this post was submitted on 10 Apr 2024
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The problem would start when you start organizing the service provision into company heirarchies. Especially if the main thing someone provides is owning the company. In that case, the "means of production" include the organization itself.
I could see a really idealized gig economy model working, though. Or just everything being organized as worker co-ops.
And, of course, then you have to start asking questions about how the service economy is actually procuring resources to function. Sure, you're trade based, in theory, but who are you trading with? One of the reasons socialism tends to be globalist in nature is that it doesn't do a whole lot of good for the idea if that "socialist economy" is actually supported by imperialism or someone else doing the ruthless exploitation of labor and then selling you those resources for cheap.
How socialist is your worker owned co-op, really, if you're buying your food from a slave plantation?