ProutNews

Proutist Universal

Bringing stories from around the world and analysing them from the perspective of Progressive Utilisation Theory, economic democracy, social and environmental justice.

Episodes

  1. The Future of Food Is Changing: Farms, Cooperatives & Crisis | ProutNews Weekly | June 14-20

    6d ago

    The Future of Food Is Changing: Farms, Cooperatives & Crisis | ProutNews Weekly | June 14-20

    Who controls food systems—and how should they be organised to serve both people and the natural world? Across the globe, food systems are under increasing pressure. Farmland is becoming more concentrated, rural communities are shrinking, supply chains are stretching across continents, and industrial agriculture often prioritises short-term profit over long-term ecological balance. At the same time, communities are developing alternatives: regenerative farming, agroforestry, cooperative agriculture, and local food systems rooted in stewardship and resilience. This week we examine three stories that reveal different dimensions of the global food challenge. Colombia: Farmers in the Amazon are experimenting with agroforestry and sustainable cacao production while trying to protect forests and secure livelihoods, highlighting the tension between economic survival and ecological preservation.Japan: A rapidly declining farming population raises urgent questions about food sovereignty, rural depopulation, and what happens when local productive capacity disappears.Italy: Agricultural cooperatives demonstrate how small farmers can strengthen their position through cooperation, shared infrastructure, and local food networks that keep value within communities.Through the lens of PROUT (Progressive Utilization Theory), these stories point to a shared principle: Food security is not only about production—it is about control, stewardship, and local economic resilience. When communities retain control over land, farming systems, and distribution networks, they are better able to sustain both ecological health and economic well-being. Colombia The Guardian: "Why farmers see Colombia’s knife-edge election as a battle for the Amazon’s future"https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2026/jun/17/armed-groups-colombian-farmers-election-run-off-guaviare-small-landowners-security-candidateJapan Japan Today: "Japan sees largest-ever fall in number of independent farmers to 1.02 mil"https://japantoday.com/category/national/japan-sees-largest-ever-fall-in-number-of-independent-farmers-to-1.02-milItaly Growing for Market: "Italy’s thriving agricultural co-ops"https://growingformarket.com/italy-thriving-agricultural-co-ops/References

    9 min
  2. Jun 15

    Microfinance & Community Lending — Who Controls Local Credit? | June 7-13

    This week on ProutNews Weekly, we explore one of the most important yet often overlooked questions in economic development: Who controls access to credit? Around the world, access to loans, savings, and financial services can determine whether individuals, families, and small businesses are able to improve their economic circumstances. But when financial decision-making becomes concentrated in large institutions, local needs can become secondary to distant priorities. This week we examine three stories that highlight different approaches to community finance: India: As microfinance continues to serve millions of borrowers, concerns are emerging about rising financial stress, borrower debt burdens, and the challenges of maintaining a social mission as institutions become larger and more commercialized.Kenya: Member-owned Savings and Credit Cooperative Organizations (SACCOs) are expanding financial inclusion and demonstrating how cooperative finance can provide communities with greater control over their economic future.Ireland: Credit unions are reinvesting millions of euros into local development, education, community initiatives, and member services, showing how finance can strengthen communities rather than simply generate profits.Through the lens of PROUT (Progressive Utilization Theory), these stories point to a deeper question: Access to credit matters—but who owns and governs the institutions providing that credit? When communities control their own financial institutions, local savings can be mobilized for local development, strengthening economic democracy, resilience, and self-reliance. India The Economic Times: "Default clouds hover over microfinance as industry flags weak monsoon"https://m.economictimes.com/markets/stocks/news/default-clouds-hover-over-microfinance-as-industry-flags-weak-monsoon/articleshow/131697713.cmsKenya World Council of Credit Unions (WOCCU): "SACCOs Positioned to Expand Financial Inclusion for Refugees in Kenya"https://www.woccu.org/newsroom/releases/SACCOs_Positioned_to_Expand_Financial_Inclusion_for_Refugees_in_Kenya_New_Report_FindsIreland The News Co-op: "Irish Credit Unions Gave €8m to Community, Says All-Island Report"https://www.thenews.coop/irish-credit-unions-gave-e8m-to-community-says-all-island-report/References

    10 min
  3. Jun 5

    Wealth Overaccumulation | ProutNews Weekly | May 25-31

    This week on ProutNews Weekly, we explore global debates around one of the most pressing economic questions of our time: how to deal with extreme wealth concentration.From the perspective of PROUT (Progressive Utilization Theory), we examine current events not just as isolated political or economic developments, but through a wider question of economic democracy: who controls wealth, and what does that mean for society?This week’s focus: Stopping Wealth OveraccumulationAcross three continents, governments and economists are revisiting policies aimed at limiting excessive concentration of wealth:In the United Kingdom, debate intensifies over equalising tax rates on income and capital gains, raising broader questions about fairness, investment, and economic power.In South Africa, civil society groups renew calls for a wealth tax to address deep structural inequality and fund social development.In the United States (California), a proposed one-time tax on billionaire wealth enters public debate, backed by economists arguing that extreme fortunes pose risks to democratic stability.From a PROUT analysis, these discussions point to a deeper structural issue: taxation alone may not be enough if wealth and ownership remain highly centralised. The key question becomes how to design systems that prevent excessive accumulation while still encouraging innovation, enterprise, and prosperity.Key themeEconomic democracy is difficult to sustain when economic power becomes concentrated.PROUT proposes that the challenge is not only redistribution after wealth is accumulated, but the structural prevention of excessive concentration in the first place.ARTICLE REFERENCES1. United KingdomThe Guardian"Wes Streeting calls for equal tax on income and capital gains in Labour leadership pitch"2. South AfricaOxfam South Africa"Oxfam South Africa Responds to Budget Speech 2026"3. United StatesLe Monde"Economists Gabriel Zucman and Emmanuel Saez campaign to tax California billionaires"

    8 min
  4. Jun 2

    Solidarity Economy | ProutNews Weekly | May 18-24

    This week’s ProutNews Weekly explores the solidarity economy—a growing global shift toward cooperative ownership, mutual aid systems, and locally rooted economic structures designed to prioritise people over profit. Across three continents, we look at how communities and governments are experimenting with more decentralised and cooperative economic models, and what this means from a PROUT perspective of economic democracy and local self-reliance. In Canada, new federal policy measures are helping support worker cooperative conversions, offering tax incentives that could expand employee ownership and keep local businesses out of external corporate acquisition. In Argentina, neighbourhood-based mutual aid networks continue to expand under ongoing inflation pressures, with community kitchens, barter systems, and collective distribution networks forming a parallel layer of economic support. In Kenya, cooperative farming is being discussed as a model for agricultural resilience, highlighting how small farmers can increase bargaining power and retain more value through collective ownership and shared infrastructure. From a PROUT analysis, these developments point toward a common question: Are we witnessing symbolic cooperation—or real shifts in economic control, ownership, and financial structure? The solidarity economy is not simply an ethical alternative. It is increasingly becoming a practical response to crisis conditions, supply chain instability, and concentrated economic power. Canada — Worker cooperatives and policy support Government of Canada Budget 2026 (Chapter 1)Canadian Worker Co-op Federation — Budget analysisArgentina — Mutual aid and community response to crisis Buenos Aires Herald — Community kitchens expand amid crisisGeo.coop — Solidarity economy and recovered enterprises in ArgentinaKenya — Cooperative farming and agricultural resilience AgriFocus Africa — Kenya cooperative farming lessonsSacco Review Kenya — Farmers, brokers and value chains

    7 min

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Bringing stories from around the world and analysing them from the perspective of Progressive Utilisation Theory, economic democracy, social and environmental justice.