Social Credit

Social credit, clipped to SoCred, is an economical system that advocates for social control of credit, a national dividend, and other policies that aim to rise consumer's purchasing power and decentralize economic power.

Purpose of the Economy and Waste
SoCred believes that the purpose a economy is to provide goods and services that increase personal well-being, however not every good serves this purpose, this goods are the waste. This waste hurts the consumer, since price of products is increased because of it, hurting his purchasing power.

Production and Cultural Inheritance
For them, there are four factor in production land, labor, capital and Cultural Inheritance, with the last one having the most importance. Cultural Inheritance is the knowledge, process and techniques that are developed by past civilizations. These ideas make so that we don't need to reinvent the well, making production easier and more valuable

How to Draw
Socialcredit_flag.svg


 * 1) Draw a ball.
 * 2) Colour the ball white.
 * 3) Draw a green outline of a semicircle with a line entering it through the bottom.
 * 4) Draw the outline of three green spikes on the semicircle with the middle spike larger.
 * 5) Add the eyes and you're finished.

Friends

 * Long.png Longism - Likes wealth distribution and increasing consumer purchasing power. Based.

Frenemies

 * Socliber.png Social Libertarianism - Likes universal income but I'm not sure if I like most of your other policies.

Enemies

 * Bankocracy.png Bankocracy - I hate you for forcing the consumers to go into debt.
 * Zio.png Zionism - You're just the last guy, but honest.
 * Dengf.png Dengism - You've ruined the great name of social credit! Now everyone confuses my ideology with you!

Literature

 * Social Credit by C. H. Douglas
 * Credit-power and democracy by C. H. Douglas

Wikipedia

 * Social Credit
 * C. H. Douglas
 * William Aberhart

Videos

 * An Introduction to Social Credit - animated video by The Clifford Hugh Douglas Institute
 * The weird "Social Credit" movement by J.J. McCullough

Other

 * The Clifford Hugh Douglas Institute