| Consultation: | FYEG General Assembly 2026 |
|---|---|
| Agenda item: | 8. Resolutions |
| Proposer: | FYEG EC |
| Status: | Published |
| Submitted: | 04/15/2026, 21:53 |
R13: Universal Basic Services: Towards a Convivial Degrowth Europe
Motion text
Introduction
Capitalism is failing at ensuring basic human needs such as affordable housing,
comfortable and sustainable transportation, universal healthcare, and food. As
Capitalism is currently the predominant economic system, the degrowth and post-
growth researcher Jason Hickel, capitalism relies on maintaining an artificial
scarcity of essential services (such as housing, healthcare, transport, etc)
through processes of enclosure and commodification. This manipulation of the
market enables the ruling class to raise prices and maximise their profits (e.g.
rental market, the US healthcare system, or the British rail system), increasing
their capital.
As indicated by the Eurostat, housing prices rose by 48% in the EU between 2010
and 2023, 10.6% of the EU population are unable to keep their homes adequately
warm in 2023, and Europe is facing an escalating housing crisis (European
Commission, 2024). According to the Global Report on Food Crises 2024 (FAO,
2024), In 2023, 281.6 million people (21.5 percent of the analysed population)
faced high levels of acute food insecurity in 59 food-crisis
countries/territories. Food insecurity in Europe affects roughly 7%–8% of the
population, with over 17% of those at risk of poverty unable to afford adequate
meals. Driven by inflation, high food prices, and geopolitical tensions, the
crisis disproportionately impacts young people, low-income households, and
under-privileged regions. The numbers do not lie: capitalism is a war machine
against equality. The intersectionality of the struggles and vulnerabilities
make it more difficult to respond and recover from shocks.
The only solution to prevent and stop the further development of these
inequalities is to move towards a Convivial Degrowth Economy where human
wellbeing is sustained while planetary boundaries are respected. Reaching a
Convivial Degrowth Economy is a key element of the Green Europe we are fighting
for, and the only way to ensure that no one is left behind and universal human
needs are satisfied. Universal Basic Services (UBS) will facilitate the
development of this system.
About Universal Basic Services
Theorised by Coote and Percy (2020), UBS aims to offer access to essential needs
to everyone regardless of financial status, as well as to help against the
climate crisis (Coote, 2022). UBS guarantee a public subsidised (affordable and
in some cases free) access to food, transportation, healthcare, education, and
housing regardless of financial status, gender etc.
These UBS will cover universal basic needs. All of these needs are satisfiable
within a threshold, as humans do not require excess in any of them to live
comfortably (Coote, 2022). At its core, UBS seeks to redefine consumption from
individual and private to public and shared (Coote, 2021).
A core aspect of UBS is the improvement of people’s access to services necessary
for decent lives, with provisioning systems that require less aggregate energy
and material use and which allow us to accelerate decarbonisation. These
outcomes can be further enhanced by ensuring strong democratic governance of
public systems (Hickel, 2023).
Practical Cases
In Europe there has already been a number of cases where UBS were limitedly
implemented.
Romania’s Green Friday in Cluj - Free Public
Transport Each Friday
With the slogan of “STOP! Today the car is standing still!” Green Friday is an
initiative started in June 2021 and active in the city of Cluj and its
surrounding municipalities (CTP Cluj-Napoca, 2026). This is a prime example of
UBS, with its goals to reduce chemical and noise pollution, traffic, car
accidents and congestion, and costs of traveling, as well as to stimulate
citizens to use the public transport more.
UBS Housing in Europe
In Vienna, housing costs are kept low because the city owns a large share of the
land. Hamburg and Copenhagen use public organisations to manage land, while the
whole country of Denmark taxes land and redistributes it to local governments
for housing investments (Coote, 2022). In Montpellier, the city partners with
special vehicles to develop land. Some regions of Belgium, Austria, Germany,
Denmark, and the Netherlands have a threshold after which rents become capped or
subsidized.
Free Access to Food in Schools - The Case of
Finland and the United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom and Finland, kids receive free lunch in school. While
Finland has been offering universal free meals in school since 1943, the UK
currently only offers them to kids in reception and in their first and second
years of school (Coote, 2022).
Standing for UBS is essential in a global context where public services are put
under a lot of pressure, and sometimes being threatened by budget cuts and
neoliberal policies encouraging their privatisation. In that regard, employing
universal basic services would:
Reduce the inequality gap. These services improve the lives of people in
the lower-income classes.
Act as a form of prevention against illness or even death (free
healthcare, education), thus reducing poverty and mortality by making
these needs accessible to everyone.
Improve sustainability by shifting the focus from producing for capital to
producing for human needs.
We, as Federation of Young European Greens, call to:
The EU to ensure universal access to nutritious, regenerative, and plant-
based food by implementing a public grocery system. Public grocery systems
are defined as retail food establishments that are directly owned,
partially or fully funded, or significantly supported by public
institutions. These institutions can range from local municipal
governments and regional authorities to community-based co-operatives that
operate under a public mandate. A core principle of their operation is
offering goods at affordable and, in some cases, subsidized prices.
European governments shall fund regenerative farms and gardens linked to
these public grocery stores (Clark, 2021).
The European governments and municipalities to invest more in sustainable
public transit systems and make them affordable.
The European Commission to extend the scope and raise the ambition of the
European Affordable Housing Plan by prioritising public over private
investment and Public Private Partnerships in affordable housing supply.
The EU Member States to design financial and legal solutions to support
social and affordable housing.
The European Commission and European national governments to design
financial and legal solutions for free healthcare.
The EU to move away from outdated fiscal rules and implement wealth taxes.
The potential revenue from wealth taxes could be allocated according to
each country’s specific needs and political priorities, offering
opportunities to invest in energy, education, healthcare, transportation,
or unemployment programmes.
References
Clark, James. 2021. « It’s Time to Nationalize Supermarkets ». Jacobin, July 15.
https://jacobin.com/2021/07/nationalize-supermarkets-australia-agriculture-food-
system-public-sector
CPT Cluj-Napoca. 2026. https://ctpcj.ro/index.php/ro/despre-noi/stiri/vinerea-
verde/1442
Coote, Anna. 2021. « Universal Basic Services and Sustainable Consumption ».
Sustainability: Science, Practice and Policy 17 (1): 32‑46.
https://doi.org/10.1080/15487733.2020.1843854.
Coote, Anna. 2022. « Towards a Sustainable Welfare State: The Role of Universal
Basic Services ». Social Policy and Society 21 (3): 473‑83.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1474746421000385.
Coote, Anna, et Sebastian Mang. 2023. « Universal Basic Services: a Greener,
More Affordable Life for All ». Green European Journal 26 (décembre).
Coote, Anna, et Andrew Percy. 2020. The Case for Universal Basic Services. The
Case for Series. Polity.
European Commission, ed. 2024. Housing in Europe: 2024 Interactive Edition.
Publications Office. https://doi.org/10.2785/5544429.
FAO, 2024. FSIN and Global Network Against Food Crises. 2024. GRFC 2024. Rome.
https://www.fsinplatform.org/grfc2024.
Hickel, Jason. 2022. Less Is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World. Penguin
Books.
Reason
The EC proposes this resolution - written by the Beyond Growth Platform (BGP) - to be handled during the General Assembly 2026.
