The European Tribune is a forum for thoughtful dialogue of European and international issues. You are invited to post comments and your own articles.
Please REGISTER to post.
The depression was caused by fiscal measures. Money is a symptom, it's not the disease.
If surplus rents from privileged property rights are captured for the common wealth by taxes then there won't be asset bubbles will there?
The cause of retail and asset price inflation is by definition and accounting identity rent-seeking - ie the demand for profit/rent in excess of cost.
Retail price inflation is everywhere and always a fiscal phenomenon: asset-price inflation is everywhere and always a monetary phenomenon. Of course, when consumables become assets - as now - we get problems.
This deficit-based banking system is fucked: permanently and irretrievably, and the reason is the systemic imbalance in purchasing power and ownership of productive assets, particularly land.
Only fiscal measures will do, and they will not happen within our perverted 'representative democracy'.
Banks are evolving rapidly into a role as service providers for the simple reason that such risk service provision is capital lite.
By outsourcing market risk, but not credit risk, they facilitated the existing bubbles in equity, commodity and energy markets. When these collapse, we'll see a move to the next adjacent possible.
As regards the fiscal measures necessary to resolve debt and to transition to a low carbon economy, the Public sector power-seekers (as opposed to private sector rent-seekers) in charge of government-as-intermediary have not only seen the steering wheel come off in their hands: they are handing it to the equally powerless front seat passenger.
This book on the End of the Market makes an interesting case that we have seen the end of 'market clearing', but in my view we have seen only the end of a market architectural paradigm.
I think we saw in late 2008 the end of the intermediated market, and that we will see an evolution via a dis-intermediated 'Energy Economy' market possibly one day to a Gift Economy/Economy of Abundance. "The future is already here -- it's just not very evenly distributed" William Gibson
...
Only fiscal measures will do ....
So, how is it a good thing that the fiscal authorities have had the wheel come off in their hands? I distribute. You re-distribute. He gives your hard-earned money to lazy scroungers. -- JakeS
That is precisely what I've been busy working on doing, by prototyping, along with a network of individuals who are joining in.
eg this project has been 18 months's work so far, but has just reached the End of the Beginning.
I wrote the constitution; co-founded the Trust; brought in the Prince's Charities; and wrote the outline Business Plan.
In a networked 21st century political economy, the parties will not create the policies: the policies will create the parties, or rather, the social movements.
The institutions of the future will not be organisations but will rather be consensual agreements for self organisation to a common purpose:
I'm working on two such movements with global application:
(a) NewClear - aimed at financial resilience, and which is a participative, decentralised financial network (and updates previous work); and
(b) Natural Grid - aimed at resource resilience, and which will be a participative, least energy cost (as opposed to least dollar cost), resource network. "The future is already here -- it's just not very evenly distributed" William Gibson
by Frank Schnittger - May 27 3 comments
by Frank Schnittger - May 5 22 comments
by Frank Schnittger - May 23 1 comment
by Oui - May 13 65 comments
by Carrie - Apr 30 7 comments
by Frank Schnittger - May 273 comments
by Oui - May 2712 comments
by Oui - May 24
by Frank Schnittger - May 231 comment
by Oui - May 1365 comments
by Oui - May 910 comments
by Frank Schnittger - May 522 comments
by Oui - May 449 comments
by Oui - May 312 comments
by Oui - May 29 comments
by gmoke - May 1
by Oui - Apr 30269 comments
by Carrie - Apr 307 comments
by Oui - Apr 2644 comments
by Oui - Apr 886 comments
by Oui - Mar 19143 comments