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Plan A, the “manual” of citizenship for economic recovery

“Dear political class, a feeling of sadness and exhaustion invades us. We will come out of this, there is no doubt. The question is how?” …

The answer is called “Plan A, economy for life “, a document prepared by more than 5,000 people and 70 organizations, fed up with the lack of political consensus in the face of the Coronavirus crisis. In total they are 38 strategies and 383 proposals specific in sectors such as work, finance, governance, tourism, energy or food, condensed into a citizenship manual for economic recovery.

“While politicians continue to clash, and after the failure of the so-called Recovery Commission, society has self-organized over ideologies,” he highlights Diego Isabel La Moneda, founder of the NESI Forum of social innovation and new economies and catalyst of “Plan A”, which was born as a “brainstorming” after the lockdown and has been simmering for six months.

Entrepreneurs, professors, activists and specialists in different sectors have participated in its elaboration … “We have called it Plan A, because there is no life B or planet B. It has been co-created by very diverse people who have conceived a transforming policy program economic for this country. Everything is the product of collective intelligence. Now it’s time for them to listen to us: we’ve made it easy for them. ”

The document was presented on Thursday in Madrid before starting its journey, with a letter addressed to the ten political groups in the Congress of Deputies requesting a “hearing.” The idea is to then disseminate it throughout the autonomous communities and municipalities.

“We need a local and resilient economy, capable of facing health crises, climate, food or technology “, warns the promoter of” Plan A “.” We want an economy at the service of the planet and people, aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals and with the Paris Agreement, which takes into account the social and ecological footprint of the products “.

In plan, he starts from health and the economy as the two basic pillars for the well-being of people. To begin with, a “meaningful economy” is called for, with new indicators that transparently report on the true impact of economic activities, beyond the Gross Domestic Product and in a sustainable development model that operates within the limits of the planet.

Circular economy, food sovereignty or resilient cities are some of the concepts developed in Plan A, which calls for an acceleration of the energy transition towards renewables and a boost to banking with values, impact investing and sustainable finance. Another essential chapter is that of the “reinvention of work”, with proposals to alleviate unemployment and job insecurity as a result of the pandemic.

The authors claim “a new social contract capable of ensuring the common good for the next few decades “and to guarantee at the same time the protection of the most vulnerable groups. Plan A calls for an urgent debate on” the future of work “, identifying the systemic changes caused by the technological revolution, with a background reflection on “social utility” versus profit maximization.

Beyond the shock caused ten years ago by the financial debacle, the authors of “Plan A” consider that we are facing an opportunity to “rethink everything” and emphasize the key role that Spain can play in sectors key such as tourism, food or energy in the next decade.

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