Economic systems are not neutral. They shape how resources move, how opportunity is distributed, and whether a society remains stable across generations.
This section explores the structural principles required to sustain a healthy economy within a democratic society. It examines the mechanisms that prevent extreme concentration of power, maintain material stability, and allow economic systems to remain aligned with human dignity and democratic governance.
The documents collected here do not attempt to design a perfectly efficient economy. Instead, they focus on building an economic structure that can endure, adapt, and remain accountable to the people whose lives it affects.
Topics include structural resets such as the Jubilee tradition, the philosophy underlying taxation and public contribution, limits on excessive accumulation, and the institutional safeguards necessary to prevent capture of economic systems by concentrated power.
Taken together, these pieces explore how an economy can function not merely as a machine for growth, but as a foundation for social stability, democratic legitimacy, and long-term human flourishing.


