Zum Launch unseres 𝐧𝐞𝐮𝐞𝐧 𝐒𝐨𝐧𝐝𝐞𝐫𝐭𝐫𝐢𝐤𝐨𝐭𝐬 ging es für uns mit der Kamera in die #𝐅𝐮𝐠𝐠𝐞𝐫𝐞𝐢 𝐀𝐮𝐠𝐬𝐛𝐮𝐫𝐠. ⚜️📹Dort haben wir einen außergewöhnlichen #FCA-Fan getroffen – schaut rein und seht selbst! 📺

👉📺 Hier geht’s zum ganzen Video: http://fca.de/ITV_Fuggerei
👉 Denselben Stoff wie Heinz tragen: http://fca.de/Sondertrikot_Fuggerstadt_X

Heute vor 500 Jahren starb Jakob #Fugger der Reiche (1459–1525). Als Kaufmann, Bankier und Montanunternehmer prägte er die europäische #Geschichte. Zugleich wirkte er regional nachhaltig: Mit der #Fuggerei schuf er in #Augsburg eine bis heute bestehende Sozialsiedlung.
Inside the Fuggerei: The world’s oldest social housing | Living Differently

YouTube

#Scrollytelling: Geschichte digital erleben! ✨📚
Mit der neuen interaktiven #StorytellingWebsite zum Gedenkjahr an Jakob Fuggers 500. Todestag wird Augsburger Geschichte lebendig. 🏰📜

Beim Scrollen entfalten sich:

🌀 fließende Animationen

🗺️ interaktive Karten &

👥 ein digitaler Stammbaum.

⏩ Mehr zum Projekt: https://www.visionbites.de/blog/interaktive-storytelling-website-500-jahre-jakob-fugger

#jakobwho #fuggerei #webdesign #storytelling #uxdesign #digitalstory

Bold colours for a humble and unique housing complex – welcome to this week's #Doorsday!

This #door is one of the entrances of the #Fuggerei in #Augsburg. It is a walled public housing complex with 67 houses (containing 140 apartments in total) that was founded by Jakob Fugger the Rich in 1516 as a place for needy citizens. You need to be a citizen of Augsburg, of the Catholic faith, and have become indigent without debt in order to qualify for one of the Fuggerei housing units. If you tick all the boxes, you still pay only 1 Rhenish gulden rent per month (equivalent to €0.88) like in the good old times. Well, plus utilities (around €85/month in 2013), and you have to make three prayers a day for the current owners. The gates are locked at night and the 150 residents have to pay the watchman a small fee if they return later than 10pm.
The Fuggerei was destroyed twice (Thirty Year's War + WWII), but always restored. Today, you can visit the complex and its museum, the entrance fee goes towards the upkeep. A charitable trust, established by the wealthy founder in 1520, supports the project and is carefully managed by the #Fugger family to this day.

#historicBuilding #oldBuilding #architecture #Architektur #doorPhotography #dailyDoor #doorsOfMastodon #doors #Tür #Türen #Tor #gate #AdoorableThursday

#Augsburg Fotos II: Luxus Zimtschneckenladen, das Volk steht auf gegen #Merz, Kirche #StMarkus in der #Fuggerei, #Fugger himself.

#canonphotography #CanonM6II #sigma50mm

@Dianora There are a few other economic concepts which are IMO key to developing any remedies and/or alternatives. I'll try to touch on the major ones here.

Wage/Rent pricing, mentioned above, is a key stumbling point. Smith:

A man must always live by his work, and his wages must at least be sufficient to maintain him. They must even upon most occasions be somewhat more, otherwise it would be impossible for him to bring up a family, and the race of such workmen could not last beyond the first generation.

https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page%3AThe_wealth_of_nations%2C_volume_1.djvu/135

The Law of Rent and Iron Law of Wages (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_rent https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_law_of_wages) dictate that these dynamics are always in conflict and play, and crush the working class, most especially those who live by wage labour (or worse: piecework pay, see Smith's discussion of this for an eye-opener), and rent rather than own their domeciles. Both concepts date to the 18th / early 19th centuries, but are largely ignored in contemporary orthodoxy.

The "obvious" solutions, of, say, providing free/subsidised essentials to the working class or of critical goods and services (food, clothing, housing, education, healthcare) largely further exacerbate the existing perverse market dynamics. I am not saying DON'T help those in dire need. What I am saying is that if this is the sole and widespread remedy, that the underlying problems get worse: wages fall (because "welfare" benefits subsidise its costs rather than employers paying a living wage), education, housing, healthcare and other services get more expensive (because subsidies provide additional revenues).

Winston Churchill (another unlikely champion) noted this in 1906:

Some years ago in London there was a toll bar on a bridge across the Thames, and all the working people who lived on the south side of the river had to pay a daily toll of one penny for going and returning from their work. The spectacle of these poor people thus mulcted of so large a proportion of their earnings offended the public conscience, and agitation was set on foot, municipal authorities were roused, and at the cost of the taxpayers, the bridge was freed and the toll removed. All those people who used the bridge were saved sixpence a week, but within a very short time rents on the south side of the river were found to have risen about sixpence a week, or the amount of the toll which had been remitted!

https://www.landvaluetax.org/history/winston-churchill-said-it-all-better-then-we-can

Instead, a dual strategy of taxing rents (generally: providers of the goods/services above or those acting similarly economically), and providing for increased labour bargaining power though an improved best alternative to negotiated agreement (BATNA) and coordinated negotiation power (a/k/a Labour Unionisation) is necessary. Both of course run into the Wealth is Power and Logic of Collective Action (Mancur Olson, 1965: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Logic_of_Collective_Action) problems.

Direct subsidies / contributions as emergency measures directed at dire immediate circumstances are ABSOLUTELY of value. **But they should result in direction to directly addressing the rents/wages dichotomy.

A business which cannot pay a living wage and survive economically is a charity conducted to the benefit of its owner at the cost of its workers, or is provisioning public goods which should see a subsidy in their provision through tax revenues and transfer payments. Below-subsistence wages and labour supports only exacerbate the underlying problem.

Private ownership of real estate is a surprisingly recent development, displacing earlier feudal or monarchical rents (often very long-term leases) largely in the late 19th century. Among the few explorations of this history I've found is Simon Winchester's Land (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_(book)). And of course there's Henry George's Progress and Poverty (https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Progress_and_Poverty_(George,_D._Appleton_%26_Company,_fifth_edition)), championing the Land Value Tax (along with: Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and Milton Friedman (!!!), to name just a few. Social housing has its failures, but also successes, including the Fuggerei (Augsburg, Germany, created by the Fugger family in 1516 and continuing to serve to this day: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuggerei), Vienna, and Japan (through both market and government actions, in part through some idiosyncratic practices).

Housing cannot be both affordable and an investment asset. And of the two, the first function is primal.

Incidentally, I suspect that a large part of the US growth in homelessness may be directly attributable to going off the gold standard, itself a response to the country's peak-oil moment and reliance on foreign energy imports, driving banks and financial institutions to find an alternate asset class: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21304603.

Next are some more obscure economic principles, somewhat addressed in the mainstream, but highly underappreciated ...

2/

#economics #orthodoxEconomics #critique #wages #rents #LawOfRent #IronLawOfWages #MancurOlson #UBI #unions #LogicOfCollectiveAction #RealEstate #homelessness #OilCrisis #PeakOil #Fuggerei #ProgressAndPoverty #HenryGeorge #DavidRicardo #SimonWinchester #AffordableHousing #AssetHousing #BusinessAsCharity #tootstorm

Page:The wealth of nations, volume 1.djvu/135 - Wikisource, the free online library

Fuggerei: the world's first public housing

In 1521, a German merchant and banker known as Jakob Fugger 'the Rich' funded and built the first social settlement in the world

Karl's Notes

Die #Fuggerei in #Augsburg ist die älteste, sich kontinuierlich in Benutzung befindliche #Sozialsiedlung der Welt.

https://www.stadtschreiberinnen.der-leiermann.com/die-fuggerei/

Die Fuggerei - Die StadtschreiberInnen Europas

Die Fuggerei in Augsburg ist die älteste, sich kontinuierlich in Benutzung befindliche Sozialsiedlung der Welt. Lesen Sie ihre Geschichte.

Die StadtschreiberInnen Europas

@black_intellect

Excellent

The concept of #SocialHousing was invented by the exemplary #German merchant, #JakobFugger, back in 1521, when he donated the #Fuggerei.

Still in existence, it is the oldest in the world. Delegations from around the globe have been visiting it to learn how it has been managed.

https://www.fugger.de/en/fuggerei

Fuggerei