Framework for a Green Industrial Policy
* Article: Jostein Hauge & Jason Hickel (05 Jun 2025): A progressive framework for green industrial policy, New Political Economy, doi
URL = https://tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/13563467.2025.2506655
Abstract
"In the age of ecological breakdown, there is a growing need for ‘green’ industrial policy. However, existing frameworks for green industrial policy fail to address unsustainable growth in energy and resource use in high-income economies. In this sense, they are not adequate to achieve core ecological objectives. This paper fills a gap in the literature by offering a progressive framework for green industrial policy that combines traditional green industrial policy perspectives with insights from ecological economics and literature on post-growth and degrowth.
The framework has three key pillars:
(1) scale down ecologically harmful industries and sectors to directly reduce energy and resource use;
(2) organise production more around public benefit, with greater democratic control and guidance over investment and production; and
(3) work towards global ecological justice and enable greater ‘ecological policy space’ for the global South to pursue industrial development.
The paper argues that this progressive approach to green industrial policy is necessary due to the scale and urgency of the ecological crisis. The framework shows how productive capacity can be liberated and redirected towards more socially and environmentally beneficial ends, while also democratising control over the economy."
Excerpts
From the Conclusion, by Jostein Hauge and Jason Hickel:
"This paper has proposed a progressive framework for green industrial policy that addresses the shortcomings of existing approaches in the face of urgent ecological challenges. By combining insights from traditional green industrial policy perspectives with literature on ecological economics, post growth and degrowth, we have outlined a three-pillar approach that aims to achieve core ecological objectives while enabling just economic transformations.
The first pillar calls for scaling down ecologically harmful industries and sectors to directly reduce energy and resource use, using credit policy and other mechanisms. This approach recognises that the continuous growth in energy and resource use is unsustainable and that certain industries need to be strategically downsized. This not only reduces ecological harm but also liberates productive capacity that can be redirected towards more environmentally and socially beneficial ends. The second pillar advocates for reorganising the economy to produce for public rather than private benefit, with greater public control and guidance over investment and production. This involves scaling up public investment in ecologically necessary production, aligning policies with democratically determined green transition goals, and increasing public provision of essential goods and services. It also calls for greater financial coordination between various policy levers of the state and a more active role for banks in credit guidance towards environmental objectives. The third pillar emphasises the need for global ecological justice and greater ‘ecological policy space’ for the global South to pursue industrial development. Recognising that high-income countries are primarily responsible for ecological breakdown, this approach calls for differentiated climate responsibilities. It argues for ensuring lower-income countries have more leverage in formulating their industrial policies while advocating for compensation or reparations from the global North for climate-related damages and appropriation of ecological commons.
This progressive framework represents a departure from traditional green industrial policy approaches. It acknowledges that the scale and urgency of the ecological crisis requires more than just market-based solutions or incremental changes. Instead, it proposes a fundamental restructuring of economic priorities and approaches to industrial policy, with a focus on reducing overall resource use in high-income economies while enabling sustainable development in the global South.
The kind of progressive transformation we call for requires changes to the status quo, shifting away from an economic system that relies primarily on growth-oriented solutions. Luckily, these changes are in high demand. In the research community, a survey of nearly 800 climate policy researchers around the world found that 73 per cent support positions that call for moving towards a world that is not growth-focused (i.e. post-growth) (King et al. 2023). Among the public, a consumer research study found that 70 per cent of people in 20 high-income and middle-income countries support the statement that ‘overconsumption is putting our planet and society at risk’ (Sustainable Brands 2014). Even in the United States, where support for consumerism and growth is supposedly strong, 70 per cent of people believe that ‘environmental protection is more important than economic growth’ (Yale Climate Opinion Maps 2018). On the climate justice front, strong majorities in the global North support compensation to the global South for climaterelated damages (Fabre et al. 2023).
Clearly, the systemic change we call for is not out of step with the public or with scientists. Of course, even strong public support for a policy framework does not mean it will be implemented. Indeed, it is reasonable to expect very strong resistance from elite factions who benefit so prodigiously from the existing arrangement. The path forward will require not only protest and demonstration – the dominant mode of popular political engagement over the past decades – but the establishment of mass-based political parties that can represent the interests of the working-classes, achieve power, and implement industrial policy measures that can resolve the social and ecological crises of the twenty-first century. Meaningful, systemic socio-economic change has often been unpopular with policy elites, including the British suffragette movement, the civil rights movement in the United States, and the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa (Malm 2020). Nelson Mandela, recognising that the anti-apartheid movement was calling for change that was deemed unrealistic by policy elites at the time, pointed out that ‘It always seems impossible until it’s done’. Although the framework we outline above calls for systematic transformation, the policy pathways are not simply thought experiments. They build on real-existing implementation, both at present and historically, including carbon taxes, credit guidance, anti-trust legislation, consumer protection laws, and public ownership structures. But we do indeed question the status quo of the capitalist economic system more fundamentally than existing frameworks for green industrial policy. It is time for green industrial policy frameworks to consider the views of climate scientists and the public more seriously. While we should continue to take lessons from existing frameworks for green industrial policy, we must advance this field in a more progressive direction. Our aim with this paper is to move the needle in that direction."
Discussion
The green journey of industrial policy
J. HAUGE AND J. HICKEL:
"Governments are also now recognising that industrial policy may be useful or necessary to achieve certain ecological objectives, and that industrial production itself must be attentive to ecological impacts. Thus, the emergence of ‘green industrial policy’. This approach started gaining traction in the 2010s, kickstarted by calls for green growth – very simply, the idea that economic growth can and should be more ecologically sustainable (Jacobs 2013, Pollin 2015, Hickel and Kallis 2020). Hauge (2023) highlights that three economic and political observations specific to the contemporary world economy underpin the rationale for green industrial policy: (i) change to the status quo of the global economic system is needed, involving a stronger focus on ecological sustainability; (ii) the manufacturing sector must play a role in the green transition, both through offering new, green technological solutions and through making existing energy systems and production methods greener; (iii) state action, involvement, incentives, and investment are crucial to achieve a green transition, especially because private markets – which organise production around what is most profitable rather than what is most necessary – do not have a good track record of dealing with problems related to ecological breakdown.
In the age of ecological breakdown, the world economy needs more and stronger green industrial policy. However, there are questions about whether industrial policy, as currently formulated, can be truly green. A growing body of literature in industrial ecology and ecological economics, developed under the umbrella of post-growth and degrowth, argues that continued aggregate growth in highincome countries is likely to be incompatible with ecological sustainability (Weiss and Cattaneo 2017, Haberl et al. 2020, Vogel and Hickel 2023). According to this literature, high-income countries should pursue planned reduction in energy and resource use in order to enable rapid decarbonisation and alleviate other ecosystem pressures (Hickel 2021). Some of this can be achieved through efficiency improvements, but it also requires scaling down less-necessary forms of production to reduce energy and resource use directly, and so that productive capacities can be redirected toward more socially necessary objectives.
To the extent that one of the objectives of industrial policy is to increase aggregate production, this is at odds with the critique of growth that has been developed within industrial ecology and ecological economics. Indeed, there are clear contradictions between this aim of industrial policy, as traditionally formulated, and ecological sustainability. This paper discusses these contradictions and offers a new, progressive framework for green industrial policy. This framework fills a gap in the existing literature by building on insights from literatures on both green industrial policy and degrowth. The paper first explores the journey of industrial policy toward ecological considerations, outlining the rationales and pillars of both industrial policy and green industrial policy. Then, the paper explores the contradictions of green industrial policy from a degrowth perspective. Building upon these critical analyses, the paper offers a progressive framework for green industrial policy, rooted in three policy areas: reduce damaging and unnecessary forms of production, organise production more around public benefit, and pursue global ecological justice.
Industrial policy can generally be defined as state intervention to move the economy towards a
desired structure in the medium/long term. At a more granular level, industrial policy refers to strategic government intervention at the firm or industry level to develop the economy, often with the
aim growing innovative, productive, and high-value activities (Chang 1994, Pack and Saggi 2006,
Rodrik 2008, Hauge 2023, Juhász et al. 2023). Industrial policy can be designed in a range of
different ways, so, in practice, the toolbox of industrial policy is extensive. Trade policy is an
obvious example, such as import tariffs and export subsidies to protect and assist domestic producers. But industrial policy can also involve less obvious instruments, such as price regulation,
exchange rate policy, labour training policy, long-term financing by development banks, the establishment of state-owned enterprises, and infrastructure investment, to name a few.
The appropriate degree of state intervention has always been central to discussions on industrial policy. This makes the role of industrial policy a contentious issue, as it relates to state-versus-market debates. Irrespective of one’s opinions on this, industrial policy has been used by governments for hundreds of years and has been an invaluable tool for economic growth and development strategies. Alexander Hamilton, one of the founders of the United States, was a fierce a supporter of industrial policy, and laid the basis for a century of steep tariff barriers on imports of manufactured goods into the United States, which helped enable US industrialisation (Chang 2002). In the second half of the twentieth century, industrial policy was at the centre of the rapid economic development of the so-called ‘Asian Tigers’ (Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan) (Wade 1990, Amsden 1992, Chang 1994, Woo-Cumings 1999).
Even governments that have been ideologically opposed to state intervention have used industrial policy. Ronald Reagan protected the US steel and automotive industries from import competition, and Margaret Thatcher designed financial incentives to increase investment rates in the UK automotive industry (Juhász et al. 2023). That said, the period of neoliberalism spearheaded by Thatcher and Reagan in the 1980s saw a decline in the use of industrial policy globally, and particularly in the global South. This was largely because industrial policy was effectively outlawed by international organisations – such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the World Bank – through the enforcement of free trade agreements and structural adjustment programmes (Wade 2003, Chang 2007, Gallagher and Kozul Wright 2022). Since the 2010s, however, industrial policy has come back with force (Stiglitz et al. 2013, Cherif and Hasanov 2019, Aiginger and Rodrik 2020, Juhász et al. 2023). This is due to a number of reasons (for a detailed discussion, see Evenett et al. (2024)). First, in the wake of the global financial crisis in 2007/08, governments have become more wary of leaving key national objectives to the market, and have generally increased levels of regulation and intervention. Second, we have witnessed increasing geopolitical competition, especially between the United States and China, the two largest economies in the world. Both countries are more actively ramping up investment in manufacturing and innovation as part of broader strategies to strengthen their international competitiveness and international economic power. Third, the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine rattled global supply chains, reminding countries of the dangers of being too dependent on imports of critical goods and intermediate inputs. The response by governments around the world was to use industrial policy to strengthen domestic production.
The return of industrial policy is also due to growing environmental concerns. Governments are recognising that the world economy needs to become cleaner and greener, involving change to the status quo. So far the private sector has not made the necessary investments in renewable energy, public transit, building insulation, etc, because these are not considered sufficiently profitable (Christophers 2024). In light of this, governments are recognising that state intervention is necessary to achieve a green transition. Of course, the motivation to develop green industries is not coming purely from the perspective of respecting planetary boundaries, but also from a desire and need to be internationally competitive in technological clusters that are shaping our future (Lebdioui 2024). Countries are racing to become global leaders in industries associated with renewable energy, such as batteries, electric vehicles, photovoltaics, and wind turbines, to name a few. China, for example, has become the world’s leading manufacturer of electric vehicles and photovoltaics through years of strategic industrial policy (IEA 2024).
Unsurprisingly, the idea of ‘green industrial policy’ has become more central to discussions on ecological sustainability and national economic development/planning policy (Hallegatte et al. 2013, Rodrik 2014, Schmitz et al. 2015, Altenburg and Assman 2017). The idea of green industrial policy has grown alongside and builds upon the idea of ‘green growth’. Green growth as an agenda was pushed by various international organisations in the 2010s, and has by now become mainstream. The idea is to achieve growing GDP alongside a reduction of ecological impacts to sustainable levels, e.g. by absolutely decoupling GDP from greenhouse gas emissions and resource use (Jacobs 2013, Pollin 2015, Dale et al. 2016, Hickel and Kallis 2020, Green 2023). In terms of how green industrial policy has been defined and discussed in existing literature, it can be understood as state intervention that supports the green growth agenda. One lens through which one can understand green industrial policy is through the idea of Green New Deals (although a few of these – such as the Green New Deal for Europe – are critical of the idea of green growth). These are sweeping public policy packages with the intention of tackling climate change and global warming, while at the same time creating jobs and reducing economic inequality (e.g. Pettifor 2019, Rifkin 2019, Chomsky and Pollin 2020, Ajl 2021). Green New Deals have a strong association with progressive politics, especially in the United States, building upon Franklin D. Roosevelt’s famous New Deal in the 1930s. In both Europe and the United States, the concept of Green New Deals started gaining momentum in the 2010s. It reached mainstream political discussion in 2019, when the Democrats Alexandria Ocazio-Cortez and Ed Markey attempted to get legislation passed for a Green New Deal in the United States Senate.
In line with both green growth and Green New Deals, green industrial policy focuses heavily on reducing greenhouse gas emissions through investment in new energy systems, energy infrastructure, and energy efficiency. The literature on green industrial policy is rich with extensive country case studies on public investment strategies in renewable energy, but also provides insight into the details of green government intervention, including carbon taxes, feed-in tariffs, research and development (R&D) support, subsidised credit, and public procurement (e.g. Hallegatte et al. 2013, Altenburg and Assman 2017, Pollin 2020).
There is clearly a need for more green industrial policy. However, one may question the ability of industrial policy to be truly green, at least in terms of how it has been considered so far. At their core, existing frameworks of green industrial policy support the idea of increased aggregate economic growth. But mounting evidence suggests that, in high-income countries, degrowth approaches may be necessary for ecological sustainability."
(https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/13563467.2025.2506655)
The contradictions of green industrial policy from a Degrowth perspective
J. HAUGE AND J. HICKEL:
"The idea of ecological limits to economic growth began receiving serious attention by economists as early as the 1970s (e.g. Georgescu-Roegen 1971, Meadows et al. 1972, Daly 1973). Over the past decade, research in industrial ecology and ecological economics has demonstrated that the global ecological crisis is being driven overwhelmingly by excess production and consumption in high-income countries. In high-income countries, material resource use exceeds sustainable guardrails by on average a factor of four (Hickel et al. 2022), and they are responsible for around 90 per cent of global carbon emissions in excess of the safe planetary boundary (Hickel, 2020b; Fanning and Hickel 2023). By contrast, low-income countries have low levels of resource and energy use, well within sustainable levels, and in fact need to increase resource and energy use in order to achieve human development objectives.
Advocates of green growth claim that by harnessing technological change and efficiency improvements, high-income countries can continue increasing total output while reducing resource use to sustainable levels and get emissions to zero by 2050. But researchers in industrial ecology and ecological economics have raised major empirical questions about the feasibility of achieving these objectives.
Let us first look at resource use. Several major reviews have found that despite strong efficiency improvements, high-income countries are not achieving sustained absolute decoupling of GDP from resource use – let alone the rates of decoupling necessary to achieve sustainable levels – and extant models indicate it is unlikely to occur in a growth-oriented scenario even under optimistic assumptions (Haberl et al. 2020, Hickel and Kallis 2020, Vadén et al. 2020, Vadén et al. 2021). This is because, in a growth-oriented economy, gains (savings) from efficiency are leveraged to expand total production, making absolute reductions in resource use very difficult to achieve.
Emissions are a somewhat different story but have parallels to the developments in resource use. Many high-income countries have achieved absolute decoupling of GDP from emissions, even in consumption-based terms (although the total number of countries achieving absolute decoupling remains relatively low; Hubacek et al. 2021). However, no high-income countries are on track to meet their Paris climate obligations. At existing rates of mitigation, they will take on average more than 200 years to decarbonise and will burn their fair-share of the remaining carbon budget 27 times over (Vogel and Hickel 2023). Much faster mitigation is needed. For high-income countries, this is challenging because they have high levels of energy use, meaning a massive effort is required to build out enough renewable energy infrastructure. Climate scientists and industrial ecologists indicate that the only way for high-income countries to achieve sufficiently rapid decarbonisation is to reduce total energy use. Some of this can be achieved with efficiency improvements, but again – given economy-wide rebound effects (Berner et al. 2022) – this is not enough by itself.
To resolve these problems, recent research indicates that high-income countries need to abandon aggregate growth as an objective (Kallis et al. 2025), and take a more industry-specific approach to economic development. This implies focusing on increasing and improving socially and ecologically necessary activities, while scaling down or ‘degrowing’ harmful and less-necessary forms of production to reduce energy use and resource use directly (Hickel et al. 2021). This may include reducing production of, for example, SUVs, cruise ships, fast fashion, industrial meat, mansions, private jets, commercial aviation, advertising, weapons, etc. In the climate policy literature and IPCC reports, this is referred to as ‘demand-side’ or ‘sufficiency’-oriented mitigation (Creuzig et al. 2022, IPCC 2022). Any unemployment that may be created by industry-specific reductions is intended to be mitigated by implementing a public job guarantee, which provides a mechanism for reallocating labour away from damaging and unnecessary sectors toward other forms of production (for example, to produce renewable energy, public transit, public housing, etc.) (Olk et al. 2023). With this approach, high-income countries can accelerate progress on decarbonisation and other ecological objectives while improving social outcomes at the same time.
It is important to underscore that the need to reduce aggregate production applies only to highincome countries – not to developing countries (although developing countries too can benefit from the general approach of reducing harmful and unnecessary output in order to increase socially beneficial and economically strategic production). Furthermore, it is important to note that degrowth scholarship embraces technological innovation (Hickel 2023). All published post-growth and degrowth scenarios start with rapid technological change and efficiency improvements, accelerated through public investment, and then add sufficiency and equity measures (Victor and Rosenbluth 2009, D’Allesandro et al. 2020). For example, scenarios for transport-sector decarbonisation require EVs (technology, efficiency) but also a rapid and large-scale reduction in car use and a shift toward public transit (sufficiency and equity) (Winkler et al. 2023). A recent study in Nature Energy finds that this approach – efficiency plus sufficiency – can enable the United Kingdom to reduce energy use by more than 50 per cent, without compromising citizens’ quality of life, and thus bring Paris-compliant mitigation within reach (Barret et al. 2022).
This scholarship clearly contrasts with traditional industrial policy, even in its ‘green’ formulation. Degrowth questions the pursuit of aggregate growth and wants instead to distinguish between socially beneficial and damaging or unnecessary production. Furthermore, in contrast to most of the literature on green industrial policy, degrowth offers an assessment of the ecological crisis that extends beyond just emissions, to include resource use and other ecological pressures (Hickel 2020a, Fanning et al. 2022, Parrique 2024). With this approach, additional contradictions of the traditional green industrial policy literature emerge. For example, if high-income countries maintain high and growing production, the decarbonisation strategy will have to require high and growing levels of material extraction in order to build out the necessary renewable energy infrastructure and devices, thus exacerbating ecological pressures associated with resource use. Gregoir and van Acker (2022) find that Europe will have to ramp up its demand for metals – in particular cobalt and lithium – by an extraordinary amount in order to meet its clean energy goals by 2050. With lithium, it is estimated that the world would need a 2,700 per cent increase in extraction compared to 2020 levels (Hickel 2020a). This would have to involve more deep seabed mining, which would have a devastating impact on deep sea ecosystems and biodiversity (WWF 2021). These problems can be mitigated by reducing aggregate energy use.
Traditional frameworks of green industrial policy include elements that are clearly important and needed to meet the challenge of ecological breakdown. But it is clearly also necessary to develop a more progressive framework for green industrial policy – one that considers not only emissions but also material resource use, and which offers a robust alternative to the conventional approach of ever-increasing production and consumption. The remainder of this paper outlines such a framework."
(https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/13563467.2025.2506655)
Towards Ecology-Friendly Credit Guidance Frameworks
J. HAUGE AND J. HICKEL:
"Control over finance and money translates into control over our collective labour and resources. In today’s economic system, capital – by which we mean the major financial firms, the commercial banks, the largest corporations, and the wealthiest 1 per cent – has overwhelming control over financial assets and therefore determines production. For capital, the purpose of production is not to achieve social and ecological progress, it is to maximise and accumulate profit. This is why many societies chronically overproduce many damaging and unnecessary things, like fossil fuels and superyachts (which are highly profitable to capital), and at the same time chronically underproduce socially useful things, like renewable energy, public transport, affordable housing, and universal healthcare services (which are less profitable or not profitable at all). In this sense, it is not surprising that the private sector has a poor track record of investing in environmentally beneficial activities (Christophers 2022, 2024).
Credit guidance frameworks can help overcome this problem. In the previous section we described how credit policy can reduce lending to and investment in damaging sectors that must be scaled down. A similar approach can also be used to actively steer private finance toward more socially and ecologically beneficial activities, thus ensuring sufficient investment in necessary but less-profitable production in line with democratically ratified objectives. Credit guidance was used extensively in the post-war period (Monnet 2018). It helped many European states build up industrial capacity and accelerate innovation in key sectors. In the contemporary world economy, China represents a strong example of credit guidance in action (Sperber 2024). In China, major financial institutions and banks are controlled by the state, which allows the government to strategically allocate capital in line with long-term objectives. Green industrial policy has been a core aspect of state-led credit guidance in China and has achieved remarkable success: China is now the global leader in the manufacturing of many renewable energy devices, such as photovoltaics, EVs, lithium-ion batteries, and wind turbines. Credit guidance also holds other potential economic benefits, such as offsetting inflationary pressures and potentially preventing debt bubbles. Public finance mechanisms can also be leveraged to increase investment in socially and ecologically necessary production, and are particularly important in cases where the necessary production is not profitable at all. Any government that has sufficient monetary sovereignty can issue the national currency to invest directly in implementing a public job guarantee, improving public services, insulating buildings, innovating more efficient technologies, and establishing a national renewable energy system, without being limited by the question of profitability (Kelton 2020). Increasing public finance in this manner may risk driving inflation if the new production stretches the productive capacity of the economy. But this risk can be avoided by implementing measures to reduce other, less-necessary forms of production (and by using taxation to reduce the purchasing power of the rich), which reduces excess demand and prevents inflationary pressures (Olk et al. 2023). The degrowth-oriented measures described above therefore liberate real resources that can be redirected toward increasing production for the public good.
We have mentioned the public job guarantee and universal public services above. The idea of a job guarantee is to prevent unemployment that may arise from reducing output in certain sectors, and enables labour to train and participate in socially meaningful production and the ambitious public works that are necessary for the transition (Kaboub 2008, Sylla 2023). The job guarantee programme can also be used to establish living wages and good labour conditions, therefore compelling private firms to meet similar standards or risk losing staff. This is a crucial stabilising mechanism in striving towards universal employment, good livelihoods, and sufficient production of necessary goods and services regardless of fluctuations in aggregate output. The idea of universal public services – by which we mean not only education and healthcare but also affordable housing, childcare, and sufficient quantities of water and clean energy for household consumption – is to ensure that necessary goods and services are always being produced and available to all, again irrespective of changes in aggregate output.
Currently, many states take a passive approach to green industrial policy, limiting their intervention to fixing ‘market failures’, for example through carbon taxes, emission trading schemes, and subsidies for renewables, as outlined above (Gabor and Braun 2025). Although these can be useful, governments must take a more active approach to investment if we are to achieve rapid reductions in emissions and bring resource use to sustainable levels. In this kind of system, the direction of investment is determined by the state, the public, and the people, rather than by capital. In practice, this means more public provision of essential goods and services, public finance and credit policy in line with democratically ratified objectives, and greater democratisation of private sector production in the form of worker/community ownership of firms.
We also need greater financial coordination between various policy levers of the state, be it monetary policy, fiscal policy, credit plicy, or financial repression policy (Gabor and Braun 2025). For many state bodies, this would transform business-as-usual, but nothing less is necessary given the scale and urgency of the challenges we face. Central banks in particular need to change the way they operate, from simply focusing on ‘market-fixing’ and short-term price stability, towards taking a more active role in credit guidance (Kedward et al. 2024). Reorganising the economy to produce for public benefit would also enable our societies to shift toward more community-centred living, in turn helping us to more rapidly decarbonise and reduce material footprints (Hickel 2020a; Kallis et al. 2020, Schmelzer et al. 2022). Many cities and countries have started implementing policies for that purpose. For example, many European cities have started incentivizing more use of public transport and less use of private vehicles. Oslo has made large parts of its city centre inaccessible for cars, London has introduced ultra-low emission zones, and Milan has vastly expanded its bicycle network. Research has demonstrated that sufficiently rapid decarbonisation does not only require more electric vehicles, but also requires a large-scale reduction in car use (Winkler et al. 2023).
More broadly, public provisioning is crucial in the age of ecological breakdown. In the 1950s and 1960s, assets such as land and housing were in fact often in the hands of the public, but since the wave of neoliberalism starting in the 1970s, land and housing were sold off in abundance to the private sector (Harvey 2007). These should be restored to public ownership, so they can be provisioned to people under more accessible conditions. The housing market has become especially problematic. Housing has become so financialised that most people now see houses as investment assets to generate returns rather than places for people to live in. The deregulation of the housing market has paved the way for rent hikes, growing deficits of social housing, and a growing number of dilapidated houses being put up for rent. In England, there has been a net loss of 20,000–35,000 social homes nearly every year since 1981. In 2023, there were 1.4 million fewer households in social housing compared to 1980 (Shelter 2024).
(https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/13563467.2025.2506655)