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A discussion on the urgent need for a Green New Deal in Newark and Licking County, addressing climate change, social justice, and job creation. Explore the benefits, popular support, and affordability of this comprehensive and sustainable solution.
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A Green New Deal for Newark & Licking County:Climate Action, Social Justice & Jobs Fadhel Kaboub Associate Professor of Economics, Denison University President, Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity @FadhelKaboub @GISP_Tweets Global-ISP.org kaboubf@denison.edu Indivisible: Ohio12 East Licking County Public Library, Newark, Ohio January 23, 2019
My main message We have: • A climate emergency; • Millions of people want to work, but can’t find jobs; • Green tech innovations: More efficient & cheaper every day. So what are we waiting for?
Green New Deal polling in Ohio Green Jobs: • Would you support or oppose giving every American who wants one a job scaling up renewable energy, weatherizing homes and office buildings, developing mass transit projects, and maintaining green community spaces? 55% Support 17% Oppose 28% Don’t Know/Neither
Green New Deal polling in Ohio Support 100% Candidates: • Would you be more or less likely to support a candidate for office who supports moving the United States to 100% renewable energy by 2030? 49% More Likely 18% Less likely 33% Neither/Don’t Know
Green New Deal polling in Ohio Green Job Candidates: • Would you be more or less likely to support a candidate for office who supports a jobs guarantee to address the economy, inequality, and climate change by offering every American who wants one a job expanding renewable energy, mass transit, efficient buildings, community green spaces, and resilient infrastructure? 46% More Likely 18% Less likely 37% Neither/Don’t Know
What is a Green New Deal? • Federally funded • Locally implemented (decentralized) • Urban & Rural • Inclusive, Just, & Restorative • Comprehensive & Permanent
How do we pay for it? • We’re told: • The government is broke; • We’re running out of dollars; • the rich will never agree to pay higher taxes to fund all of this; • the national debt will burden future generations • Inflation, hyperinflation, Zimbabwe, Venezuela, Weimar Republic… • we need to borrow more dollars from China….
How did the US finance WWII? • Remember the misery of the Great Depression? • Where did the money come from? • Was WWII affordable for the US? • Did the US wait for tax revenues before entering the War?
What is Monetary Sovereignty? • A financially sovereign government is a government that: • issues its own currency, • collects taxes in that same currency, • onlyissues bonds denominated in that same currency • operates under a flexible exchange rate regime • Again, distinguish between: • Currency Issuer vs. Currency Users This approach is known as Modern Monetary Theory, or MMT
Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) • Important distinction: • The Federal Government enjoys monetary sovereignty (currency issuer status). • Money enters the economy when Gov. spends it into existence • Taxes and bond sales drain reserves out of the system However: • States, Cities, Municipalities, households/individuals, Corporations, non-profits etc. do not have monetary sovreignty (currency user status). • State/City/corporate/household debts are real financial burdens
Rampant Inequality • 2015: 80 people owned as much as half humanity. • 2016: 61 people owned as much as half of humanity. • 2017: 42 people owned as much as half of humanity. • 2018: the richest 26 people owned as much as the world's poorest half.
Job Guarantee Wage Structure W1: skilled workers (college education, technical training, or an equivalent amount of prior work experience): $21/hour W2: semi-skilled workers (high school education, some work experience, perhaps need some additional training): $18/hour W3: unskilled workers (no education, primary school education, no training): $15/hour
Job Guarantee Cost Estimation • Assuming: • 23.4 million full-time workers. • 40 hours/week. • Annual Benefits Package: $10,000 per employee. • Annual Material Cost: $50 billion. • Net Total Annual Cost: $593.8 billion, or 3.93% of GDP. • The post-2008 recovery cost is already in the trillions, but has failed to produce any significant reduction in unemployment, poverty, and inequality, let alone prioritize fighting climate change.
Concluding Remarks • 12 years to go! • The climate crisis, inequality, poverty, and injustice call for urgent and bold actions • The current climate & jobs policies are too weak, slow, expensive, and ineffective • Economic Justice and Climate Justice via a living wage Green New Deal are possible, desirable, and affordable
Thank you! Questions/Comments A Green New Deal for Newark & Licking County:Climate Action, Social Justice & Jobs Fadhel Kaboub Associate Professor of Economics, Denison University President, Global Institute for Sustainable Prosperity @FadhelKaboub @GISP_Tweets Global-ISP.org kaboubf@denison.edu