Degrowth is the radical post-Brexit future the UK needs

I find the ideas at the core of Joe Herbert’s article in The Conversation interesting.

The Conversation

The notion of “degrowth” is compelling, especially when you consider the predictions of Polly Toynbee’s hard-right revolution in my previous post.

What I find difficult to conceptualise, is the how?

Yes “the logic of infinite growth is driving ecosystem collapse and climate breakdown”. Yes the “heavily polluting countries of the global north – such as the UK – must undergo a phase of managed and socially equitable economic contraction”. Yes endless economic growth has “left our society overworked, over-stressed and plagued by extreme levels of inequality”. I agree “poverty and inequality could be tackled by implementing a universal basic income”.

The intellectual arguments are there, but as I said, what I don’t understand, is the how?

Those at the top of the pyramid will not give up their privilege, and will react with hostility at any attempt to redistribute wealth through taxation. Any attempt to seize their assets will be met with violence. The strengthening of right-wing economic policies has come with boots on the ground. Those soldiers will be mobilised, and will have to be fought.

The problem is wars are great for growth, so how do you degrow society without going to war?

Brexit is cover for hard-right revolutionaries

I agree with Polly Toynbee’s assessment in The Guardian, and I find her conclusions deeply troubling.

The Guardian

Brexit is fast becoming (perhaps it has always been) a synonym for crisis capitalism. Anything that does not service the needs of the few will be ripped to shreds for profit. What is left is for the crows, and crows that will go hungry.

It is my opinion, this country will end up being a tax haven. Consequently anything funded by tax revenues will go. How long before we have favelas on Brixton Hill, a shanty towns in Hyde Park, or people dead because they can’t afford medicines?

Polly Toynbee savages George Osborne, to his face

Not even a savaging from Polly Toynbee can wipe the smug grin off Gideon “George” Osborne’s face.

@BBCNewsnight

Watch the Video

And Gideon’s cogent rebuttal to this savaging, “I disagree with all that”. That is not an argument refuting the charges put to him. That is the reply of the playground bully, “I’m right, you’re wrong, now shut up”.