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Full Employment Is National Security?

🔍 Executive Summary This document analyses the national security implications of a state-led Job Guarantee (JG) framework proposed by Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) economists. Contrary to some assumptions, such a program may serve as a highly effective stabilising force in preventing radicalisation and protecting the UK from domestic extremism. Key benefits include: Disruption of radical recruitment pipelines, Restoration of economic dignity in vulnerable communities, Enhanced labour mobility back to the private sector, Improved resilience of society during economic shocks. We recommend exploratory inter-agency dialogue on the security implications of full employment via public job guarantees. 🧠 Background The MMT school of macroeconomics holds that the UK government, as the issuer of the pound sterling, faces no financial constraint in employing unused domestic resources — particularly idle labour. The Job Guarantee (JG) acts as a permanent automatic stabilise...

Musings on Neil Wilson comments on land value tax

Claim one: “LVT is a very silly idea because you can’t assign a value to the land without knowing what the value of the denomination you are using is. That ends up being a circular argument.” Set one price JG hour unskilled labour. LVT needs JG. Claim two: Argument against land value tax “If you try to tax land, then the rich just put the price up, which will then get paid because of the government injections the land tax is trying to fund.” True but land value goes up based on rent as they charge more. In reality LVT is matched with corresponding tax cuts on output and employment, tenants’ net incomes will increase, which will increase rental values and hence rents; so it looks as if landlords are ‘passing on’ the LVT when actually they are just increasing the rent in line with what tenants are willing and able to pay. But even if LVT is a replacement tax, it bring a flood of homes onto the market when people “right-size” (be that up- or down-sizing), which will tend to level rental v...

Three fables/parables of mainstream economics

A  guy called JB Clark and his accomplices have eliminated from (neoclassical) Economics the concept of “land” as a particular type of capital, with a “fertility” and thus a “rent”. This was done to counter arguments that “land” generates “rent” thanks to its natural, intrinsic “fertility” and this windfall should therefore be specially taxed. Also JB Clark and his accomplices have this reduced all “capital” to a single “jelly”, that is to dollars in practice, by using delusional handwaving called the “Cobb-Douglas production function”, in order to “prove” the central truthiness of neoclassical Economics, that absent government regulation income is uniquely determined to productivity, which cannot be proven if there are even just 2 different types of “capital”. This makes contemporary Economists pretty much blind to the economics of mined energy, and of the unique advantages of extracting it in nearly ready-made form from mineral sources. For example R Gordon’s argument (of which I...