When a Few Own Everything: Can the Economic Democracy Act Restore Broad Ownership? Today’s podcast argues that extreme wealth concentration creates economic, political, social, and global crises: most people can’t afford what the economy produces as income from assets flows to a small ownership class, automation replaces workers without shared gains, and the wealthy often channel money into speculation rather than productive investment while using resources to dominate markets.
This economic power becomes political power, weakening democracy, increasing social unrest, overwhelming the welfare state, and making inherited wealth more decisive than work or education. Globally, poor countries remain marginalized, and trade imbalances deepen. The Economic Democracy Act is presented as a root-cause solution by expanding capital credit so ordinary people can buy productive assets with loans repaid by the assets’ future earnings, creating Universal Capital Ownership Accounts, rebuilding purchasing power, and broadly sharing AI and robotics gains.
In our opinion, the best way to secure respect for human dignity is — you guessed it — embodied in the Just Third Way of Economic Personalism:
CLICK ON THE LINKS, NOT THE PHOTO
You must click on the link below to get to the video, not on the photo.
When a Few People Own Almost Everything
(The links right above are what you’re supposed to click on.)
And if you want the playlists for previous videos:
Economic Personalism (The Book)
Economic Personalism v. The Great Reset
Socialism, Modernism and the New Age
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