Jason Hickel: Gutxiago gehiago denean

When Less is More with Jason Hickel

Before unpacking the implications of degrowth, we need to understand how the language of growth has served to justify the exploitative ravages of capitalism and, to paraphrase Lenin, its highest stage – imperialism.

Jason tracks inequality between the global South and North from the industrial revolution and the colonial era to the present day. You don’t need to be an economic historian to see that growth in the north relied on forms of appropriation from the south. As Marx pointed out in the 19th century, price inequalities are not natural; they are induced through geopolitical and commercial power.

So in the colonial era, of course, you drove down wages by enclosing Commons and dispossessing people and destroying subsistence economies to create massive unemployed people. Today it is through a variety of different mechanisms, the structural adjustment programs that were imposed across the global south by the World Bank and the IMF, which are controlled by the US government primarily.

G-7 countries made massive cuts in public sector employment as well as labor and environmental standards. Neoliberal structural adjustment programs of the 1970s and 80s further induced price inequalities. Today countries of the global South are heavily dependent on foreign currency and are forced to compete to attract foreign investment. They are in a global race to the bottom to deliver cheap labor and resources to multinational companies effectively as tribute.

This is why I come to degrowth from the perspective of anti-imperialism, recognizing that we live in an imperialist world economy. Degrowth is a demand for ending those patterns of net appropriation that sustains such high levels of access consumption in rich nations … Rich countries should reduce the resources to get back within sustainable levels, while poor countries should reclaim their resources, mobilizing them around meeting human needs with throughput converging globally at a level that’s consistent with universal welfare and ecological stability. That is the world we should be imagining and calling for.

Jason and Steve discuss the gross inadequacies of the GDP as an indicator of growth and the need to break from the ideology that defines growth as a positive, desirable goal or outcome. GDP only counts commodities regardless of their social value or harm. It doesn’t distinguish between $100 of books or bullets. It says nothing about whether people’s needs are met. As an alternative to GDP, Jason leans toward a dashboard approach instead of the Genuine Prosperity Index.

Understanding MMT shows the way to meet the main objectives of degrowth. Jason adds that the MMT proposal for thinking about taxation – i.e., not as a way of funding public activity but as a way of pulling demand out of the economy – can be applied to ecological economics as a tool for reducing excess resource and energy use.

Dr. Jason Hickel is an economic anthropologist, author and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. He is a Visiting Senior Fellow at the International Inequalities Institute at the London School of Economics and Professor at the Institute for Environmental Science and Technology at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. He is Associate Editor of the journal World Development and serves on the Statistical Advisory Panel for the UN Human Development Report and the advisory board of the Green New Deal for Europe.

Jason’s research focuses on global inequality, political economy, post-development and ecological economics, which are the subjects of his two most recent books: The Divide: A Brief Guide to Global Inequality and its Solutions and Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World.

3:33 What is degrowth

4:54 Ecological crisis

19: 54 Genuine progress

Indicator Gpi

23: 53 Synergies between

Mmt and D growth

27: 09 Sovereign currency

33: 49 The colonial period

34: 00 Commodity of the

Industrial revolution

34: 56 Price inequalities in

International trade

Transkripzioa:

0:07

for d growth basically there are two main objectives one is an ecological objective which is to reduce resource

0:13

and energy throughput and then the other is a social objective which is to improve people’s access to

0:19

the things they need to live well and ensure that’s secure right so basically a social guarantee

0:27

so i think the mmt proposal for how to think about taxation i.e not as a way of funding public activity

0:34

but rather as a way of pulling demand out of the economy can be applied to ecological economics as a tool for

0:41

reducing excess resource and energy use and that i think is very promising [Music]

0:51

what i have said is that this campaign is not just about electing a president

0:58

it is about making a political revolution

1:07

taking money from our children and borrowing

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from china people are dying is the program so critical it’s worth

1:20

borrowing money from china to pay for it and if not i’ll get rid of it stop lying

1:26

[Music]

1:38

now let’s see if we can avoid the apocalypse all together here’s another episode of macro and cheese with your

1:44

host steve grumbine all right this is steve with macro and cheese folks i’ve got dr jason hickle

1:51

joining me today and i’ve tried to get together with this gentleman for a while now his work indeed growth is absolutely

1:58

must read everything that he has put out has been absolute gold and it was my distinct

2:05

honor for him to agree to come on with me let me introduce him a little bit more dr jason hickle is an economic

2:12

anthropologist author and fellow of the royal society of arts he’s a visiting

2:17

senior fellow at the international inequalities institute at the london school of economics

2:23

and professor at the institute for environmental science and technology at the autonomous university of barcelona

2:30

he is associate editor of the journal world development and serves on the

2:35

statistical advisory panel for the un human development report in 2020 the

2:40

advisory board of the green new deal for europe and the harvard landsat commission on reparations and

2:47

redistributive justice jason’s research focuses on global inequality political economy host

2:54

development and ecological economics which are the subjects of his two most recent books the divide a brief guide to

3:02

global inequality and its solutions penguin 2017 and less is more how d

3:08

growth will save the world penguin 2020. and let me say i’m a project manager by trade and my tagline is i am the lessest

3:15

more project manager so this is really neat jason thank you so much for joining me today sir thanks

3:22

very much steve it’s good to be with you absolutely so this word degrowth it

3:27

scares some people that word is especially in economic terms it kind of jolts it

3:33

what is degrowth yeah it is it’s a striking term i agree i should mention i didn’t come up with a

3:39

term it was around before i started writing about it but in fact it’s got an interesting pedigree that is rooted in

3:44

the anti-colonial struggle from the global stats we can discuss that later but before i describe what degrowth is

3:50

let me just briefly kind of outline the key background stakes of this question okay

3:56

so obviously we’re in a crisis of ecological breakdown and crucially this is not just about climate change which

4:02

is what we focus on mostly in terms of our media and so on we’re also overshooting

4:07

several other key planetary boundaries and we see this in the form of habitat destruction soil depletion deforestation

4:14

and biodiversity loss okay and these dimensions of the crisis are being driven by excess resource use so

4:21

in other words all the material stuff that we extract and produce and consume okay so we have to pay attention to both

4:27

of these issues emissions and energy on the one hand and resource use on the other and the two are very closely tied because the more

4:34

resources we use the more energy we require and the more energy require the more difficult it is to decarbonize

4:39

right and unfortunately you know too often the resource youth side of this equation falls out of the picture and it’s really

4:46

important to bring that back in and that’s what ecological economics has been about for decades okay so

4:52

now people have a tendency to think about the ecological crisis in terms of the anthropocene right and clearly this

5:00

language is useful for certain purposes but it’s also incorrect it’s incorrect in the sense that it’s not actually

5:06

humans as such that are causing this crisis but rather a global economic system capitalism that’s organized

5:13

around the interests of powerful states corporations and rich individuals and this is very clear in the empirical

5:19

record and this is something my work focuses on just to give two key points here the

5:25

first is that the countries of the global north by which i mean the u.s canada europe australia new zealand

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israel japan are responsible for 92 of all global emissions in excess of the

5:38

safe planetary boundary so in other words the emissions that are causing climate chaos meanwhile the majority of global south

5:44

countries are still well within their fair share of the planetary boundary so right off the bat we have to recognize

5:50

that what we’re facing in terms of the ecological crisis amounts to a process of colonization

5:55

right and this is a term that scholars in the global south have used for a long time a process of atmospheric

6:01

colonization understanding the atmosphere as a commons which all of us depend on for our survival but a small faction of rich

6:07

countries have basically appropriated it for their own enrichment with severe consequences for all of life

6:14

on earth and then the same is true of resource use and this is the second key piece of

6:19

it more than three quarters of excess resource use is due to consumption of high income countries right on average

6:26

they consume about 28 material tons of stuff per person per year which is around four times over the sustainable

6:33

boundary okay so if everyone on the planet was to consume like that then we would need four planets to sustain us maybe you’ve heard

6:39

this before again this is empirically derived research here and crucially all of this is

6:45

disproportionately harming poor countries we know that climate breakdown hurts the global south the hardest in

6:52

terms of droughts famines mass displacements our media doesn’t cover that very much

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but that’s a fact 98 of climate-related deaths happen in the global south even though they haven’t contributed almost

7:03

anything to the crisis and the same is true of resource use again the majority of the material stuff that

7:09

we consume in the global north is comprised of materials that are extracted from the global south so

7:14

basically the benefits are captured in rich countries but the ecological impact of that extraction is effectively

7:20

offshored to poorer countries and this is clear if you just look at like beef consumption in the usa depends on

7:26

deforestation of the amazon the tech industry in germany depends on mining in the congo the cosmetic industry in

7:32

britain depends on palm oil plantations in indonesia and so on okay so

7:37

the key background point i want to establish here is that the crisis is playing out along colonial

7:42

lines and entails processes of colonization that we need to be cognizant of

7:49

so against this background we have deep growth and the degrowth principle is very simple

7:56

recognizing that rich countries are driving this crisis it calls for rich countries to abandon growth as an

8:01

objective and actively reduce excess resource and energy use

8:06

in a safe just and equitable way and that last dimension there the safe

8:12

just and equitable principles are crucial because that’s what distinguishes degrowth from like a run-of-the-mill recession right so the

8:18

idea here is to simultaneously scale down resource and energy use while at the same time

8:24

improving people’s lives improving social outcomes so what does this look like in practice it’s actually

8:30

very straightforward in terms of the principle right now every economist on the planet virtually except for ecological

8:36

economists assume that all sectors of the economy must grow all the time regardless of

8:42

whether or not we actually need them to and of course in an era of ecological crisis this is an insane thing to do

8:50

so instead we propose we should decide what sectors or industries or forms of production we actually want to expand

8:57

public transportation renewable energy public education whatever it might be things we need and what sectors are

9:04

clearly destructive and should be actively scaled down and here i have in mind things like suv production private

9:10

jet production industrial beef advertising fast fashion the military industrial complex the practice of

9:17

planned obsolescence whereby corporations design products to break down so as to increase turnover there

9:23

are huge chunks of our economy in the global north that are irrelevant to human well-being and are organized

9:29

almost entirely around elite consumption and accumulation and corporate power okay so we have to

9:35

be able to distinguish what’s important about production versus what is damaging and then from that principle we

9:42

recognize that as we scale down less necessary industries clearly the economy needs less labor

9:48

now under normal circumstances that would mean unemployment and this is basically why the conversation never happens right

9:54

but ecological economists propose that there’s a very simple fix for this which is basically simply to

10:00

shorten the working week and share necessary labor more evenly thereby putting an end to unemployment

10:07

and of course the mmt principle of a public job guarantee can be a crucial tool toward this end to ensure everyone

10:14

has access to the training necessary to participate in socially necessary useful activities right

10:21

and then of course you distribute income more fairly using policies like a minimum income and a maximum income

10:27

wealth taxes living wage policies etc and crucially and this is a really key part of d

10:32

growth research is you decommodify and expand public services okay so not just

10:37

healthcare and education but public transportation housing energy internet

10:43

all the basics for good living should be decommodified those key goods should be decommodified so that everyone can

10:50

access the goods they need to live well with a high standard of well-being without needing ever increasing income

10:56

in order to do so so this principle of decommodification is key to improving what i call the

11:01

welfare purchasing power of income income in and of itself is not actually

11:06

a good metric for well-being what matters is what that income can buy in terms of access to key provisions and in

11:14

a country like the usa where key provisions are all privatized and commodified and expensive then basically

11:21

you have to have very high income to access those things which is why half the country can’t access decent healthcare can’t afford healthcare so

11:28

you decommodify public services to improve the welfare purchasing power of income which takes a lot of pressure off of the need for additional growth so in

11:35

sem it’s basically simply a matter of reorganizing the economy around meeting

11:40

human needs rather than around elite consumption and capital accumulation

11:45

so that’s kind of degrowth in a nutshell it’s interesting i was just reading lenin and the imperialism the

11:53

final stage of capital or i don’t remember the title of it offhand but it’s just reading how he was talking

12:00

about how finance capital is destroying the world he was saying this back in the 1900s

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here we are today growth has got to be predicated on finance capital this is

12:13

where people are extracting surplus value from everything and everywhere in every country

12:20

and i think you said in one of your most recent writings something to the effect of eight people have more wealth

12:27

than 50 of the entire globe that’s absolutely insane and there’s no way

12:32

they earn that that is 100 investment that’s finance that’s something other than

12:38

earned income labor it’s absolutely terrifying

12:44

you said something else too that i think is really important that i want to tap into and that is that the gdp is an

12:51

indiscriminate number it doesn’t really say much of anything basically the sum total of all financial transactions

12:58

if you will but simultaneously looking at the real resource usage they don’t seem to be

13:05

tied together in sense of people are making money hand over fist without any kind of a hedge

13:12

against the extractive nature of the resources they’re plundering i’m curious how do we decouple gdp and get away from

13:20

gdp so we can actually look at what the real impacts on the economy are

13:26

how in the world will we dislodge such a system it seems quite a challenge huh

13:32

yeah okay i mean there’s so much in what you just raised i’m not sure where to start but let’s see so first of all yeah

13:37

lenin i didn’t realize we’d be talking about lenin today but it’s sorry so let’s think about this though you

13:44

know what’s interesting to me is when i engage in public conversations about these issues it becomes clear that

13:50

people’s assumption about capitalism is that basically it’s a system of markets and trade and this is of course why it

13:56

seems so natural and obvious and why could you ever disagree with capitalism it’s just what humans obviously do

14:01

in reality of course this is not true markets and trade have been around for thousands of years and we’re around for

14:07

thousands of years before capitalism capitalism is a recent phenomenon in world history only 500

14:13

years old and is fundamentally distinguished by

14:18

well on the one hand crucially it’s a system of enclosure and appropriation so by enclosure what i

14:24

mean is the enclosure of commons and the commodification of the means of

14:29

survival so as to create a desperate labor force a sort of a mass pool of

14:35

exploitable labor and then the second key thing about capitalism is that it’s a system that’s organized around and dependent on

14:41

perpetual expansion and it is the first and only economic system in all of history to be organized in that way

14:47

and this is important to distinguish what we mean when we say capitalism so that we can have a conversation about

14:52

what we’re actually dealing with here without assuming that this is just about markets and trade no you can have markets and trade without capitalism and

14:59

that’s exactly what we have to pursue so let’s be able to talk about what capitalism is and what we might want to

15:05

change about it that’s the one thing so then about gdp look gdp is a problem for all sorts of

15:10

reasons for ecological economists the problem with gdp is that rising gdp is

15:16

always just considered to be a good i mean this is taken for granted in economics virtually the entire discipline is organized around

15:21

maximizing gdp on the assumption that gdp is automatically good

15:27

and of course this is also effectively the alibi of capitalism right is growth

15:32

if capitalism is a system of appropriation and elite accumulation and enclosure which quite often does significant harm to communities and to

15:39

ecosystems how does it sustain its hegemony its ideological hegemony and the answer to

15:45

that is the language of growth as long as what you’re doing leads to growth

15:50

everyone’s going to buy into it because growth sounds so good it sounds so plants grow humans grow we all want

15:56

growth it’s the alibi of appropriation and so what we have to recognize is that

16:02

we have to break that ideology that growth is a proxy for human well-being

16:07

which very clearly is not we know for example that and this is the key thing to understand

16:13

is that rich countries don’t need more growth in order to achieve improvements in human well-being past to certain points

16:21

which rich nations have long exceeded the relationship between growth and human well-being completely breaks down

16:26

and other factors are much more relevant so take the usa for example the most advanced capitalist country on

16:32

the planet where commodification has gone further than anywhere else one of the richest countries in the world in terms of gdp

16:37

per capita and yet spain beats the us in terms of social indicators across the

16:43

board including a life expectancy that is five years longer despite having 55 percent less income

16:49

portugal beats the us with 65 less and these are not just two examples there are dozens right so

16:55

it becomes clear what actually matters when it comes to welfare is not aggregate gdp growth but rather

17:01

effectively what are you producing that promote well-being are you producing tear gas are you producing vaccines right in gdp those things are considered

17:08

equal by dollar amounts do people have access to useful things that you’re producing such as healthcare and

17:13

education or are those things commodified and how is income distributed right do

17:18

people ultimately have access to decent wages and livelihoods and access to public goods

17:25

or do they not and the answer here is that in rich countries you don’t need more growth in order to do the latter to

17:31

improve livelihoods improve access to housing education healthcare etc etc you can do it right now

17:37

by reducing inequality and investing in public services and decommodifying them so that’s kind of the key principle here

17:42

we have to break that ideology that links growth with automatically good

17:48

and of course look the truth is it’s actually quite annoying that we’re still having this conversation because this

17:53

has been known about gdp for nearly 100 years right simon kuznets himself who designed the

18:00

measure pointed out that this is a terrible way to measure social progress

18:07

because gdp leaves so much out there’s so much value because it only counts commodities

18:13

so there’s so much value that gets left out subsistence commons sharing care

18:18

volunteering nature the value of public services is left out of gdp pretty much anything that doesn’t

18:24

have a price is excluded right regardless of how fundamental it is to our civilization

18:30

and then on the other hand it doesn’t count the social and ecological costs of commodity production so you tear down a

18:36

forest and sell the timber to ikea gdp goes up doesn’t count the cost of losing that forest as habitat for species or a

18:43

future resource for humans if you privatize the uk health service

18:49

gdp goes up because you’re turning into a commodity but access to health care goes down and

18:55

that’s not accounted for in gdp so we’re so far away from kuznets warning

19:00

which was simply to say calls for more growth should always specify growth of what and for what

19:06

purpose and our economists and our politicians have lost touch with that reality

19:13

so it’s essential that we have a conversation about shifting away from this mindless machine of expansion

19:20

a friend of mine named phil lawn he’s an ecological economist down in australia

19:25

has been hyping the genuine progress indicator as a replacement for gdp for

19:30

some time now he seems like a lonely voice in the wilderness screaming out is there any progress for pushing a

19:38

model that actually does represent things like what steve keane puts out with gauging energy use and soil

19:44

consumption and the genuine progress indicator that phil lawn and guys like stephen hale talk about

19:50

where have you seen the trend going if anything yeah the genuine progress indicator gpi super

19:58

important intervention and i think it’s gaining traction these days thanks to the efforts of your friends

20:04

so basically for your listeners who don’t know gpi effectively very simplified starts with gdp

20:10

and then adds things like values that are not counted by gdp and then subtracts the costs

20:16

in terms of social and ecological costs associated with commodity production so what you’re left with is an indicator

20:22

that gives you a much more holistic view of what’s happening in the economy in terms of net improvement and that

20:29

decline and the idea is if politicians were maximizing something like gpi rather

20:34

than gdp then they would be incentivized to try to improve social and ecological outcomes while reducing social and

20:41

ecological bads right we would all agree this is a better approach to take but the other alternative to gpi

20:48

proposed by ecological economists is effectively a dashboard approach so recognizing that one of the problems

20:54

with gdp is the fact that it’s an aggregate indicator and it’s difficult to solve that problem

21:00

with another aggregate indicator so there’s always a danger of fetishizing aggregate indicators so yes

21:07

and the weights within them are always contested right and we need to be able to see

21:13

that waiting and most people don’t have access to that so a better approach is maybe to establish what it is that you

21:18

want your economy to achieve in terms of social and ecological goals so let’s have a conversation about it

21:25

the social goals we want to achieve are maybe full employment better access to livelihoods housing education healthcare

21:31

public transportation renewable energy etc so focus on improving those with specific targets

21:38

rather than just growing aggregate commodity production as a proxy and hoping that

21:43

that will somehow magically solve your social problems right and then also establish clearly your ecological goals

21:50

and those ecological goals for rich countries must include clear caps on fossil fuel and resource

21:57

use you cap fossil fuel and resource use and then you scale it down on an annual

22:03

schedule until they’re back within sustainable levels by some target date okay 20 35 2050 whatever it might be

22:10

so in some ways i’m actually like i love gpi actually i think it’s super useful but in some ways i would actually

22:17

promote probably above that this sort of dashboard oriented approach which i think is a bit more accessible to people

22:22

and this way when the news announces every day or every quarter or whatever it is what the results are of the

22:28

economy we’re actually talking about things like the level of biodiversity and the level

22:34

of decent housing access and the level of renewable energy and the level of soil health etc etc which i

22:40

think would just it would help our conversation publicly so much because right now all of that is off the table

22:46

and not being considered at all you know it’s interesting we talk about stock flow consistent modeling and

22:52

sectoral balances approach to understanding the economy itself and i could see this rolling into

22:59

something like that you’re looking at domestic public rest of world or the

23:04

import export position balance of trade and something adding to that to make that even more valid that

23:12

is an accounting identity but it’s also a measure if you understand where you are in your flows

23:18

you can understand where you need to apply deficit spending right in this case these indicators every time i see

23:25

an indicator when i understand the underlying formula that generates that indicator it informs me of what i might

23:32

need to do differently so how might this dashboard approach

23:37

inform policy activism this is a bit expansive but i think they’re tied hand in hand

23:44

yeah exactly and look i think actually mmt comes into this equation i wanted to make sure to talk about mnt

23:50

while i’m with you so i’ve been thinking about like the synergies between mmt and d growth and i

23:56

think this actually pertains to the dashboard question quite directly so let me expand so yeah for d growth basically

24:02

there are two main objectives one is an ecological objective which is to reduce resource and energy throughput and then

24:08

the other is a social objective which is to improve people’s access to the things they need to live well and ensure that

24:14

secure right so basically a social guarantee so mmt has done a really good job at

24:20

pointing out that you can basically issue the currency if you have control over sovereign currency issue the

24:25

currency to fund a job guarantee and universal public services thereby solving in effect the social question

24:32

clearly you can also use it to invest in renewable energy and regenerative agriculture right at the same time

24:38

and that’s clear effectively what you’re doing is you’re mobilizing domestic resources and energy around these key objectives

24:44

on the other hand mmt talks about taxation as useful in as much as you can pull

24:50

demand out of the economy when necessary to prevent inflation to check inflation risks right

24:56

what i think is overlooked here is that by the same token you can use taxation

25:01

to pull excess demand out of the economy to reduce resource and energy use right specifically among the rich

25:08

constraining the resource and energy use of the rich is essential to bringing our economies back into balance with the

25:14

living world can’t we just the rich [Laughter] so i think the mmt proposal for how to

25:20

think about taxation i.e not as a way of funding public activity

25:25

but rather as a way of pulling demand out of the economy can be applied to ecological economics as a tool for

25:32

reducing excess resource and energy use and that i think is very promising and so i think that when we have a

25:37

dashboard in front of us of ecological and social goals we want to achieve mmt can be a tool to accomplish quite a lot

25:43

of that of course assuming you have a progressive government and the political will to do so

25:48

and those are big deals and i got to be honest with you this is one of the things that snatches my soul from me

25:55

each of these governments that creates their own unit of account and has control of their unit of account has a

26:01

margin of food sovereignty energy sovereignty baked into their monetary

26:06

sovereignty they don’t really require money they’re not seeking money they

26:11

create money at will so what they’re really seeking is resources

26:17

resource extraction access to markets which then indicates well the countries

26:22

aren’t businesses so what exactly is it that they’re clearing markets for

26:28

i mean the corporate class capturing our governments around the world this neoliberal structure

26:34

this corporatist style of government is taking capitalism to a whole new level

26:40

how do we decouple corporations from our government take cut control back

26:46

short of a ill-fated revolution that none of us are prepared for i hate to say it

26:51

there’s got to be some sort of mechanism because otherwise we’re coming

26:56

up with all these great ideas wonderful scenarios that could save us from extinction

27:02

so how do we get these governments to serve mankind instead of capital

27:08

your observation about sovereign currency i think is so powerful and this should strike anyone who has read the

27:14

mmt literature is immediately the question becomes if there’s no scarcity of money then why

27:19

do we have a scarcity of money right and the answer basically is it’s an artificial scarcity there’s a scarcity

27:26

that is induced in our economy for the purposes of ensuring that you

27:31

have control over labor and resources right so basically mmt proposes that you can

27:37

pretty easily solve the social question but governments don’t do that because what would happen then is there would be

27:42

no incentive for workers to sell themselves for cheap to corporations like why would you work for mcdonald’s

27:48

flipping burgers for a few dollars an hour when you could have a living wage doing

27:54

dignified socially necessary work through a public job guarantee system that has democratic control of the

27:59

workplace etc etc participating the most important collective projects of our era

28:05

you would not choose to work for mcdonald’s you would not and so in order to maintain the supply of labor

28:10

to corporations there’s an artificial scarcity of money and provisioning that has to be induced

28:17

right the us government is a great example of this so one of the reasons why our even progressive governments

28:23

like say dubai demonstration buy into the support for corporations

28:29

the catastrophe that you’re mentioning is because they believe that growth is good and so anything that delivers

28:35

growth is something they pursue and if that means handing power to corporations and heading resources to corporations and

28:40

ensuring a steady flow of deep labor etc etc then you do that only once progressive politics breaks from the

28:47

obsession with growthism can we have a more rational conversation about how to run the economy and then

28:52

what you do is you do what’s called for in the degrowth literature as you actively disaccumulate capital and you

28:58

decommodify key parts of the economy and markets continue to operate but within those parameters right so

29:04

disaccumulation beak modification and then caps on resource and energy use these are the core principles

29:10

but right now the progressive movement is effectively not talking about this so that has to change i think that

29:16

challenging the ideological hegemony of growth is an essential step there

29:32

you are listening to macro and cheese a podcast brought to you by real progressives a non-profit organization

29:39

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and follow us on periscope twitter and instagram [Music]

30:13

[Music]

30:21

i’m going to say something that you may object to but i want to say it clearly so that you hear where i’m coming from

30:27

i was a huge bernie sanders supporter and he’s probably short of henry wallace

30:33

probably the most progressive we’ve ever had we haven’t really had a guy like a

30:39

bernie sanders leading a left movement in the united states and around the world bernie wouldn’t look all that left

30:45

he’d look kind of normal so when i hear biden put up as a progressive i can’t help but chuckle

30:51

just a little bit because biden and her right neo-liberal

30:57

and i gotta tell you my listeners will hate me for saying this but there’s been a few moments where i’ve

31:03

had to tip my hat to biden and i did not intend to tip my hat to he’s done a lot of things that i’m not happy about from

31:10

bombing families in afghanistan but that notwithstanding compared to his predecessor he’s done a

31:17

few things that make you go wow maybe he’s listening to some people i think the tepid response to

31:23

student loan forgiveness just an absolute albatross on older workers that had to go back to school to reinvent

31:30

themselves after the last global crash that we had in 08 and 09 he has also not helped young kids out in

31:37

any way in terms of their student debt he threw 50 million of a two trillion dollar albatross

31:43

and he basically shot all over a green new deal so there’s some things about buying that

31:48

you have to tip your hat to i’ve never seen a democrat less concerned about the deficit

31:54

biden is obviously broken clearly away from obama and definitely broken away from the clintons so in that sense he

32:00

scores some major progressive points but i would say though that we need a lot better and i’m afraid that we need it a

32:06

lot quicker than we’re going to get it i think you talked about the soil and its ability to sustain agriculture

32:14

maybe 60 years as it stands now if we continue farming as we are so there’s a lot of things that are

32:20

happening really quickly life is coming at us fast and we don’t have time for dinosaurs

32:25

like the biden administration that has not adopted these things full-throatedly and we’re the ones that are the worst

32:32

offenders and yet we’re only providing tepid responses so this kind of leads me to the more

32:38

fundamental question that i raised when i talked to you about war and about the approach to

32:43

not just colonizing the planet but policing and extracting from the planet

32:48

and the modus operandi of invading these countries for underlying resources and

32:54

that’s both anecdotal but i think there’s a lot of empirical evidence that would suggest that our military actions

33:00

are less altruistic and more extractive and also more

33:06

devastating to the environment and ecology as a whole what would you say to that yes there’s no question i think

33:12

that the most effective analysis of war and specifically the us and nato war machine

33:18

i guess is to point out that it is about strategic control over access to

33:24

resource flows right and that is important because growth in the u.s and western europe the global

33:30

north basically at large depends heavily on net appropriation of resources

33:36

energy and labor in the global south right and this is not just the loony rantings of someone who’s

33:42

talking about abstract neocolonialism this is empirically demonstrated and i’d love to talk about this a little bit actually so

33:48

yes but first let me rewind and just talk about the colonial period proper we know from economic historians very

33:53

clearly that growth in the north relied on forms of appropriation from the south think about the industrial revolution

34:00

the main commodity of the industrial revolution was cotton right cotton of course not grown in england

34:06

cotton grown on land appropriated from indigenous americans and grown by enslaved africans

34:12

but also relied on sugar grown in the same fashion grain appropriated from india on a mass scale timber

34:18

appropriated from india countless resources appropriated from colonial africa etc and all of this crucially

34:23

also with significant ecological consequences which are often not spoken about jason moore’s work does a really

34:30

good job on pointing to the fact that colonial forms of appropriation were devastating for local

34:36

ecologies including mass deforestation in the americas now that economy

34:42

remains more or less in place today growth in the global north continues to rely on a large net appropriation of

34:49

resources from the south although now it’s facilitated not primarily through direct military occupation and colonial

34:55

control but rather through price inequalities in international trade and commodity supply chains right

35:01

now let me explain briefly what i’m after here sure in international trade when you have price inequalities i.e

35:07

wages and resource prices in the south are lower than they are in the north what that means is for every unit of

35:14

embodied labor and resources the south imports from the north they have to export many more times to pay for it

35:20

which facilitates a net transfer from the south to north now price inequalities are not natural as marx

35:26

famously pointed out in the 19th century they are induced through geopolitical

35:31

power right and commercial power so in the colonial era of course you drive down wages by enclosing commons

35:39

and dispossessing people and destroying subsistence economies to create a mass of unemployed people

35:44

today it is through a variety of different mechanisms the structural adjustment programs that

35:50

were imposed across the global south by the world bank and the imf which are controlled by the us government

35:55

primarily but the g7 more generally massively cut public sector employment

36:00

they cut labor standards they cut environmental standards et cetera et cetera in order to

36:07

depress the costs of labor and resources and restore northern access to the cheap

36:12

labor and raw materials they had enjoyed under the colonial period right and so price inequalities were induced

36:18

by neoliberal structural adjustment programs in the 80s and 90s today as a consequence of neoliberal

36:25

globalization global south countries are heavily dependent on foreign currency to finance

36:30

debt and imports therefore they’re all competing to attract foreign investments therefore they’re in a global race to the bottom

36:36

to deliver cheap labor and resources to multinational companies effectively as tribute and these multinational companies also

36:43

furthermore exercise extraordinary monopoly power firms from the global north control 97

36:49

of all patents in the global economy which gives them tremendous power to depress

36:54

the prices of suppliers who again are overwhelmingly in the south where all of the labor and resources are mobilized

37:00

think of your iphone think of your laptop think of your clothes thus squeezing suppliers and pushing wages to

37:06

below the cost of subsistence right the result being of course mass poverty across the global south that is

37:12

intractable so all of this induces price inequalities which sustain a flow of resources from

37:18

south to north on a mass scale and let me just give you an idea for what the scale of this is

37:24

this comes from research from christian dorninger published earlier this year using input output models

37:31

a net transfer of 10 billion tons of embodied raw materials okay so that’s double the total mass of resources

37:38

extracted from the continents of africa per year net transferred from south of the north 800 million hectares of embodied lands

37:45

which is twice the size of india imagine land twice the size of india

37:50

mobilized entirely around net transfers to the north of land-based goods

37:55

overwhelming it’s overwhelming 23 exajoules of embodied energy which is five times more than iran’s total annual

38:02

production of oil i mean a tremendous scale so think about it

38:07

and this is where the ecological economic arguments about thinking about resources in terms of use value becomes

38:13

important that quantity of land could provide nutritious food for four to six

38:18

billion people ending hunger forever right but instead it’s used to produce things like sugar

38:24

for coca-cola and beef for mcdonald’s consumed in the global north that quantity of energy could provide

38:30

electricity for 1.5 billion people which is the entire population of the continents of africa

38:35

while powering infrastructure for public healthcare education transportation internet for everybody

38:41

but instead it’s appropriated to power suvs in europe for example right so

38:47

we live in this global economy where the south’s vast resources

38:52

and vast reserves of labor are being mobilized around servicing northern consumerism and growth

38:59

when they could be used to meet local human needs and this is why i come to de-growth from the perspective

39:05

of anti-imperialism recognizing that we live in an imperialist world economy and de-growth

39:11

as a demand for ending those patterns of net appropriation that sustain such high levels of excess consumption of rich

39:17

nations the ultimate demand being one of effectively convergence right

39:24

rich countries should reduce their resource use to get back within sustainable levels while poor countries should reclaim

39:31

their resources mobilizing them around meeting human needs with throughput converging globally at a

39:38

level that’s consistent with universal welfare and ecological stability that is

39:43

the world we should be imagining and calling for and that vision emerges clearly from

39:48

this literature i want to throw you a bone here on this one this is something i don’t think a

39:54

lot of people talk about but the epicenter of where all this

39:59

race to the bottom mindset begins i look in the united states directly as

40:05

rust belts are created as sweetheart deals for tax bases are given in texas

40:11

to extract a company from detroit and leaving them destitute and leaving

40:16

all those people behind and this mindset of the states competing

40:22

for business has generated the race to the bottom there is no up there is only

40:27

down and the states are currency users they have no ability to generate currency to

40:33

be able to offset those shortages that are left behind and so schools which are funded by the

40:39

income taxes of zip codes those schools become destitute we create this impoverished area once again that has no

40:46

hope unless the federal government steps in on a global scale the exact same

40:51

model and this is why i brought up lenin in the beginning was that i was having a flashback

40:58

as to watching finance capital capturing whatever territory it’s trying to

41:04

capture and in this case on a global scale we got the haves in the north stealing from the have-nots in the south

41:12

and in the u.s i can’t quantify this so this is purely conjecture but i’m guessing that the

41:18

states that are the quote-unquote net producers the ones that have the businesses internally in their state

41:25

are like germany if you will in the eu whereas the ones that are not in that

41:31

condition are like greece and you can see this dynamic through sectoral balances but i think this is

41:37

why i come back to the dashboard idea that you had merging it with that sectoral balances approach because

41:43

if you realize there’s a deficit in the public space you have a remedy you know we need to

41:49

deficit spend let’s see where and that’s where that dashboard would kick in and let us understand how to tune the eq

41:56

but in this case do you see any tie-in to what i stated there with the states and competing with one another and

42:02

extracting those companies based on cutting the bottom out of taxes and ultimately drying up the public service

42:09

and the public purpose in each of those states i think it’s almost a one for one i could be wrong but i think i see that

42:16

i think you’re absolutely right ever since i encountered mmt this has struck me as well about the us is that clearly there’s a crisis for the

42:23

poor states that are not able to issue their own currency right which is a huge problem

42:29

it means they’re reliant entirely on whatever federal funding they can achieve or gdp growth and so

42:35

which means attracting companies and cutting your taxes this is a major issue i feel so bad for

42:41

anybody who’s in state governments because your hands are literally tied and that’s a disaster i don’t know what the solution is to this

42:47

i’d love to hear what mt people think about that but clearly i 100 affirm what you’re

42:53

saying which is that imperialism does not operate only on the world stage although that’s its primary

42:58

manifestation clearly within the us there are clear imperial dynamics and we

43:03

can see this very clearly when it comes to the resource frontiers in the u.s itself

43:09

look at the indigenous struggle against the pipelines right there’s a militarized fight for access

43:15

to resources that are effectively controlled by indigenous communities and that’s to say nothing about their

43:20

long-term appropriation over the past several hundred years so we have to recognize imperial

43:25

dynamics that continue to operate within the us today it is after all a colonized territory and has not been decolonized

43:32

and we have to call for that what’s interesting in the mmt space is that

43:38

there’s this movement among progressive economists in the global south people like fadel kaboob and ndongosambasia

43:45

who have been pointing out that you can use mmt principles as a tool for

43:51

decolonization as a tool for reducing your dependence on foreign currency by

43:56

reducing your dependence on imports and so on right yes and that’s powerful it’s

44:01

interesting for me to think about mmt as a tool for anti-imperialist economic policy but yes

44:08

the u.s states or u.s communities to be more specific don’t have that option which is really unfortunate

44:15

and dango and foddle are both friends of mine have interviewed indongo about the cfa frank and that whole approach to

44:23

colonial africa and decolonizing and talking about job guarantee in emerging

44:29

countries and foddle is very close to our program you’ll frequently see him with a real

44:34

progressive shirt on and he’s a core part of what we do here

44:39

and his approach to the global south and a global green new deal this is exactly why i’m trying to marry

44:46

these things together i see you as very much a part of our world and i want to tie these adjacent minded

44:53

schools when i think of mmt i think of it as plumbing it’s not really ideological at

44:59

its core so narrow mmt is accounting it’s understanding banking the way it

45:05

really flows once you can demystify and debunk all the false scarcity ideas about money

45:12

then you start what i call next leveling with the work that you’re doing and the work that steve keane is doing about

45:19

various things that exceed that monetary thing because ultimately mmt’s purpose is to make money the least important

45:25

thing to consider here it’s really all about resources to take jacque fresco’s respect of on a

45:33

resource-based economy mmt takes that approach as well in terms

45:38

of understanding that it’s really do we have an economy that can produce the real resources that

45:45

we need for consumption that really is the key indicator of what you’ve got versus money

45:52

so from that standpoint i want to take it one final step and this is where i would like to close this out

45:59

the word the growth as we said in the beginning is a bit of a shocker just like mmt is horrific for marketing

46:06

anytime you add theory to something theory is a very scientific word but it was also more of a blog post where

46:13

somebody said hey maybe we call them mmt but degrowth has that same thing

46:18

you may as well said communism here how do we take these principles

46:24

and advance them how do we market this because i am very sympathetic to socialism i’m very sympathetic to

46:30

communism the writers and the struggles of the past haiti and russian revolution

46:36

that speaks to my heart but clearly even in the face of the calamity we’re facing this

46:42

hurricane that tore through the us here recently should be a light bulb moment for a lot of people

46:48

and the fires in the pacific northwest how do we market this to where regular

46:54

people are starting to use this as part of their common vernacular so they’re thinking this way because

47:00

we can’t survive if we don’t get this right we’re done yeah so there’s a lot to think about

47:05

here first of all the term degrowth the idea of it it’s a missile word

47:10

it immediately triggers a response and the response illuminates the

47:16

assumptions that people have about growth and how the economy should work which creates space for a conversation

47:21

now quite often it’s a tense conversation people are like resistant but what’s

47:26

interesting about it and this is what happened to me with it is that if you’re reflective enough to be like whoa okay uh my assumptions are being

47:33

challenged here let me investigate this further think about it more carefully and then it can produce epiphanies and i

47:39

think that’s very useful intellectually terms like this similar to say using the term

47:44

decolonization in like 1920 most people in polite europeans decided to be like what are you talking about

47:50

that sounds crazy but then it opens a space for you to say decolonization is crucial for an ethical society right and

47:57

that’s effectively the conversation that’s been provoked with the growth now there’s a question here do you want that

48:03

to be a public facing term i’m not committed to that necessarily people want to say they’re

48:08

eco-socialists which i would consider myself i think basically the principle of ecosocialism being design the economy

48:15

such that it meets everyone’s needs at a high standard while at the same time operating within planetary boundaries

48:22

right and also it should not be an imperialist economy so and then of course d growth is simply

48:28

what rich nations need to do to get to that vision scale down excess resource and energy

48:33

use etc so i don’t know if de-growth is like the isms it’s like less the horizon and more

48:39

of the path if you will but the question is raised is eco-socialism any less of a triggering

48:45

term for people in the u.s i doubt that’s the case and i would still like to retain the use of d

48:52

growth because it’s such a useful analytical tool and has been so well defined in the literature

48:57

and is so urgent as well in terms of the ecological crisis i find it useful in that respect but i

49:03

think what’s important of course is the policies we have to get the policies taken up

49:08

regardless of what we’re calling them and i think that one way to approach that is to shift the conversation away

49:14

from emissions as such but rather to fossil fuels and people understand that fossil fuels

49:20

are causing climate breakdown and so it should be rational therefore to cap fossil fuels and ratchet them down on an

49:28

annual schedule until they are at zero by say 2035 in the case of the us and

49:33

the uk etc now you scale up renewable energy as fast as you can in the meantime but with

49:38

any energy gap that you have the idea is you want to allocate energy in such a way that you prioritize

49:45

people’s needs and well-being and essential services etc and this is where de-growth social policies become so

49:52

essential we can establish universal access to the resources people need to live well and to good

49:57

livelihoods with mmt policy with degrowth policy etc and that can all be packaged into

50:04

a demand for declining fossil fuels which sounds so reasonable but it’s

50:09

remarkable that this is not a public-facing demand the idea for capping and declining fossil fuels and

50:15

it needs to be we need to be rallying around that you’ve heard kerry talk about the u.s

50:20

emissions plan we’re going to cut emissions by half in 10 years how are you going to do that

50:26

and the answer i kid you not is with technology we don’t have yet that technology being fantasy is about

50:33

carbon capture and storage that scientists routinely question the feasibility of and all this is a method

50:40

for getting away from the core question which is the urgency of capping and declining fossil fuel use

50:46

so if we can frame the ecological question around that then i think that we have a lot of traction and maybe

50:52

that’s the way to approach it but look i’m open to suggestions here well one of the things that jumps out at

50:57

me was biden’s buildback better approach and his focus now he’s almost going full ronald reagan

51:05

which should be terrifying to most lefties because he’s demonizing china

51:10

and using a cold war rhetoric to ramp up our

51:16

innovation and compete with china well competition at that level

51:21

is not going to generate de-growth it’s going to generate growth and dirty growth and a lot of friction as well

51:29

china has a totally different model of approaching not only their economy but

51:34

their relationships around the world but this is no less volatile and i

51:40

wonder i think biden is trying to appeal to republicans i think that we are in a collision

51:47

course with state capital neo-liberalism

51:52

any number of public-private partnerships we’re in a position now where getting

51:57

rid of patent laws and shrinking copyright protection basically creating a global commons to help everyone grow

52:05

we’re the opposite that we’re actually growing the other direction building more protections and becoming

52:11

more private i don’t want to worship at the altar of bill gates or any of these other rich

52:17

guys that are building phallic symbols to fly into space i want to really focus

52:23

on reinventing rediscovering the public purpose and it seems like the train is leaving

52:29

the station going that way and you and i are over here talking about a train going this way that doesn’t exist yet

52:35

and we’ve got to make it exist and that terrifies me jason this is one of the primary reasons

52:40

why i had you on here and you have been absolutely amazing let me give you the final thought on that and then we’ll

52:47

close out with where we can find your work yeah so the question of the us stands towards china is terrifying and also

52:53

just absurd given the fact that look the discourse on china and this needn’t be

52:58

read as a defense of china okay we’re all aware of china’s problems but china’s gdp per

53:04

capita is one-sixth that of the usa’s and yet it’s being trumped up as this

53:10

economic threat what does that mean i mean if you think about the significance of this the us is basically saying

53:16

global south countries are only allowed to develop up to a certain point but they’re never allowed to achieve

53:22

full sovereignty because that is a threat to our interests and that’s very troubling that’s a very

53:28

troubling claim which i think reveals the core imperialism of u.s geopolitical

53:35

strategy and i think that we need to reject it at every turn because that’s extremely dangerous

53:40

you’re right things are moving in that direction how do we get the train to move in the other direction in terms of strategy i think this is key

53:48

the environmentalist movements which is presently the movement addressing the ecological crisis is not going to

53:54

succeed on that matter alone and the reason is because they don’t have the political power to do so and there’s no

54:01

clear way they’ll be able to attain that political power so extinction rebellion fighters for future etc they can do a

54:06

great job at raising awareness and maybe even closing down streets say in central london or new york but they don’t have

54:13

the political power to establish the fundamental changes that we need what does have that political power is

54:18

working class formations now one of the problems we face is that the unions right now

54:24

and this has been true for decades tend to be resolutely growthists which is strange when you think that when you

54:30

consider the job of unions is to be a counterweight to capital unions are effectively aligning with the

54:37

interest of capital for the sake of endless commodity expansion on the grounds of this is the only way to

54:42

improve livelihoods and to improve people’s lives right so it’s essential that we’re organizing

54:49

within working-class formations and alongside them in alliance with them to build an awareness of how the social

54:56

problem can be solved in rich nations without additional growth and again mmt offers us the tools for doing that

55:02

public job guarantee shorter working week expanded public services etc if we can establish the principle of a

55:08

social guarantee then i think we’re on strong footing to start having a conversation about

55:14

actively scaling down destructive sectors of the economy because we no longer have to worry about

55:20

the boogeyman of unemployment right that artificial scarcity is now off the table

55:25

and we can have a rational conversation about the economy and so i guess this is simply to say alliances with working-class movements

55:32

are essential and i say this recognizing that in the us they’re very weak in western europe they’re much stronger

55:37

and that gives some hope i think there’s that and then the other thing i think is important here is alliances

55:43

with global south movements against imperialism and that’s important because again as

55:48

i’ve been at pains to establish the global economy is structured according to principles of imperialism the

55:54

ecological crisis is a symptom of imperialist forms of appropriation the people that have the skin in the

55:59

game here are the exploited countries of the world and the social movements there are very

56:05

clear that the crisis of ecological breakdown was not primarily a crisis of technology but rather primarily a crisis

56:11

of colonization and appropriation read for example the people’s agreements of kochibamba signed in 2010 by

56:18

thousands of social movements across the global south this principle is clear what we need to do in response is to

56:24

align as much as possible with anti-imperialist social movements in the global south

56:30

because anti-colonial struggle is the only struggle that has ever substantially changed the structure of

56:35

the global economy which happened in the mid 20th century before being reversed of course by neoliberal structural

56:41

adjustments and there’s potential for that to happen again and those are the alliances we need to create

56:46

and that’s important because right now in the global north the discussion about progressive economics and ecological

56:52

breakdown etc almost entirely excludes that dimension and certainly entirely excludes those

56:59

kinds of alliances it’s not an internationalist conversation in any true sense of the word and so i think

57:04

that is what we need to focus on establishing i think that is very well stated so i

57:11

have all your books and as i told you before i have not read all of your books but i own all of them because i want to

57:19

read them and with that in mind why don’t you tell our audience where they can find your

57:25

work and what you’re working on now okay so less is more and the divide are both

57:32

published by penguin you can buy them anywhere not but if you’re in the uk then hive is a

57:37

good kind of ethical alternative to amazon i’m less certain about the us but in the us i know you can buy less is

57:43

more from blackwell’s which is a british company that ships for free to the us and they send you a nice

57:50

oxford looking bookmark very cute so my work is all freely available on my

57:56

website jasonhickle.org my published academic work and my essays and so on and in terms of what i’m working on

58:03

these days increasingly working on further defining how imperialism works in the global economy

58:10

and how it relates to ecological breakdown and what strategies are sort of feasible

58:16

for us to pursue against that dual emergency so keep an eye out for more coming down the

58:21

pipeline in the next couple of months this has been absolutely amazing and i say this because all the guests i bring

58:28

on here i believe are amazing but this truly took me to a new place and

58:33

i’ve been super excited about this and you didn’t disappoint my friend i hope

58:38

that we can do this again in the future i hope you found value in coming on here because i’d like to marry d growth and

58:44

mmt i want the community that i work within and represent to really see this as

58:49

an extension of all the work that they’re doing i really find this to be a great marriage and i hope you do too

58:56

yeah thanks so much for the conversation it’s actually really enjoyable to talk to somebody who’s familiar with and he

59:01

was led actually on a lot of these spaces so thank you yeah it’s been really interesting for me

59:07

fantastic all right with that i’m steve grumbine with jason hickle macaron cheese we’re out of here

59:19

macro and cheese is produced by andy kennedy descriptive writing by virginia cox and promotional artwork by mindy

59:26

doan macron cheese is publicly funded by a real progressive patreon account

59:32

if you would like to donate to macro and cheese please visit patreon.com real

59:37

progressives

1:00:21

you

oooooo

Gehigarri batzuk:

Bill Mitchell-en Desazkundearen beharraz eta ‘aurrerazaleen’ jarrerak

Bill Mitchell: Deslotzea eta desazkundea

Bill Mitchell: Desazkundearen konteptua, erreforma ala iraultza?

Desazkundeaz: Erin Resemblance gehi Bill Mitchell

oooooo

Geure herriari, Euskal Herriari dagokionez, hona hemen gure apustu bakarra:

We Basques do need a real Basque independent State in the Western Pyrenees, just a democratic lay or secular state, with all the formal characteristics of any independent State: Central Bank, Treasury,

proper currency1, out of the European Distopia and faraway from NATO, being a BRICS partner…

Euskal Herriaren independentzia eta Mikel Torka

eta

Esadazu arren, zer da gu euskaldunok egiten ari garena eta zer egingo dugun

gehi

MTM: Zipriztinak (2), 2025: Warren Mosler

(Pinturak: Mikel Torka)

Gehigarriak:

Zuk ez dakizu ezer Ekonomiaz

MTM klase borrokarik gabe, kontabilitate hutsa

Anthony Anastosi: Estatu dirua, Klase borroka


1 This way, our new Basque government will have infinite money to deal with. (Gogoratzekoa: Moneta jaulkitzaileko kasu guztietan, Gobernuak infinitu diru dauka.)

Utzi erantzuna

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