Image: Country Life Utopia 2048, by Aerroscape
Introduction
Ideas for basic universal services (funding public / private to be determined).
Based on the idea of solving my complete problem permanently (Lean Solutions).
The blog is a bit of a ‘stream of consciousness’ for which I apologise but it was important to me to try to look at the whole problem of enabling people to live a meaningful life whilst taking the astronaut’s view of earth as a space ship which only has finite resources that must last the whole journey; if the human story on earth is to endure that means living within the constraints of nature including the ability of nature to process our waste including CO2.
Shelter
Definition
Everyone needs a place to live. The structure and its fundamental equipment needs maintaining, repairing and upgrading over time.
Question of scope but as a minimum probably:
- Fabric of the building
- Maintain the inside of the building at a suitable temperature
- Water and sewerage (although the latter may include dry toilets, grey water etc)
Current state
Too much of salary devoted to basic fabric (relative to actual housing stock, replacement rate, growth in households, maintenance required etc). Housing not aligned to work leading to excessive commuting and individual car ownership.
Future state
Zero land cost for residential housing. Residential land community owned. Price controls related to replacement costs. Shelter including heating and water and sewerage to enable trade offs (e.g. insulate versus provide energy for heat).
Details to be work (e.g. exclude properties over council tax band E, only include certain amount of land and treat the remainder as potentially productive)
Health
Emphasis on maintaining health rather than addressing illness. National Health Service rather than sickness service. Including access to things that will maintain health.
Might want to include basic food service to allow trade offs between food and cost of addressing illness.
Measure on both length of life and proportion of life lived in good health.
Current State
Spiral of decline as less money is directed at worst illnesses allowing more of these to develop.
Future State
People have more ability to keep themselves healthy reducing burden on the sickness element of the system. National basic food provision to address health issues created by food industrial complex.
Sustenance
Ability to obtain sufficient food (in terms of both calories and range of nutrients). Again, people may be conditioned to want more than is reasonable within the constraints of climate emergency and need to reinvigorate nature.
Current State
Food industrial complex has people eating more food that is required (or healthy) and food that is unhealthy. Much of health spending is related to poor diet.
Future State
Day to day diets are simple, consisting of less food, mostly locally grown and cooked from raw ingredients. Food is still used for celebrations (e.g. Christmas) but less often than present. Basic food provision as part of health provision.
Food rules – Eat food, not too much, mostly plants
Implement the recommendations in A Small Farm Future to enable UK to be largely self-sufficient in food whilst restoring 30% of UK to wilderness.
If required, ration meat.
References
Food Rules, Pollan M
A Small Farm Future, Smaje C
Mobility
Ability to travel when needed. Problematic in climate emergency as desire and what might be considered allowable likely to conflict. Need to look carefully at travel that adds most ‘value’ to society and people’s lives. Need to try to reduce non-value adding travel. Links to shelter and work.
Old Age and Disability
Ensuring that basic services are available to all independent of age and ability to work. Neither of these conditions should negatively impact on people’s quality of life. Work guarantee allowing people to work as much as they feel able.
Broader Context
Climate Emergency
Current number one problem. Everything needs to be measured against this problem. Sophisticated multi-level models to enable choices to be made as to where CO2 budget should be spent. Focus largely on the ending of the burning of fossil fuels but also preserving forests, improving soil quality and restoring oceans (don’t know much about the last one!). However, other measures where they aren’t too risky (e.g. painting roofs white to reflect the sun), planting trees in towns and city for shade. Preventing spread of deserts etc.
Pressure on Nature
Only just behind climate emergency and inter-linked. In particular, need to reforest in order to drive precipitation and cool the earth. Emphasis on pollinators. Wildlife corridors. Short term aim for UK 30% wilderness.
Rise in inequality
Decoupling of rise in wellbeing from GDP as early as the 1960’s in US. Additional decoupling through neo liberalism and post 2008 financial crisis. Proportion of GDP in wages falling etc etc
Relationships between inequality and health and happiness.
Future state
Maximum 5 to 1 earning ratio between highest paid in organization and lowest paid (including all forms of income – salary, bonus, in-kind, dividends).
Pressure on resources
A response to climate emergency (fossil fuel burning) that depletes other resources and further destroys nature is not a sustainable one.
Future state
Doughnut economics. Right to repair. Banning of materials that cannot be recycled.
Other fundamentals
Politics and civil society
Future State
Return of local decision making. NOTE: with modern communications this will lead to lots of ‘postcode lottery’ stories that will have to be dealt with. Transition was difficult due to lack of experience of the population and lack of self confidence and feeling that ‘someone else should do this’ and I have a right to expect a ‘perfect life’.
Compensation for possible failures in local decision making is layered planning models and measurements to understand which localities (at all levels) are off plan. NOTE the plan is a democratically agreed plan (e.g. through referenda at different levels)
Reference: Half-Earth Socialism, Vettesse and Pendergrass
Equality
Future State
Modesty is valued. People who make excess income are embarrassed and take steps to correct the situation.
National living wage set to ensure that a family can afford to live with 2 caregivers working 120% of normal hours. Additional help for one caregiver families with children.
Money
Future State
Money as information. Money used to direct resources. Money that sits still is taxed heavily so that it can be reused for the above.
Work
Future State
Work is available for those that want it. Those that don’t do not have to work as long as they are not engaged in activities that are detrimental to others (understand that this is really hard to police!). Work is rationed. Industries that are destructive are stopped (oil and gas, casino capitalism). Minimum wage is set at a level that enables a ‘decent live’. Industries that are not able to pay these wages are allowed to perish (e.g. excessive hospitality). Government picks up the slack addressing social issues (insulating homes, promoting health, providing arts and culture, restoring nature, climate friendly agriculture, recycling and restoring etc etc)
Social life
Future State
Local low cost, no cost socializing is the mainstay. Reduction in work and provision of basic services leaves people free to participate in a range of local activities (volunteering, sports, arts, social clubs, hobbies, life long education etc). Driven by requirement for leisure industry to pay living wage.
Capitalism and Profit
Futures State
Emphasis on small and local or large and non-profit. If something can’t be achieved by a small organization then it should be done by a purpose based social enterprise.
Government intervenes heavily in the banking sector to ensure that finance is directed towards productive enterprises. Deconstructing of ‘money making money’ industries
Global Trade
Future State
Requirement for government to balance imports and exports. Government decides what sectors can import based on export performance.
Very strict controls on flows of capital into and out of the country.
Profit declared and taxes paid where business is done (end to excessive IP arrangements that export profits and avoid UK tax).
End to foreign ownership of residential property (with reciprocal for UK people owning property overseas).
Root Cause Problems
Burning of fossil fuels and removal of remaining forests and other habitats that sequester carbon is making the planet uninhabitable by humans
Injection
No fossil fuels to be burnt by the UK. Promotion of carbon sequestration overseas but not to get to ‘net zero’ but to restore CO2 levels to safe ones.
Limiting of consumption of meat, fish and dairy with immediate ban on imports of these.
Investment in UK agriculture to grow fruit, cereals, nuts and vegetables in UK using permaculture, agroforestry and high productivity agriculture (like Netherlands)
Ban on import of products that lead to loss of vital habitats (e.g. palm oil)
Current levels of consumption and waste are removing space for nature
Injection
Immediate 30% of UK left to nature
Household model of the UK Economy
Comparing the UK Economy to a household leads to poor decision making.
Injection
Move to a model of the UK Economy that recognizes:
- Government debt is not borrowing from external third parties; it is ‘borrowing’ using its own debt instrument.
- Focus decisions on government borrowing on the effect it will have on inflation.
Stop using Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as a measure on performance of UK economy (society) and move the use of the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI).
Power Imbalance between Capital and Labour
When private capital has more power than workers, then workers will be forced to accept jobs at wages that make profit for private companies but do not provide the workers with an adequate life-style.
Injection
Use a government job guarantee to establish a floor for wages in the private sector, ensuring that private companies can only make a profit whilst paying wages necessary to maintain an adequate life-style (e.g. based on the living wage foundation’s living wage)
The wealthy command too many resources
The wealthy command too many resources creating inflationary pressure before the modest needs of all workers are met.
Injection
Make income tax more progressive. Set maximum salary multipliers within private companies.
Asset Inflation
Something about the ability to use scarce assets in lieu of income.
Injection
Tax unearned income (or unspent income) more heavily than income that produces an economic output. Housing controls (see below)
Excessive household debt
Something about excessive household debt and viewing shelter (basic service) as a way to acquire wealth.
Injection
Debt jubilees
- Housing debt (mortgages) linked with control on future prices
- Higher education debt
- Others to be considered
View housing as basic service. Land designated as residential land as zero value. Cost of housing related to build costs (or rebuild costs) at low carbon standard. Additional land taxed at potential economic value based on surrounding land use.
Private Pensions over State Pensions
Leads to a desire to build up capital in property. Pension companies tend to invest in financial products and assets rather than productive enterprises.
The idea that the UK cannot afford to change seems odd when you realize that there is £6Tn in UK Private Pension funds.
By way of comparison:
- £250bn to decarbonise residential properties
- Onshore wind projects cost £1M per MW (UK needs 100GW or so of energy production)
Specialization of the Economy
Specialization makes the economy less resilient. This will be a huge problem as climate change bites. The country should attempt to be self-sufficient in the resources required to provide the universal basic services. Given that the UK has few natural resources, this is likely to require the UK to need to adopt a reduce, reuse and recycle approach to key materials needed to deliver basic services.
Trade Imbalances and other capital flows
The UK economy exports productive work and pays for it by selling off assets. Needs to stop.
Must be a balance of trade based on:
- Maximising self-sufficiency with respect to food stuffs and raw materials
- Fair trade of output of UK productive resources with those of other nations
Capital flows are disallowed except in specific circumstances.
Philosophical Root Causes
Command over Nature
Humans wrongly think that they can understand and command nature. Nature is far more complex than humans realize and actions with respect to nature have consequences, many of which come to light years after they are taken.
Injections
- A return to a posture of awe with respect to the beauty and complexity of nature; adopting the posture that nature cannot be tamed and humans must respect and live alongside nature.
- Presumption of harm whenever humans do anything contrary to nature (including but not limited to monoculture, releasing plastic into the environment, introducing non-native species etc)
- Immediate commitment to 50% of the planet left to nature (undisturbed) and 30% in the UK immediately given to nature.
- Move to agroforestry and permaculture to integrate human food production with nature (alongside things like Dutch approach to growing in glasshouses and (possibly) industrial production of protein – meat substitutes) to balance need to grow food with need to restore nature.
Take what you want
Education and marketing promotes the idea that every human can take what they want from the earth with no adverse consequences. In this context ‘take’ include pushing the by-products out into the world (not just CO2 and other GHGs but also waste of all kinds). It also means the depletion of nature resources that will not be renewed (metals, oil and gas etc).
Injections
- The default moral position should be to take as little as you can from the earth and no more than you need.
- Modesty as the default behaviour when faced with success.
- Education with respect to what people actually need to survive and thrive.
- Presumption against mass travel (or at a minimum fast travel)
I have the right to be happy
The next few decades are going to be tough. People need to be resolved to this fact. Happiness cannot be gained through life being easy and things being achievable through the mass deployment of non-human energy.
Injection
- Happiness will be gained through the ability to enjoy the things that people really value (e.g. when asked at the ends of their lives what made them happy), such as relationships, experiences, learning, helping others.
- People will need to take pride in overcoming adversity together as a community
I can be happy when those around me are not
The idea that inequality does not impact on my happiness.
Injection
- Presumption that I will be happy when those around me are happy
- Presumption that my well-being and happiness cannot be at the expense of that of others
Transition – The first five years
Introduction
We have five years to protect humankind from real misery due to the warming of the earth.
Emergency action needs to be taken in that time to put the brakes on and buy time for permanent solutions.
Demand Reduction
In order to stop burning fossil fuels and slow the warming of the earth activities that rely on energy must stop. Alternatives to fossil fuels will not arrive fast enough to save humanity from the effects of warming.
Injections
- Immediate reduction in working hours (4 days at 7.5 hours per day with an aspiration to get to 4 days at 6 hours per day)
- 2 days per month of volunteering and 2 days per month of continuing education, sport, arts, hobbies (the one enabling the other)
- Working from home where possible
- Employers pay commuting costs with incentives to provide transport, enable use of public transport, including paying for commuting time over 1 hour per day (may have unintended consequences so care with this one!)
- Return to shorter hours for shops and entertainment venues (no later than 11pm, possibly earlier in the winter)
- Mass insulation of homes (no cost to homeowner).
- Free public transport with vehicle scrappage schemes. Including innovations with respect to public transport like WestLink.
Towards self-sufficiency in food
The climate crisis is ultimately a food crisis. The more the UK can be self-sufficient with respect to the food the more others can keep the food they produce. This is likely to be forced upon the UK anyway as governments refuse to export food when they do not have enough for their own populations. However, this will need to be achieved without adding to climate change through the wrong kind of food production.
Injections
- National Basic Food Service to massively increase UK production of cereals, fruit vegetables and nuts. Balanced between agroforestry, permaculture, small farms and industrial production.
Towards self-sufficiency (or better) in energy
Whilst the focus in the first five years will be on energy reduction, there are some quick wins with respect to energy production.
Injections
- Community energy companies with simple access to the national grid. National grid focussing on grid balancing.
- Add an additional layer of local grid balancing (micro-grids) around substations including energy storage.
- Nationalise residential energy and price controls such that investments can be made in decarbonizing home energy without the homeowner needing to pay. Ability to provide district heating schemes to whole communities.
- Research into medium term solutions, in particular year round energy storage (at electricity, hydrogen or heat).
- Reverse ban on onshore wind.
- Much faster planning permission for emergency schemes (e.g. district heating)
Discourage energy use, nature and resource depletion
Beyond energy for commuting and heating homes, other forms of energy use (and depletion of nature and finite resources) will have to be discouraged.
There are two possible mechanisms – price or rationing. The expectation would be that during the transition, rationing would be used to ensure that (say) 80% of resources are rationed to ensure fair access for all and the remaining 20% would be priced to encourage alternatives to be found.
This would require lots of modelling and consultation but this will have to be done in the first year of the emergency powers being granted. Areas subject to rationing and price controls would include:
- Air flights – priority could be given to family visits, education, government business, NGOs and (some) business use for example with presumption against pure vacations.
- Fast fashion – priority given to sustainable clothing, limited number of new garments per person per year.
- Meat and Dairy – ban on imports from producers that deplete nature (e.g. Brazil stock yards), rationing on limited UK production etc
- Staples – gradual reduction in imports of staple food stuffs (e.g. cereals) and replace with UK production.
- Tea, coffee and chocolate – ration to encourage countries to change land use to produce food for their own populations (and as production is hit by climate change)
- Food importing by National Basic Food Service with food re-priced to enable local food production.
How will this be paid for?
There will be a concern that this needs to be paid for. However, it needs to be resourced, which is not the same thing. The government (ideally all party) will have to direct resources during the critical first five years to ensure change happens fast enough.
Injections
- All Party government for five years (led by the party that wins the next generation)
- ‘COVID’ style committee to hold the government to account
- Regular briefings to the country on progress
- Adoption of emergency powers to direct production to where it is needed (safe climate factories)
- Economic modelling to predict where money will flow and accumulate
- Actions taken to remove money from the economy which could be inflationary (based on analysis of where money flows to)
Messaging
What we oppose
Simple moral language to try to unite single issue campaigners under a common purpose.
| We Oppose | Can cover and unit the following |
| Greed | Desire for excessive wealth Land reform |
| Exploitation | Diversity, gender, race, sexual orientation Of natural resources and nature Of the poor by the rich Of the global south by the global north Power imbalances in decision making Of wealth and assets (rent seeking) |
| Want | Homelessness / poor housing, food and energy poverty, low wages, health, disadvantage through disability |
| Idleness | Lack of opportunities to work, learn, and enjoy leisure, sport and culture |
…and therefore what we stand for
| We stand for | Which can cover |
| Restraint | Modesty, restraint, rebalancing (of prior greed), reduce, reuse, recycle |
| Courage | Fairness, courage (to oppose exploitation), reparations (prior exploitation), participatory justice |
| Support | Enough, self-sufficiency, resilience |
| Meaning | Meaningful work, educational opportunities, leisure, sport and cultural opportunities, 4 day week, decentralisation away from South East, reshoring, self-sufficiency, resilience, participatory democracy |
… Expressed as rights and obligations
I have the right…
To expect a life filled with meaningful opportunities to work on behalf of my community, learn knowledge and life skills, enjoy time with friends and family and participate in sports and cultural activities.
To be supported in meeting my basic needs for shelter (including warmth), food, travel and wellbeing (including physical and mental health)
In return I will…
Show restraint in everything I do, in particular only taking from the earth that which can be replaced to ensure that future generations are able to thrive.
Show courage ensuring fairness in all my dealing with others in my community and across the globe and participating on decision making and the delivery of justice in my community and across the globe