Contents:
- Microeconomic Liberalisation vs. Microeconomic Reforms
- Key Campaign Streams of Microeconomic Liberalisation
- Real-World Examples and Case Studies
- Potential Challenges & Criticisms
- A Campaign of the Free World
- Related Articles
- External Weblinks
Microeconomic Liberalisation vs. Microeconomic Reforms
Key Campaign Streams of Microeconomic Liberalisation
- Multi-Roster: This campaign advocates for a system promoting job-share, allowing for greater flexibility and work-life balance while ensuring full employment.
- Labour Rights Revised: This stream focuses on expanding and strengthening labor rights, including a a basic income guarantee (BIG), Right to Multi-Roster, Meal Tickets and a suite of new labour rights of the Free World Industrial Settlement.
- Meal Tickets: This campaign proposes a system where individuals receive meal tickets or vouchers as a compulsory part of their remuneration (for each shift), to ensure food security and to stimulate local economies.
- The ByProducts Economy: This stream promotes the development of a circular economy where byproducts and waste are repurposed and reused, creating new employment, increased economic opportunities and reducing environmental impact.
- BP Money: This campaign suggests the creation of a complementary currency or "BP Money" to facilitate transfer payments, transactions within the ByProducts Economy and promote economic development.
- De-Industrialisation Heritagization: This stream seeks to preserve the cultural heritage of de-industrialized communities while rearticulating the Manufacturing System Design (MSD) intent of existing infrastructure for new economic activities.
- Human Energy & Human Skills: This campaign emphasizes the importance of investing in human capital through education, training, and skill development to prepare individuals for the jobs of the future.
- The implementation of a Multi-Roster system in a manufacturing plant, allowing for increased employee satisfaction and productivity.
- The establishment of a ByProducts Economy network in a rural community, creating new jobs and reducing waste.
- The introduction of BP Money in a local market, stimulating economic activity and promoting community self-reliance.
- Concerns about potential bureaucracy and inefficiency in implementing some of the campaign streams.
- Questions about the long-term sustainability and scalability of certain proposals.
- Resistance from established economic interests and proponents of traditional Microeconomic Reforms.
Microeconomic Liberalisation offers a bold and innovative approach to tackling unemployment and underemployment through targeted interventions in the microeconomy. By empowering individuals and communities with the tools and resources necessary to participate fully in the economy, it seeks to create a more equitable and sustainable economic future for all. While facing potential challenges and criticisms, Microeconomic Liberalisation represents a paradigm shift in economic thinking and policy-making, prioritizing full employment and social equity over traditional market-driven solutions.
Related Articles
- Automatic Structural Stabilizers
- Public Liability Unemployment
- Total Managed Markets
- De-Industrialisation
External Links
No comments:
Post a Comment