Cost Comparison Between Micro-Utopias and Mainstream Society: Per-Person Living Expenses and System Efficiency Model

🧠 1. Mainstream society: cost per person (market-based system)

In a typical high-income European-style system (like Cyprus/Greece/Western EU), a rough monthly per-person cost profile looks like this:

🏠 Housing

  • Rent: €500–€1,200 (varies heavily by city)
  • Utilities: €100–€250

🍽️ Food

  • €250–€500/month per person

🚍 Transport

  • €50–€150/month (public transport or fuel share)

🎓 Education

  • Public schools: free, but indirect costs exist
  • University: €0–€10,000+ per year depending on country/status

🏥 Healthcare

  • Public systems: partially covered, but taxes + private gaps
  • Private insurance: €50–€300/month equivalent burden

📊 Total “real cost burden”

Even in subsidised systems:

~€900 to €2,500+ per person per month (direct + indirect cost load)

🧠 2. Micro-utopias model: cost per person (internal system logic)

In Solon Papageorgiou’s micro-utopias framework, internal life is designed so that most survival needs are not priced per individual.

So instead of “cost per person,” we look at shared system cost per person-equivalent load.

🏠 Housing (shared provisioning system)

  • No rent per person
  • Cost becomes:
    • construction
    • maintenance
    • materials
    • shared utilities

📊 Estimated structural cost:

€150–€400 per person/month equivalent (amortised community infrastructure)

🍽️ Food (collective provisioning)

  • shared kitchens, local production, reduced waste systems

📊 Equivalent cost:

€100–€250 per person/month

(but not individually billed)

🚍 Transport (shared mobility)

  • fleet-based transport instead of ownership

📊 Equivalent cost:

€30–€100 per person/month

🎓 Education (no tuition, no gatekeeping)

  • no tuition fees
  • cost shifts to system maintenance (teachers, facilities, materials)

📊 Equivalent cost:

€50–€200 per person/month (system-wide funding)

🏥 Healthcare (preventative + collective model)

  • no per-visit billing
  • focus on prevention reduces downstream costs

📊 Equivalent cost:

€100–€300 per person/month

📊 3. Total conceptual comparison

System Estimated per-person monthly burden
Mainstream society €900 – €2,500+
Micro-utopias (modelled) €400 – €1,200

🧠 4. Why micro-utopias could be cheaper (in theory)

The framework reduces cost pressure through:

✔ No profit extraction layers

No landlords, insurers, or market margins on essentials

✔ Shared infrastructure

One system serves many people directly

✔ Prevention-first healthcare

Less expensive downstream treatment

✔ No duplication of services

One coordinated system instead of competing providers

⚠️ 5. But the critical limitation

This only works if:

  • population is well-organised
  • logistics are efficient
  • participation is high
  • waste is low
  • governance is stable

Otherwise, costs can rise due to:

  • coordination overhead
  • inefficiency in shared systems
  • transition costs from existing systems

🧩 6. Core takeaway

  • Mainstream society = individual pays fragmented costs
  • Micro-utopias = collective pays integrated system cost

So the shift is not just cheaper vs more expensive:

it is “many separate bills” vs “one shared infrastructure system”