DominicElson

33 Followers
54 Following
110 Posts
International development economist (SE Asia & UK). Interested in small island states, coastal livelihoods, locally controlled forestry and (of course) climate change.
Working with Indigenous communities to find the spark that will ignite change.
Co-founder of Seventythree Foundation.
Also an organic farmer.
Orang gila & uku'aka.
@danneidle Is there a similar analysis looking at taxes on land, fixed property and financial assets? I suspect that we are lightly taxed on property in relation to the local services LG provides (or would that need to include other local taxes, such as local income tax in some countries?).

How much tax do workers in the UK pay on their wages, and how does it compare to others across the world?

https://www.taxpolicy.org.uk/2023/09/20/wedge2022/

How much does the UK tax the average worker, compared to the rest of the world?

I posted some charts yesterday on how the UK tax system compares to other countries when we look at tax as a % of GDP. One response was to say: "well, I don't care about tax as a % of GDP... I care about the tax I pay". Which is fair enough. How can we fairly compare the tax actual pe

Tax Policy Associates Ltd
Whitman on what makes a great person and what wisdom really means https://t.co/XHyy8WFznQ
Walt Whitman on What Makes a Great Person and What Wisdom Really Means

“The past, the future, majesty, love — if they are vacant of you, you are vacant of them.”

The Marginalian

"There is no greatness without a little stubbornness... Works of art are not born in flashes of inspiration but in a daily fidelity."

Albert Camus on writing and the importance of stubbornness in creative work https://t.co/dwkSLFdGv5

Albert Camus on Writing and the Importance of Stubbornness in Creative Work

“There is no greatness without a little stubbornness… Works of art are not born in flashes of inspiration but in a daily fidelity.”

The Marginalian
@natureworks 4 years ago it was just rushes (juncus effusius) and bramble. Now we have flag iris, hemp agrimony, jacobs ladder, ragwort, betony, comfrey, various mint, star of bethlehem, snakeshead fritillary and, er, nettles!

IF I HAD INFINITE MONEY…

I’d figure out how to display the 100 UK #NativePlants & #WildFlowers in my Garden Wild Spreadsheet so you can a gantt chart of which plant flowers when, in order of date.

I would also add a column for ”grows best with” companion plants.

And I would have a chart grouping the plants by *colour*, in a visually pleasing manner.

BUT I DON’T

So, here's a vanilla spreadsheet. Use it in #GardenDesign, grow #NativePlants where possible.

https://bit.ly/garden-wild-spreadsheet

@natureworks this is brilliant, many thanks! We will use it in our natural regen zone (the aptly named ‘boggy field’).

https://open.substack.com/pub/samf/p/the-disconnect?r=e7fna&utm_medium=ios&utm_campaign=post

Important article that descibes the chaos in the UK justice system, illustrating how fiscal austerity was designed to punish the most disadvantaged in society. The bill for that misguided policy is now due for settlement and the hard truth is that we can’t afford to pay it, but neither can we afford not to. #austerity #inclusivedevelopment

The Disconnect

Lessons from the slow-motion collapse of the criminal justice system

Comment is Freed
@DrKerryS @HampshireKarin @natureworks we find that our sheep love to eat cleaver. We disentangle it from the roses and give it to the sheep in the morning. It is apparently quite good for them, but they mostly spend the day wearing it…

The United Kingdom is crisscrossed with public footpaths where the public holds a legal right to traverse.

Many of these paths are centuries old. Many of them are probably even older, dating back thousands of years to the Neolithic or older.

They predate virtually every extant property claim that could be leveraged against them. They have belonged in common to the community that uses them since before there was a British state.

And yet, the British state is in the process of handing over thousands of miles of public footpaths to private owners because these paths—older than the state—have not been registered with the state. In James Scott’s terms, they are not *legible* to the state.

But carefully surveyed, delineated, discrete parcels of private property linked to individual owners—the state’s favorite—are legible to the state. So over they go.

Enclosure never really stopped.

https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/public-access-paths-lost-landowners-lobby-government-therese-coffey-england/

Public to lose access to paths after landowner lobbying

Exclusive: Government U-turned on vow to abolish deadline for registering paths in England after letter from landowners

openDemocracy