Discover the Currency of Collective Action
- October 2, 2024
The UK economy faces a critical crossroads: skyrocketing inequality, high housing costs, and stagnating wages are symptoms of a system that prioritises scarcity-driven wealth creation at the expense of ordinary citizens. To create a fairer, more prosperous society, we must explore a new economic model that balances the public and private sectors to meet people’s needs. Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), along with demand-based wealth creation, can be the foundation of a new economy that includes price caps, nationalising critical industries, and significantly expanding the role of public investment to grow the economy and reduce poverty.
Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) highlights the fact that countries like the UK, which issue their own currency, can never "run out of money." This means the government has the ability to create money to fund public investments and services without needing to rely on taxation or borrowing in the traditional sense. The key constraint is inflation, which can be managed through taxation, price controls, and responsible public spending.
MMT allows governments to:
To ensure that economic growth doesn’t lead to runaway inflation or excessive price increases, price caps can be an effective tool, particularly in key sectors such as housing, energy, and essential goods.
Control on Essential Goods: Governments can place price caps on critical items like food, fuel, and rent to prevent the cost of living from spiraling out of control, which can harm low-income households. By capping prices, the government ensures that these goods remain accessible to all citizens.
Preventing Speculation: In markets like housing, price caps can prevent speculative buying and artificial scarcity, where investors push prices up purely for profit. Capping rents or limiting property prices based on local wage levels ensures that housing remains affordable for working families.
Avoiding Inflationary Pressures: In an MMT-based economy, where the government is actively spending to boost demand, price caps act as a buffer against inflation by preventing businesses from hiking prices purely to take advantage of increased spending.
While price caps must be carefully managed to avoid shortages or black markets, they serve as a protective measure to ensure that economic growth benefits everyone, not just those who can afford rising prices.
In certain industries—especially those where private ownership has led to inefficiency, poor service, or inflated prices—nationalisation can be a vital tool to better meet the needs of the public.
Essential Services: Industries that provide critical public goods—like healthcare, utilities (water, energy), transportation, and broadband—are best operated as public entities, as they serve the needs of the people rather than profit. Privatized services often lead to higher costs and reduced quality because of the profit motive.
Reinvestment of Profits: In a publicly owned industry, any profits can be reinvested to improve services, lower prices, and raise workers’ wages, rather than being siphoned off to shareholders. For example, a nationalised energy sector could invest in renewable energy infrastructure, reduce costs for consumers, and accelerate the transition to a green economy.
Improving Efficiency and Access: Nationalising industries also ensures that efficiency is aligned with public needs. While private companies often cut costs at the expense of service quality, a public service model can focus on long-term planning and investment in infrastructure, improving overall efficiency while still delivering affordable services.
Energy: The energy crisis in the UK highlights the flaws in the privatised energy sector, with skyrocketing prices and poor service. A nationalised energy sector could ensure affordable access to electricity and gas while investing in green energy to combat climate change.
Transport: Public transportation has become prohibitively expensive for many. Nationalising the railways and bus services could improve the quality of transportation while reducing costs, making it easier for people to travel for work, leisure, and education.
Broadband: In a digital age, access to affordable, high-speed internet is critical for economic participation. Nationalising broadband could ensure universal access, reducing the digital divide and promoting innovation and remote work opportunities.
The future of the UK economy requires a balanced approach that leverages both public and private sectors. Public ownership of key industries and services ensures that the basic needs of the population are met, while the private sector can innovate, drive competition, and focus on niche markets or specialised goods and services.
Public Sector: The government can take control of essential services (like energy, transportation, and healthcare) to ensure that these services are affordable, accessible, and of high quality. By reinvesting profits and focusing on public welfare, the government can raise living standards and reduce poverty.
Private Sector: The private sector can remain a dynamic part of the economy, particularly in industries like tech, manufacturing, and retail, where innovation and entrepreneurship are key drivers of growth. The private sector can thrive in a healthy, demand-driven economy where wages are higher and people have more money to spend.
To truly reduce poverty and significantly increase the wealth of the nation, the UK must embrace a model that prioritises people over profits and creates wealth by meeting demand, not by hoarding scarce resources. Key steps include:
Expanding Public Investment: Using MMT, the government can create money to invest in infrastructure, education, healthcare, and other services that directly boost the economy by increasing employment and wages.
Capping Prices Where Needed: Price caps on essential goods and services ensure that increased demand doesn’t lead to runaway inflation, keeping the cost of living manageable for all citizens.
Nationalising Key Industries: Bringing essential industries under public control ensures that services are run efficiently, affordably, and in the public interest. Reinvesting profits back into these industries helps raise wages, improve services, and boost the economy.
A Mixed Economy: By balancing public ownership of essential services with a thriving private sector, the UK can create a fair, demand-driven economy that lifts all citizens, reduces inequality, and drives long-term growth.
Through the principles of Modern Monetary Theory and demand-based wealth creation, the UK can take bold steps to reshape its economy, reduce poverty, and grow the wealth of the nation. By investing in public services, infrastructure, and employment, while capping prices and nationalizing key industries, the UK can ensure that economic growth benefits all citizens—not just those at the top.
A balanced mix of public and private business will create a fairer economy where basic needs are met, wages are higher, and everyone has the opportunity to thrive. The path forward is clear: invest in the public good, drive demand-based growth, and build a fairer, more prosperous UK.
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