An economic philosophy where resource stewardship aims at collective wellbeing across generations, not individual accumulation.
Rabia renounced worldly possessions to pursue pure devotion, modeling how material detachment enables spiritual freedom. Ubuntu Economics reimagines material life through the lens of intergenerational flourishing. Rather than maximizing personal wealth, this framework asks: how do my economic choices affect my family's seven generations forward? How do I honor the work of ancestors whose labor created current resources? Ubuntu economics emphasizes reciprocal obligation, communal resource management, and wealth as responsibility. Land belongs to no individual but to the community across time. Resources exist to meet real needs and preserve life, not to accumulate status. Economic decisions are ethical decisions affecting unborn people. This challenges modern capitalism's short-term extraction while recovering African practices of collective stewardship. It reframes poverty and wealth as communal concerns requiring communal solutions, restoring economic relationships as extensions of family obligation.
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