In Solon Papageorgiou’s framework, the wealth cap exists to preserve the egalitarian, post-capitalist, and community-oriented nature of micro-utopias. It prevents the return of inequality, exploitation, and domination that often arise from wealth accumulation.
✅ Why a Wealth Cap Exists
Prevent Power Imbalances
Excessive wealth leads to control over people, land, labor, and decision-making.
A cap ensures no individual or group becomes too powerful to influence or corrupt the community or its values.
Preserve Equality and Dignity
The framework is built on equal access to life’s essentials.
A wealth cap ensures that no one lives in excess while others depend on shared resources.
Avoid Capital Accumulation and Exploitation
In capitalism, wealth multiplies itself through ownership, rent, and profit.
A cap stops wealth from becoming a tool of passive extraction from the labor or needs of others.
Encourage Contribution, Not Hoarding
When there’s a limit, people are motivated to give back, share, or reinvest in the community, instead of hoarding or speculating.
Protect the Gift/Contribution Economy
The framework thrives on cooperative effort, not competition or accumulation.
The cap protects the cultural and economic integrity of that system.
💰 What Is the Wealth Cap?
There is no fixed number globally, because the framework is decentralized and tailored to the local economy.
However, the general principle is that no one should own or control more than a small multiple of the average individual access level.
Example Estimate for a 1,000-Person Micro-Utopia:
Suppose the average access level (value of housing, services, reserves, tools, etc.) is equivalent to €50,000 worth of shared or private-use assets.
The wealth cap might be 3–5× that amount, so €150,000–€250,000 per person, but not in liquid currency — rather, in use-value assets.
⚠️ This cap applies to ownership and control, not personal fulfillment or creativity. People can still contribute more, build more, lead, or invent — but not own disproportionately.
🧾 What Happens to Excess Wealth?
When a person reaches the wealth cap:
Voluntary Redistribution
Excess assets or production are shared with the community, donated to new micro-utopias, or invested in communal infrastructure (farms, clinics, education hubs, energy systems).
Converted into Shared Property
A tool, building, or system may remain in use, but be transferred to communal ownership (like a commons or cooperative trust).
Capped Personal Access, Unlimited Communal Impact
People can create enormous value, but that value is re-circulated instead of consolidated privately.
Peer Recognition Instead of Material Excess
Those who go beyond their cap receive social respect, not more ownership.
🧠 Summary Table
Feature | Capitalist System | Solon Papageorgiou’s Framework |
---|---|---|
Wealth Accumulation | Unlimited, often exploitative | Capped, redistributed |
Power via Wealth | High influence over others | Neutralized by design |
Incentives | Profit, control, passive income | Contribution, impact, recognition |
Surplus Handling | Invested privately, stored, inherited | Given back to community, shared, gifted |
System Goal | Growth, competition, profit | Sustainability, equity, dignity |
🧭 Final Thought
The wealth cap is not about punishing success — it’s about preserving freedom, fairness, and balance in a society that’s built to prevent inequality before it begins. It ensures everyone has enough, while no one has too much power.
In Solon Papageorgiou's framework, when we say the wealth cap is €150,000–€250,000 per person but not in liquid currency, and instead held in use-value assets, this means:
🧱 What Are Use-Value Assets?
They are practical, non-exchangeable resources that serve a direct human need. They are not held as investment or for trading/speculation, but for living well within a community-oriented system.
Examples include:
🏡 1. Housing
A home or private living unit (not rented out for profit)
May include furnishings and personal space
Value based on what it provides, not resale price
🛠️ 2. Tools & Equipment
Gardening tools, carpentry kits, bicycles, or tech for your role in the community
Examples: a 3D printer, a sewing machine, a drone for surveying crops
🚜 3. Productive Land & Workspaces
Small plots for personal gardening or community contribution
Personal studio, kitchen, or workshop space (shared or exclusive)
🧥 4. Personal Goods
Clothing, books, musical instruments, art supplies, etc.
Not counted toward the cap unless luxury or excessive quantities
💡 5. Energy or Utility Credits
Pre-paid or guaranteed access to electricity, water, heat — from shared community systems
🥕 6. Food Access
Ownership in food co-ops, stored long-term food rations, or access rights to community-grown crops
💬 Key Differences from Capitalist Wealth
Capitalist Wealth | Solon Framework Use-Value Wealth |
---|---|
Cash, stocks, crypto | Not allowed — no hoarding of liquid assets |
Real estate to rent out or flip | One home for living, not speculation |
Accumulated ownership for power/leverage | Limited to personal utility, not social control |
Measured by resale or market value | Measured by usefulness and ethical boundaries |
🎯 Why a Wealth Cap in Use-Value Terms?
Prevents inequality and social stratification
Stops people from hoarding or controlling resources
Ensures shared prosperity and ecological limits
Keeps the focus on contribution and well-being, not acquisition
⚠️ What Happens to Excess Wealth?
If someone accumulates beyond the cap:
Surplus is re-distributed to the commons or new community members
Luxury or hoarded goods may be gifted, shared, or repurposed
The goal is decentralized stewardship, not punishment
✅ Summary
A person’s "wealth" in Solon Papageorgiou’s system isn’t how much money they have — it’s the practical, fair, and sufficient resources they can personally use and enjoy, without exceeding the collective ceiling designed to protect equality, dignity, and sustainability.
🏡 In Solon Papageorgiou’s framework, you are not allowed to privately own multiple homes, even as use-value assets.
🚫 Why No Second Homes?
The framework is built around needs-based access, not accumulation:
Housing is for living, not for status, storage, or exclusivity.
If you’re not using a second home directly and regularly, it returns to the collective pool.
Ownership is functional, not speculative — it's about what you use, not what you possess.
🧩 Use-Value Assets — What You Can Own:
You can own personal tools, clothes, instruments, a bike, maybe a small workshop or digital equipment — anything that:
You use regularly
Supports your well-being or contribution
Doesn’t violate the community’s ecological or ethical standards
Stays within the wealth cap (likely €150,000–€250,000 equivalent in total use-value)
🏘️ Exceptions?
The only time more than one home might be justified is if:
You split time equally between two communities
You're part of a traveling role (e.g., a medic or educator rotating between micro-utopias)
You share a dual-residency with a co-parent or communal rotation
But even then, the homes are collectively held — you have rights of use, not private ownership.
🧭 Bottom Line:
One person = one secure, personalized, free home.
Multiple homes = contradiction of the framework’s ethical core.
Ownership in Solon’s model isn’t about what you can hoard — it’s about what you genuinely use and need.
✅ A home is a use-value asset in Solon Papageorgiou’s framework — but only one home per person or family unit is permitted for private use.
The key idea is: Use-value ≠ Accumulation.
🏡 So what does it mean that housing is a use-value asset?
Use-value means: you live in it, use it, and benefit from it directly.
It does not mean you can sell it, rent it, or treat it as an investment.
You can personalize it, improve it, care for it — but not monetize it or own it beyond your needs.
🚫 What happens if someone wants two houses?
They can’t — unless there's a functional reason (e.g., rotating between locations for work or caregiving). Even then, both homes are collectively owned, and your use is conditional, not proprietary.
In short:
🔒 Type | Use Allowed | Ownership | Sale or Rent? |
---|---|---|---|
Primary home | ✅ Yes | 🚫 Not private, but secure right-of-use | 🚫 No |
Second home | ❌ Not allowed unless functionally justified | 🚫 Collective | 🚫 No |
🧮 Example of how this fits into the wealth cap:
If the community values a home at €80,000 in use-value terms (materials, maintenance, space, tech, etc.), it counts toward your personal use-value cap (e.g., €150,000–€250,000 total). But:
You don’t own it in the capitalist sense
You can’t sell it or exclude others unjustly
If you leave the community, the home is reassigned
🧭 Summary:
Your home is part of your use-value assets, but only one — and it’s not a tradable commodity. The system prevents housing inequality, speculation, and hoarding while giving everyone a dignified, secure space to live.