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Stolen Ground: Land Rent, Gaza's Gas, and Why Ordinary Israelis Are Being Played into Supporting Genocide

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  There is an economic argument about the Israel-Palestine conflict that seldom gets made. Not because the evidence for it is weak. Because the evidence for it is uncomfortable for nearly everyone involved: for the Israeli right, for the liberal Western donors funding the conflict, for the Palestinian leadership, and for the Western left that prefers its analysis simple and its villains easy to identify. The argument is this. The engine driving the dispossession of Palestinians, the rise of the Israeli far right, and the conditions that produced the Gaza genocide is not, at its root, religious or ethnic or even purely ideological. It is economic. Specifically, it is the economics of land rent: who captures the value that communities and public investment create, who gets locked out of it, and what desperate people do when the ground beneath them has been turned into an asset class they can never afford. This is not a comfortable argument for anyone. But it is, I think, the corr...

The Landlord’s Invisible Hand - What WOuld the UK Look Like with a Sensible Land Policy

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There is a peculiar kind of theft that takes place every single day across Britain, and almost nobody notices it. It happens in city centres where car parks sit on prime urban land, in commuter belts where crumbling houses occupy plots that could house ten families, in rural counties where shooting estates sprawl across hundreds of thousands of acres producing almost nothing, and in market towns where boarded-up high streets rot quietly next to empty plots held by developers waiting for prices to rise still further. The theft is not committed by any single villain. It is committed by the structure of our tax system, which has, for well over a century, systematically rewarded the holding of land over the productive use of it.   Consider the basic arithmetic of Britain’s land. The United Kingdom covers roughly 24 million hectares. Of that, approximately 17 million hectares, around 71 percent, is classified as agricultural land. Urban areas, including everything from city cent...