The cooperative model is not new. The Rochdale Pioneers established the first modern consumer cooperative in 1844, in response to exploitative pricing by mill owners. The context maps onto the streaming conversation with uncomfortable precision.

The cooperative sector globally represents $2.5 trillion in combined turnover and supports the livelihoods of around one billion people. Mondragon employs over 70,000 people and generates €11 billion in annual revenue alone. The argument that cooperatives are charming but unscalable doesn't survive contact with the evidence.

The reason platform cooperatives are rare in the tech sector isn't that cooperative principles are incompatible with digital platforms. It's that venture capital requires a return structure that is fundamentally incompatible with cooperative ownership - and so the funding infrastructure for technology has actively selected against this model for decades.

The Pack started with a structural question: what would it look like if the distribution infrastructure were owned by the people whose work it distributes? Not managed on their behalf by a company whose interests might or might not align with theirs. Owned by them. Governed by them.

New blog on cooperative history, platform cooperativism, and why your grandmother's ethics still hold up in the digital age.

👉 https://www.packmusic.au/blog/music-streaming-and-the-platform-cooperative-a-match-made-in-music-heaven-finally-some-good-news

#CooperativeEconomics #MusicIndustry #IndependentMusic #ThePackMusic #EthicalBusiness #MusicianOwned #FutureOfMusic

The Oldest New Idea in Music — The Pack Music Co-operative

The Pack is something different - it's a patron-powered music streaming service that's actually forging mutually beneficial, direct, and transparent connections between local businesses, local listeners, and local musicians. With the radical notion that maybe, just maybe, we can create a sustainable

The Pack Music Co-operative

Somewhere along the way, streaming platforms decided that music was content. Just content - endlessly reproducible, infinitely available, valued at approximately 0.003 cents per play.

We find this argument unpersuasive. The Pack Music Co-operative is built on a different premise: that music is arts, made by people, that those people deserve to be paid for it, and that the infrastructure we deliver it through should prioritise them.

In practice: 70% of every subscription dollar to the artists You actually listened to each month. Human curators making playlists because they love music. Discovery tools built around where you actually live.

We're crowdfunding to finish it. $45,000 gets us to launch. https://crowdfunding.startsomegood.com/thepackmusiccoop

#ThePackMusic #CooperativeEconomics #FairStreaming

Somewhere along the way, streaming platforms decided that music was content. Just content - endlessly reproducible, infinitely available, valued at approximately 0.003 cents per play.

We find this argument unpersuasive. The Pack Music Co-operative is built on a different premise: that music is arts, made by people, that those people deserve to be paid for it, and that the infrastructure we deliver it through should prioritise them.

In practice: 70% of every subscription dollar to the artists You actually listened to each month. Human curators making playlists because they love music. Discovery tools built around where you actually live.

We're crowdfunding to finish it. $45,000 gets us to launch. https://crowdfunding.startsomegood.com/thepackmusiccoop

#ThePackMusic #CooperativeEconomics #FairStreaming

#RainbowGrocery #CooperativeEconomics #LibertarianSocialism

"Rainbow Grocery is a worker-owned cooperative, meaning its employees collectively own and democratically manage the business. Each worker-owner has an equal vote in major decisions, reflecting the co-op’s founding values of equality and shared responsibility.

Though modest in scale, the stores were backed by a bold idea: That food could be distributed ethically and labor could be organized without hierarchy. The concept attracted idealists, activists and those united by shared spiritual values.

'That part of the Mission wasn’t the greatest,' co-op worker/owner Pat Seguin told Mission Local in an interview about Rainbow’s 40th anniversary. 'A lot of people couldn’t afford clean, healthy food, nutritious food.'

While other food conspiracies fractured under the weight of ideological divisions and internal conflict, Rainbow endured.

(. . .)

Beyond being a grocery store, Rainbow is a radical experiment in workplace democracy.

Everyone who works at Rainbow is an owner. After nine months on the job, new hires pay a $10 fee to become voting members of the cooperative. There is no CEO. Wages are equal, regardless of job title. Departments self-govern and hire their own."

https://missionlocal.org/2025/08/rainbow-grocery-50th-anniversary/

Rainbow Grocery, S.F.’s iconic worker-owned co-op, turns 50

Mission stalwart Rainbow Grocery is turning the big 5-0 — and celebrating this month with a public block party.

Mission Local

December 29 is Day 4 of #Kwanzaa: Ujamaa (Cooperative economics)

📈 Systems that support collective growth create waves of opportunity.

Your success becomes a blueprint for community advancement.

#CooperativeEconomics

Applications close on 21 January for the for the 2024-2025 Institute for the Cooperative Digital Economy (#ICDE) fellowship programme. Fellows, typically PhD students or junior academics, receive a one-time $2,000 for travel expenses to the next conference in Kenya to present an academic report on a topic of their choosing within the ICDE's areas of interest. #cooperatives #CooperativeEconomics #SolidarityEconomics

More here: https://platform.coop/blog/open-call-for-applications-for-the-2024-2025-icde-fellowship-program/

Open Call for Applications for the 2024-2025 ICDE Fellowship Program | Platform Cooperativism Consortium

Are you a Ph.D. student or junior academic engaged in research related to cooperative principles within the digital economy? If so, the Institute for the Cooperative Digital Economy at The New School…

Platform Cooperativism Consortium

@GuerillaOntologist Do we have anything on Laura Cornelius Kellogg and the Lolomi Plan on geo.coop?

#CooperativeEconomics #indigenous

The dominant Europe-centred paradigm in #CooperativeEconomics means the field is working with an incomplete, therefore inadequate, record of the rich diversity of ways people have understood and practised cooperation as an economic strategy. For instance, the #AfricanPhilosophy of #Ubuntu imparts a model in which cooperation is a perpetually sought ideal state and seeking it creates cooperative economic relations.

Read more in my blog from the #AtlanticFellows at LSE: https://afsee.atlanticfellows.lse.ac.uk/en-gb/blogs/how-piecing-together-an-ubu-ntu-cooperative-model-made-me-want-to-write-again

How piecing together an ubu-ntu cooperative model made me want to write again

A friend whom I hadn’t seen in a while asked recently why I stopped writing. “It’s like you were everywhere one day,” he said, “and then you suddenly stopped and were gone the next.” He was referring to my writing on economic and social disparities in post-apartheid South Africa. I was once prolific, writing weekly columns in national newspapers and a monthly column for the international edition of The New York Times. But I quit all of it all at once in 2016 because it felt pointless. Writing felt pointless—a manifestation in me of alienation under capitalism.

AFSEE

Just finished translating Chapter 8 of Cooperative Enterprise and Market Economy, by @luisrazeto. In this section he lays out the operational logic of labor and community cooperatives, repurposing mainstream economic categories like equilibrium and (im)perfect competition.

#translation #CooperativeEconomics #WorkerCooperatives

Expanding the possible: exploring the role for heterodox economics in integrated climate-economy modeling - Review of Evolutionary Political Economy

This paper explores the degree to which heterodox economics can contribute to the development and use of climate-economy integrated assessment models. To do so, it introduces the field of integrated assessment modeling, with a focus on the core economic methodology used by various types of models. It then summarizes some of the literature critiquing these models and how they inform policy. The paper then provides an extended classification of ways in which heterodox economics could be applied to climate-economy models and presents a number of storylines, or pathways, which could be created using insights and methods from heterodox schools. The paper concludes with an assessment of the scope for heterodox economics to answer the criticisms of climate-economy models, finding that despite not resolving all issues, the heterodoxy has a substantial role to play.

SpringerLink