Seniomeritocracy Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Seniomeritocracy is a hypothetical variation of democracy which could be effective in less-developed countries and consists of assigning more votes to older people and people who have achieved higher levels of academic certification. This is based on a rationale that older people have more experience and those who have attended formalized institutional training will have a greater amount of knowledge to deal with issues such as economics and politics. The idea is that more educated people are more qualified to obtain better results when managing the common property of society (Economy) and laws (Politics). And with age, older people have "served" more years as part of society, and therefore they deserve more "say" in the common issues of the society.The word Seniomeitocracy originates from the Latin "Sen" or "Seni" meaning "elder", plus the english word "merit" plus κρατειν meaning "to rule", and the suffix íα; the term therefore means "Rule by the Seniority & Merit."
This system borrows and combines the ideas from both Meritocracy and Gerontocracy. However, as opposed to Gerontocracy which usually refers to a small clique of very old leaders with power, Seniomeritocracy gives an edge to older people when voting, but not full control.
A possible implementation would be one based on age and academic certification. Let us assume that people start to vote at 18 and retire at 65, an 18 year old would get 18 votes and a 65 year old would get 65 votes. A multiplier would apply based on academic certification, a person's vote would be mutiplied by one if the person has not gone to school, by 2 if the person had primary education, by 3 if the person had secondary education, by 4 if the person had a college degree and by 5 if the person has a masters degree.
To illustrate, in this example:
- A 18 year old with no formal education would get a total of 18 votes.
- A 20 year old with a high school degree would get a total of 60 votes.
- A 30 year old with a college degree would get a total of 120 votes.
- A 50 year old with a masters degree would get a total of 250 votes.
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1.1 Academic Excellence
2 Seniomeritocracy in Practice1.2 Informal education 1.3 Rule of the older "majority" 1.4 Privacy/Anonimity 3 See also |
While this concept is largely theoretical, in democracies where voting is optional, senior citizens currently do get more representation by virtue of the fact that they turn out to vote in larger numbers, implying that at least a Seniocracy exists. In addition, if statistics that correlate higher education with greater voter turnouts are correct, then this 'hypothetical' concept actually exists in reality, albeit to a limited and unintentional degree. This form of unintentional seniomeritocracy can easily be defeated, however, in democracies where voting is mandatory, such as Australia.Possible implementation issues
Academic Excellence
Informal education
Rule of the older "majority"
Privacy/Anonimity
Seniomeritocracy in Practice
