Economics

In the perfect society, economics is structured not around profit maximization, but around the rational distribution of resources to sustain life and promote complexity. This model emphasizes optimization over accumulation, aligning with principles of logic, fairness, and the advancement of societal well-being.

Universal Income

Every individual receives a guaranteed sum of money at regular intervals. This amount is continuously adjusted to ensure it covers basic living needs—housing, nutrition, healthcare, communication, and mobility. Additional funds are distributed, when possible, to meet luxury needs—not as a right of wealth, but as a function of surplus and contribution.

Freedom of Work

Labor is not mandatory. Each person may choose to:

  • Form a corporation

  • Work as an employee for another corporation

  • Work for the government

  • Or refrain from working entirely

Contribution is encouraged, not coerced. Productivity is aligned with passion, capacity, and creativity—not survival.

The Government’s Role

The government is the largest producer in society. Its function is to:

  • Guarantee the fulfillment of basic needs

  • Strive to provide luxury goods and services

  • Support innovation through research, culture, and public infrastructure

The government does not compete—it stabilizes, coordinates, and fills the gaps that private production does not or cannot reach.

In this model, economics becomes a rational circulatory system, not a competitive marketplace. Its success is measured not in growth, but in well-being, access, and the sustained capacity to elevate complexity across all domains of life.

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