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Why people should work together to shape the economy

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Why This Matters

Mariana Mazzucato's 'The Common Good Economy' highlights the urgent need for a societal shift away from profit-driven models that exacerbate inequality, environmental degradation, and social injustice. It emphasizes the importance of democratic accountability and a focus on the common good to create a more equitable and sustainable economy for all. This perspective is crucial for the tech industry and consumers alike, as it calls for responsible innovation and policies that prioritize societal well-being over unchecked profit.

Key Takeaways

The Common Good Economy: A New Compass Mariana Mazzucato Allen Lane (2026)

The 500 richest individuals on the planet added a record US$2.2 trillion to their fortunes in 2025 alone, while more than two billion people experienced moderate or severe food insecurity. The charity Oxfam International, based in Nairobi, estimates that the super-rich in high-income countries extract around $30 million per hour from low- and middle-income nations, where roughly 85% of people in the world live.

As ever more people struggle to keep a roof over their heads, public money is increasingly being absorbed by military spending, which reached a staggering $2.7 trillion in 2024. Government-sponsored investments into ‘high-tech solutions’ are concentrated in this industry of death, further fuelling ecological devastation through mineral extraction and fossil-fuel use.

How to measure a good life — tips for moving beyond GDP

These figures offer only a glimpse into the profound irrationality of a society in which the production of goods and services — even those most essential to life — is subordinated to an abstract and violent logic of capitalist profit.

Building on her earlier influential ideas on technological change and the role of the state in innovation, economist Mariana Mazzucato argues that today’s environmental and social crises stem from an economy that is organized around extraction and shielded from meaningful democratic accountability. The Common Good Economy presents a road map for the urgent transformation that our societies must undertake.

The book challenges the dominant narratives of power and value that many of us have internalized through the framework of neoclassical economics. Rather than treating capitalist markets as natural developments that allow for freedom and collective opportunity, Mazzucato draws on the work of economic historian Karl Polanyi to emphasize how markets are politically constructed and deeply embedded, often in ways that undermine the common good.

She shows, for instance, how the prioritization of short-term financial returns and shareholder value has driven corporations to spend trillions buying back their own shares instead of investing productively. She also highlights how the housing crisis, even in wealthy countries such as the United Kingdom, has been intensified by governments increasingly subsidizing private landlords rather than funding social housing.

Although neoclassical economics reduces climate change and social injustice to ‘externalities’ — indirect inconveniences unrelated to the broader system — Mazzucato argues that today’s challenges require centring our collective actions around the common good. In her words, it means “getting economic relationships and structures right from the start, instead of correcting and picking up the pieces afterwards”.

Put people at the centre

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