 If humanity is to live within the doughnut, we need to create economies that are far more distributive of their value by design because we have inherited economies that tend to be divisive by design, whether through laws and regulations, through infrastructure, through privilege and inheritance, they tend to drive value and opportunity into the hands of a few, giving rise to a 1%. Over the last decade, the number of billionaires worldwide has more than doubled from around 1,000 billionaires to over 2,000 billionaires, and that pattern is reflected within and between many nations. We need to turn that divisive dynamic that leaves millions of people falling short on the essentials of life while others over consume. We need to turn that divisive dynamic into economies that are far more distributive by design, sharing value and opportunity far more equitably with all who co-created, and that turns out to be the whole of society. How can we create economies that ensure everyone has the essentials of life and that are structured with dynamics that share value and opportunity with all who co-create? One way to begin is to ask yourself who owns the sources of wealth creation? In your locality, who owns the land? Who determines how that land is used and the value that's generated by that land? How is it distributed? Who owns the housing? Is it owned as social housing, private housing owned by landlords, owned by community land trusts and housing cooperatives? Who reaps the value and who pays the cost when rents rise? Who owns the businesses? In your local high street, is it full of multinational corporations who extract the value and take it as profit to who knows where? Or is your high street home to locally owned enterprises owned by families, by cooperatives, by employee owned organizations that reinvest and distribute the value locally so that the value that's created here is retained here, creating strong thriving local communities. These are just some of the ways you can think about creating economies that are distributive by design, going to the source of who owns the sources of wealth creation. How can we ensure that everybody has a part of this equitable distributed economy?