Belfast Telegraph

Use this crisis for a better way of life

- ALISON HACKETT By email

EVERYTHING has changed, changed utterly. Has the coronaviru­s, Covid-19, broken capitalism? Perhaps.

Business and financial experts argue that we must keep the show on the road: reduce interest rates to almost zero; print money; keep everyone spending; save the airlines; the motor car; tourism; roads; cruise ships.

Burn oil. Spend, spend, spend. Shore up the economy. We mustn’t fall into a depression. But why would we want to return to the flawed system of the last century?

The hamster-wheel of growth is harming the planet, the air we breathe and our psyches.

Post-coronaviru­s, we each need to think about how we contribute to the social good (or how we “add value”, to use business speak).

Most of us have lost the ability to understand the difference between what we need and what we want and so we prop up all sorts of derivative, but inessentia­l, businesses that come loosely under the sectors of gambling, entertainm­ent, narcissism, addiction and greed.

They play on our desire for a thrill, a desire to celebrate ourselves, our fears about the future and our need to avoid boredom.

Imagine, post-coronaviru­s, Ireland and Northern Ireland coming together, using citizens’ assemblies to advise on how to become a green island; how to provide a universal income for citizens; how to introduce random selection (like jury service) for being a political representa­tive: an MP or a TD, a councillor, a member of the senate or House of Lords.

The island of Ireland could be the first joint nation to fully harness tidal energy (our coastline is a resource waiting to be exploited), wind energy and solar energy; we could embrace recycling, re-using, up-cycling and swapping our surplus goods by expanding local markets, replacing cars with people, putting the community at the centre of the urban environmen­t.

Some would call it communism. I’d call it fair.

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