Upstream - Documentary #7: Universal Basic Income Pt. 2 – A Bridge Towards Post-Capitalism?
Episode Date: September 25, 2017It has been said that it’s easier to imagine the end of the world than to imagine the end of capitalism. That might have been true a decade ago, but today, the end of capitalism is becoming more and... more plausible — at times it feels inevitable. In fact, at least half of Americans think that capitalism is a fundamentally unfair system, and over a third have a positive view of socialism. These numbers are rather strange for a society where just uttering the word “socialist” in public a generation ago could cost you your job or get you onto some government list. And when you look at younger generations, it gets even more interesting. A Harvard University survey showed that the majority of millennials do not support capitalism. And in the United Kingdom, similar surveys have found that people are more likely to have an unfavorable view of capitalism than of socialism. More and more people are falling out of love with capitalism. And is it really all that surprising? Capitalism has failed to achieve most of its promises and many are now beginning to dream about what a different, better world might look like. Well, in this second episode of our 2-part series on Universal Basic Income (UBI), we’ll explore what role UBI might have in transitioning to that different world. There is an exciting and lively debate taking place among the left right now exploring whether Universal Basic Income would do more to dismantle capitalism or, rather, to prop it up and help to keep it going. For this episode, we’ve assembled another all-star cast of economists, journalists, and authors, and asked them to share their perspectives and to envision what the long-term societal effects of giving everyone a Universal Basic Income might look like. Would a progressive UBI act as simply another form of welfare, temporarily propping up a fundamentally flawed system, and just serving as another concession to eventually be eroded and gutted by the capitalist class? Or could it be more than that — could it actually fundamentally challenge the current capitalist system and help to dismantle it? We explore these questions — and many more — in this final episode of our 2-part exploration of Universal Basic Income. Featuring: Erik Olin Wright - Marxist scholar and sociology professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison Kathi Weeks - Marxist-feminist scholar, associate professor of Women’s Studies at Duke University and author of ‘The Problem with Work: Feminism, Marxism, Antiwork Politics, and Postwork Imaginaries’ Matt Bruenig - Writer, researcher, and founder of the People's Policy Project Richard Wolff - Marxist economist, economics professor Emeritus University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Founder of Democracy at Work, and host of the weekly radio show Economic Update Doug Henwood - Journalist, economic analyst, and writer whose work has been featured in Harper’s, Jacobin Magazine, and The Nation Martin Kirk - Co-founder and Director of Strategy at The Rules Rutger Bregman - Journalist and author of ‘Utopia for Realists: The Case for a Universal Basic Income, Open Borders and a 15-hour Workweek’ Manda Scott - Novelist, columnist, and broadcaster Juliana Bidadanure - Assistant professor in political philosophy at Stanford University Sofa Gradin - Political Organizer and Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at Queen Mary University of London Music: American Football, J. T. Harechmak, Pele Many thanks to Benjamin Henderson for the cover art. This episode of Upstream was made possible with support from listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support If your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming documentaries, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Bluesky. You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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I have a follow-up question. So this is a little bit more of an abstract question.
Looking at the long-run, long-term effects of universal basic income,
do you think that it could move humanity from our current capitalist system
to some kind of new system, post-capitalism, let's call it?
I think it would be a step in the direction of accelerating capitalism to its inevitable end.
But it still is implying capital,
because you're working with money and an income.
But capitalism is relating to the accumulation of money.
A better question is, if we're in that zone already,
and we're looking back at the history book,
and we're like, what turned the tide to make this thing happen?
I think it would be seen as one of the parts.
It won't be the turning point, but it'll be one of many turning points, like any vector image.
One of the straws on the camel's back.
Yeah, the capitalist camel.
Yes.
What's your name?
Christelle Loré.
I think if it's done well,
it could really, I think, change the economy
and the way we think about things.
There are already a lot of things that are being done,
new initiatives that are challenging
the capitalist way of doing things.
And I think that this would definitely contribute to busting that system.
That was Robert on the streets of San Francisco,
asking people our big question for this episode.
Could universal basic income be a bridge towards a post-capitalist future?
This is the question that we'll explore in the second part of our two-part series on basic income.
In our first episode, we demonstrated how a progressive UBI not only alleviates poverty and supports people whose work isn't waged, but also that it has the perhaps counterintuitive
effect of actually encouraging people to be more productive in their lives, enabling them
to do more work that is meaningful to them.
But what if we were to zoom out and explore universal basic income's
potential for bringing about systems change? Could a progressive UBI radically transform
our current economic system and spell the end of capitalism? Or alternatively, would
it fail to go far enough to address its structural inadequacies? Or even, might a UBI actually
soften the edges of capitalism and ultimately serve as a way of keeping the system going?
To begin this inquiry, let's start with a brief exploration of the system that we're currently in.
Good afternoon. Our topic today, what is capitalism?
We hear capitalism, capitalistic system, on every hand,
on the radio, in newspapers, magazines, books, in lectures, in daily conversation.
But just what is capitalism?
But just what is capitalism?
Here's Sofa Graydon, lecturer in politics and international relations at Queen Mary University of London and political organizer, from their podcast World Power.
So firstly, capitalism focuses on the private ownership, not only of property in general, but of what Marx called the means of production in particular.
And the means of production are things that you could make money from.
So your toothbrush or a photo of you as a cute baby are not means of production,
but a machine or a warehouse building would be.
In other economic systems, the means of production might be owned by collectives of workers in cooperatives or by the state. But in capitalism, the means of production are owned by
individuals who have bought them for their own personal gain. And what follows from this is that
you have a distinction in a capitalist company between the owners of the company on the one hand
and the workers on the other hand. And in this relationship
the workers work and create value for the company but the value that the workers create goes to the
owners of the company and the workers only ever get a wage that is as low as possible regardless
of how much value they create for their bosses. Secondly I would say capitalism focuses on profits. And a profit is a financial
gain calculated on a short-term basis, every quarter, every few years, maybe every year.
So if a company, for example, harms the environment, emits CO2 that will create problems for larger
groups of people 30 years from now, that is not included in the calculation of that company's finances and that company's success or otherwise. Thirdly, I would argue that capitalism focuses on
competition between different firms in the market. Different companies are supposed to compete
against each other and take a larger and larger market share. Actually, you could say that all
capitalist companies are basically trying to become the
monopoly in their market, because they're constantly striving for a bigger market share
and for a bigger profit, and there is never a point at which a company would just sit
back in their chair and say, oh now we've achieved enough, now we can stop.
Capitalism is an economic system in which power over the allocation of investments and the control over basic economic activity is vested in owners of capital.
This is sociology professor Eric Olin Wright at the University of Wisconsin-Madison,
whose work offers a way of seeing UBI as a path beyond capitalism.
That's what capitalism is.
It's a particular kind of market society
in which ownership of capital gives you the right to boss people around
and to allocate resources.
And the economy is capitalist
when capitalism dominates the overall system of economic relations.
The economy is not an end,
but a means for how we meet human needs within the limitations
of our planetary home. And capitalism is just one of those means in the form of a market run by
private ownership. But it isn't the only way we meet our needs. It's just the dominant one.
When we say the United States is a capitalist economy,
that's a kind of shorthand for a much more complicated description.
The fuller description would be to say
the economic system in the United States
consists of a vast array of quite different kinds of economic relationships
within which capitalism is dominant.
So that kind of more complicated description implies that capitalist economies like the United States
already contain many non-capitalist forms of economic activity.
These would include, for example, the care economy, the cooperative economy, the gift economy, and the not-for-profit
economy. These are all non-capitalist forms of economic activity which all currently exist
alongside capitalism. In this way, we can imagine the economy, in the words of feminist economist
Gibson Graham, as a global sea of capitalism with many islands of alternatives.
My argument for transformation then consists of thinking about various ways
in which we can expand the non-capitalist forms
within this complicated configuration that combines capitalism with non-capitalism.
So I look for economic forms that are more egalitarian,
more democratic, and more solidaristic and ask, are there ways that we can,
even inside of a capitalist world, expand and vitalize those sorts of economic activities?
Okay, so how does UBI fit into this?
What's the relationship between unconditional basic income
and the development of non-capitalist possibilities?
If we lived in a world where people could freely move
from one kind of economic relation to another,
so their participation in either the capitalist
or the cooperative market was entirely voluntary.
They could simply decide, I want to live that way of life and opt for the non-capitalist form of relations.
First of all, that would be a very different world from the one in which we live.
Second of all, it would mean that the capitalist part of that economic system would be way less powerful.
that the capitalist part of that economic system would be way less powerful, that the power that comes from owning capital would no longer be able to dictate the conditions of life to other people.
And thirdly, it would make possible a balance between these different forms of activity
that I think would tremendously enhance social justice, solidarity, and democracy for everybody.
It would actually be a more just society, even for those people who decide they'd rather work in a capitalist firm.
Justice would be enhanced broadly, not just for those people who opted out.
And unconditional basic income is then one of the things which might facilitate such a
transition. Let's look a little more closely at a couple of examples of non-capitalistic forms of
economic activity and explore how they might be strengthened in a world with universal basic
income. It would guarantee a flow of income to all sorts of mission-driven organizations,
from community organizations to nonprofits to activist organizations, you name it.
Think of the performing arts, you know, music, dance, theater,
you know, the classic images of the starving artist, right?
The young person, usually, who is dedicated to their artistic endeavors
and lives miserably because of their passion for art. Or theater people who have a day job. They
wait on tables and do theater in the evening. Well, an unconditional basic income, in a sense,
liberates theater artists from having to earn as much income outside of
the theater. And therefore, it becomes a way of expanding the space in the economy
for performing arts as a form of economic activity, which does not have to rely entirely
on market-generated income in order to support its participants.
entirely on market-generated income in order to support its participants.
So capitalism could be eroded if people were truly given the choice of fully supporting and empowering alternative economies. But is this erosion guaranteed?
What a UBI does is give people resources to behave in different ways, but it doesn't force them to
behave in different ways. It doesn't guarantee that people will take the opportunities created
by having the ability to say no to capitalist labor markets and then build the more solidarity
and social economy in the ways we talked about. It doesn't guarantee that at all,
social economy in the ways we talked about. It doesn't guarantee that at all, but it makes it possible. And the sense in which it makes it possible, that is in and of itself a change in
power relations, because it's power that prevents them from being able to do it under existing
structures. And then it's a question of how people react to it and what kind of social movements
emerge, what sorts of efforts to indeed change people's ways of thinking
come about in a context where,
if you change your way of thinking, you can do something different.
So the increased freedom that would come with a basic income
would give people the choice to decide whether or not
to enter into capitalist relations,
but there's no guarantee that this would happen.
With this in mind, it seems important that any movement for a UBI
be accompanied by campaigns to show how harmful capitalism is,
to shift people's thinking around possibilities,
and to invite people to participate in alternatives.
and to invite people to participate in alternatives.
But what if these complementary campaigns don't gain momentum?
What if they're stifled by those in power?
What if a tipping point never takes place?
Is there a real risk that without a significant shift towards alternatives,
a UBI could actually just help to keep this system going?
This is economist and author Kathy Weeks, who we heard from in episode one.
Whether or not a guaranteed basic income would just sort of allow capitalism to survive,
I mean, yes. And I think that's why the politics of basic income have sort of become much more possible, because I think really this is the way that capitalism can survive.
It can't survive if it's not going to work as a system of income distribution.
And it's really not working well, and that's becoming much clearer to more people.
So I think if capitalism is going to have a future, I think basic income is, you know,
is going to be necessary.
But again, I don't think that means that it's going to shield it from critique. I think in the process of trying to save itself, it's also going to open up other kinds of
possibilities for disruption and for antagonism and for political opposition.
disruption and for antagonism and for political opposition. So again, I really, I think that it's both a mere reform, but it's a mere reform with real potential to get us to a different place in
the future. The argument that a UBI could actually save capitalism makes sense if we're talking about it as a kind of welfare program that helps to
redistribute income. We'll explore whether or not it's helpful or even accurate to view basic income
as a form of welfare later on in the episode. But for now, let's explore how welfare works
and what role it plays within capitalist economies.
what role it plays within capitalist economies.
Hello, this is Matt.
We made a call to Matt Brunig,
a researcher and writer whose work focuses on welfare, poverty, and inequality.
Capitalist economic systems,
despite their being really good at creating a lot of stuff and producing a lot of stuff, they also are not very good at distributing that stuff evenly and not very good at making sure
people have security from sort of random or unfortunate events. And that is what creates
a lot of poverty and inequality in society. So the leading causes of poverty in any given capitalist country are old age, disability, unemployment.
Students or caregivers often find themselves in poverty.
And this is just sort of capitalism doesn't have a good way of integrating those people into the way that it distributes income.
Capitalism only wants to distribute income out to people who are working and to people who own a lot of stuff.
And there's this middle ground of people who are neither at any given time, even though they may have worked in the past or they might work in the future. And so things like UBI or the welfare
state in general are the solution to that problem, to set up alternative ways of distributing income
in society that aren't based purely on this kind of ruthless capitalist efficiency. And that,
I think, is sort of the basic problem that all welfare programs, whether UBI or not, are trying to solve.
By providing an income to people who are engaged in activities necessary to capitalism, but that capitalism tends to ignore, like parenting or caregiving in general, welfare plays an essential role in keeping the system running. And if we view basic income as another example of welfare softening the edges of a ruthless
capitalist system, then we see that it actually doesn't tackle the root causes of the problem,
which is ultimately the system itself.
Here is Richard Wolff, economist and professor at the New School in New York City.
We spoke with him at his home in Manhattan.
Capitalism has always, from its beginning, failed in a fundamental task.
It failed to provide meaningful work, even under its own terms of exploitation, for everybody. It couldn't do it.
Its own mechanisms mean that when you even get near to full employment, the position of workers
bargaining for wages allows them to push the wages up, which makes the employer react by saying,
well, I'm not going to pay you that higher wage, so I'm firing you, I'm not hiring you,
plunging them back into unemployment.
It's its own mechanisms, make a long story short, that prevent the system from ever achieving full
employment. It's always only a question of how many people will be unemployed, how bad will it be,
how long will it last, all of that. And the problem is that's not a viable system. Why?
all of that. And the problem is that's not a viable system. Why? Because people who are literally without work and therefore without income are going to have very little to lose.
Unless they quietly walk off into the woods and die, which some do, but most won't, they are going
to try to find another way to exist. And they become the beggars, and they become the thieves,
and they become the marauding gangs, whatever you want.
So the system has to come up with that.
And so it invented, took centuries, it invented what we nowadays call welfare, or the safety
net, or a whole variety of terms like this, in which you basically say, not what kind of a system leaves large numbers of people bereft,
and even if it pays them, pays them so little that they can't live,
we're going to solve this problem by, let's see,
taxing a bunch of money from those who have it
in order to basically give it to these people so they don't make
trouble.
We say to them, okay, live over there in that shitty part of town, but we'll give you enough
that you can eat, we'll give you a food stamp, and we will give you a Section 8 voucher to
live in public housing, and we will give your kid a free breakfast at school if they qualify,
because we pay you so little that your life is miserable. And that'll be called, if you
lump it all together, a guaranteed basic income. The rational response to this would be, wait a
minute, why do we have a system that creates this thing? We don't do that.
We dare not ask those questions in our culture. So we have basic income, welfare, charity,
whatever you want to call it, to keep these people going. But no sooner do you do this,
then you set up a struggle. All the people who have money, a job income,
they're going to have to now be taxed to raise the money to take care of the people on the basic income.
They don't want that.
They worked hard for their money.
Don't take it from me.
Every right-wing jerk in any culture
has always seen a great opportunity here to deal with the anger of those
one step above those on welfare who don't want to be told you have to pay for. Of course,
the answer for the masses would be make the rich pay. And the rich understand this all too well,
which is why they buy the politicians to make sure that's not the
way it's done. And then they make sure that the way they escape their share of taxation is to set
the workers against the unemployed in an endless, horrible fight that often leads to violence and
that leads to social conflict and that leads to Brexit votes and to Trump elections and all the rest.
Two years ago, a French economist named Thomas Piketty writes a famous book, Capital in the
21st Century, 600-page book. His book shows in every capitalism that the world has seen,
any country, any time, you let capitalism function, it creates an ever-widening gap between rich and
poor. The only time that is constricted is when people rise up, like they did in the 1930s,
and change it all out of rage about this thing. And as soon as that rage passes, it's undone,
like we undid the New Deal, and we start to say, which we are not in the middle of, you know.
the New Deal and we start to say, which we are not in the middle of, you know.
So what's my response?
We don't need and we don't want, because it's socially destructive and socially divisive,
to have one group of people who work and another group of people who don't.
Give everyone reasonable work and give everyone reasonable pay.
Our societies are being torn apart by struggles over redistribution. Do we take and from whom to give to those less fortunate as if it
was a matter of fortune rather than an economic system that doesn't work.
Redistribution tears societies apart. Here's the parallel. You're going into
the park on a Sunday afternoon.
You're a married couple.
You have two children.
One is six and one is seven.
And you stop because there's a man selling ice cream cones.
And you give one of your children an ice cream cone.
It's got four scoops.
And the other one, an ice cream cone with one scoop.
And you continue walking.
Those children are going to murder each other. They're gonna struggle. What are you doing? And don't
then come up, okay, you've had, you've eaten this part of your scoop, so give
the other part of your scoop to your sister or your brother. Stop. The
resentment of the one who has to lose his ice cream or her you see where i'm going
every parent who isn't a ghoul understands give each child the same damn ice cream cone two scoops
each you don't need redistribution if you don't distribute it unequally in the first place. Capitalism is congenitally incapable of distributing equally. So, would a UBI just act as a different form of welfare, temporarily propping up a fundamentally
flawed system and simply serving as another concession to eventually be eroded and dismantled
by the capitalist class? Or is it somehow different? We asked economist and author Doug Henwood, who you heard from in our last episode,
if UBI is worth fighting for, and if he thought it could actually lead to the erosion of capitalism.
Well, you know, it's not communist revolution, that's for sure.
It's not workers taking over the means of production.
But there's a very famous essay by the Polish
economist Michal Kolecki. I think it's called Political Aspects of Full Employment.
And he said that if workers feel more confident, they're more likely to make demands.
And I think the capitalist class understands this, which is why they get nervous when the unemployment
rate gets too low, which is why they'd probably be very strongly opposed to a universal basic
income. So I think it would be adjusting to do in the short to medium term, just make sure that
people don't fall below a certain level of income, but it would also, I think, encourage them for the future and
make them more likely to make demands. Elites have been very, very successful over the last
several decades in ratcheting down people's expectations. People are just now happy to
have a job. They're happy not to get shot in the street. it's just like people don't expect very much out of this system.
And when people don't expect very much, they're not going to get very much. So even if it is not
radically transformative, although I think a lot of employers would find it that way,
a basic income would embolden people to expect more out of the system and be more likely to
make demands on the system in the future, which I think is a good thing.
So a Band-Aid is not a, or something larger, a larger Band-Aid is not a bad idea if you're bleeding.
And it's certainly not a cure for a broken bone or cancer,
but it's certainly, a Band-Aid can be a very useful thing.
If you've got, you know, raw skin that needs to be protected while it heals,
there's something to be said for Band-Aids.
On the surface, the effects of a UBI would look quite a lot like those of welfare,
so it's understandable that the two are often conflated.
But there is something different about UBI.
It's like a key that that if turned just the right way
might unlock a door, a big door with something pivotal on the other side. Perhaps there's no
way of really knowing if the effects of a UBI would be enough to dismantle capitalism.
But is there a way to increase its chances? What if the way we framed the conversation around UBI might actually be
significant in determining its long-term effects?
Hey, Della. How are you doing?
I'm doing well, thank you. How are you?
Not at all bad.
Maybe first, could you introduce yourself for our listeners?
I'm Martin Kirk.
I'm the co-founder and director of strategy at The Rules.
And what exactly is The Rules?
The Rules is a, we refer to ourselves as a collective of different types of people around
the world.
We've got artists and writers and thinkers and designers and coders, hackers.
So we're basically a collective of people who are bound together by a mission to
challenge the root causes of inequality and poverty and climate change. And when we talk
about the root causes, what we're talking about is the cognitive root causes, really,
the belief structures. So if we want to change the surface politics, we have to get into the
belief structures underneath. And I'm aware that The rules has recently launched a campaign to reframe UBI in a way that would better enable it to lead to systems change. So as of now, you don't see UBI as a path towards systems change?
growth imperative. It doesn't challenge the concept of private property. It doesn't redistribute power in any way. It adheres strictly to the principle of capital generation as the prime directive of
the system. It doesn't question value at all. So for all those reasons, on its own, it's not
inherently post-capitalist. It has the potential to move us towards post-capitalism. But in order
to do that, it has to not operate in the welfare
frame. It has to not be seen as a form of charity. It has to question concepts of power. It has to
question work. It has to get into the fundamentals of the system. We have to somehow cohere around
the idea that we're talking about system change. We're not talking about change to bits of the
system. We're talking about system change. We have to be talking about system change. We're not talking about change to bits of the system. We're talking about system change.
We have to be talking about system change.
Are you promoting a logic that is genuinely transformational, the level of the system?
Or are you promoting a policy idea that will soften the existing system slightly?
We think time has passed where you can do the latter.
Now we've got to be focusing on the system. So what are the problems that you see with putting UBI in a
welfare frame? And what might be a better way to talk about it? There are some really interesting
parallels between the UBI as a concept and development actually as a concept and poverty
alleviation. When I was at Oxfam and we did a lot of work looking at
the overall development narrative how the world talks about global poverty and development what
we found was it's a conversation that's mired in the charity frame which essentially says you know
the way to solve problems is for to give a little bit of money from rich people to poor people
but we found that charity is a very very very small concept in many respects, because it is about purely transfers of wealth. It very rarely allows space for conversations around the systems. And that means that it's actually there's a very, very powerful tension between the idea of justice and the idea of charity.
And that same tension exists in the UBI conversation, although what we'd say there is the tension is created by the predominance of the welfare at that point. You say people must work for their living and, you know, benefits can never,
charity can never be a preferable option to working.
So, but this is predominantly a framing challenge.
This is not a challenge, actually, of the basic idea of providing everybody
with the wherewithal to live a healthy life.
Because that's what UBI is, really, the wherewithal to live a healthy life.
So we think the UBI is really the wherewithal to live a healthy life.
So we think the UBI should be a conversation about freedom, about liberation. It should not be a conversation about charity. And they're two very, very different things. So we know that
tension exists right now. And as long as people talk about in the welfare frame, you are going to
reduce the idea to its most mechanical lowest point almost if you can
stimulate if you can get it talked about in the freedom frame all the energy in the frame pushes
it bigger and pushes it upwards so that's the tension we have to figure out and we don't know
how to figure it out yet because you're talking here about very deep logics that exist in our
societies it's these are very very very difficult things to get over.
And so we have to engage at this level of the frames and the language if we want to really engage the root causes of the issues that we care about.
And so how is the rules involved in the debate around UBI?
We're engaging people in the story, trying to get new audiences into it, and also to try to provide a space where lots of those different audiences that are already talking about it can come together more because it's a very fractured, siloed conversation right now.
It's less than the sum of its parts.
And what we want to do is help make it more than the sum of its parts. a prototype of a UBI delivery mechanism in early 2018 to give people that real, visceral,
practical feel and experience of engaging with the universal basic income.
And we're building a particular model that uses a cryptocurrency model, which is how you get to the radical conversations through a cryptocurrency model rather than a government
issued money model.
Cryptocurrencies are decentralized digital currencies that bypass central banks and
central governments. The best-known form of a cryptocurrency is Bitcoin, which relies on
blockchain technology to function. A discussion of cryptocurrencies could easily fill up an entire
episode on its own, but the main idea that we want to emphasize here is that they allow for monetary transactions to occur with complete transparency,
each transaction becoming a permanent link in a chain of transactions that cannot be altered and that every computer in the world can view.
This process happens without ever passing through a centralized system.
It's all completely peer-to-peer.
Although Bitcoin is the best known,
there are actually a number of different models.
Here's Martin.
We're particularly looking at one model.
It's called Circles, and it's currently being tested in Berlin.
And Circles is essentially a community trust agreement based model. So the
value of the currency is created between people. This is a horizontal creation of value rather than
the vertical creation of value. So what that means is I give you my money and you accept it because
we agree it's value between us. That's where the value is originated in agreements between people,
not because governments control the supply of it and therefore give it value.
So that's one really radical thing about it.
And what that means is that you are bypassing, you are inferring a whole new financial system, one that is not so centrally controlled, that is much more horizontal.
not so centrally controlled, that is much more horizontal. And that gets you into whole concepts of questions like we talked about earlier about power and the role of the financial system in
society. The Rules is not only working to reframe the conversation around UBI in the hopes of
transforming it into a larger social movement, but they're also experimenting with how to design a UBI that would by itself directly challenge capitalism.
A cryptocurrency-based UBI would open up a lot of opportunities while bypassing some of the funding constraints of traditional UBI proposals.
Yet at the same time, it also raises a host of questions and challenges.
raises a host of questions and challenges. Bitcoin, for example, has become extremely concentrated, with a very small number of people owning most of the currency. It's also quite
unstable, and because of the complex nature of blockchain technology, it takes an immense amount
of computing power, and thus money, to generate those currencies. Who is in control of this invisible infrastructure?
Who owns these servers? These are all issues that would need to be addressed if a cryptocurrency
model of UBI were to be successful. Needless to say, though, it's a fascinating idea. so
so One idea might be just to stop talking about basic income, but use a different word.
This is journalist and author Rutger Bregman, who we heard from in our last episode.
Income is associated with working, right?
And we have, most people still have a very narrow definition of work.
And it might be hard to change that now if you use a word like social dividend or i don't know social grant or dividend
of progress or whatever then most people would understand that this doesn't have to do anything
with working that's very important you know the way people perceive the money they should really
perceive it as a right not as a favor it's their right you know just the way people perceive the money, they should really perceive it as a
right, not as a favor. It's their right, you know, just like the freedom of speech is a right,
freedom of association is a right. And maybe a very promising way to do that is to do it
with a carbon tax. What's actually interesting here is that there's a conservative proposal
right now for a cap and dividend plan.
So the idea would be to introduce a carbon tax and to give the money to the people.
I think that could be a very promising way forward.
And it's also a way to get around the pretty difficult strategical or political issue of how people will perceive this money.
And maybe income isn't the right word. Maybe
you should use the word dividend, social dividend. There is actually a social dividend program of
this sort already, right here in the United States. Alaska is the only place in the world
that has a small universal basic income. It's one of the reasons why Alaska has the lowest inequality of all the states in the US.
And now the most interesting thing to me is that if you as a politician propose,
let's get rid of this basic income, you're finished, because it's hugely popular. And people do not perceive it as, I don't know, something for nothing or whatever. It's just
a right. They don't see it as that they're all freeloaders or something like that.
And that's very, very important.
So yeah, it's a great example of how we could talk about this.
The Alaska Permanent Fund is just a big pile of assets that Alaska owns.
Here's Matt Brunig again.
And they invest it in all sorts of ways,
in stocks and bonds and, you know, the normal sort of thing.
And every year that fund has a return
and they just take the amount of money that they get
and the return, they divide it by the number of Alaskan citizens
and then they pay it out. And some years,
I think it's been as high as $4,000. So for a family of four, that would be $16,000 of just
free money from the state of Alaska coming in. It's no taxing required or anything like that.
The way that they built up that fund is the state of Alaska owned a lot of public lands
that oil was discovered under. And so they charged oil royalties to companies that wanted to drill
the oil. And they took those royalties and put it in the fund. So they didn't build up the fund
through a wealth tax exactly. But once they got the fund, however they got it built up, it ran just like
I would want to run a national basic income program. Matt recently wrote an article titled
The UBI Already Exists for the 1%, in which he laid out an innovative proposal for how to fund
a national basic income program. Before we get into his proposal, we need to understand a little bit about the different types of income that exist in our economy.
So in a capitalist society, there are, roughly speaking, two kinds of income.
There is income paid out to workers for their labor, and there is income paid out to capitalists for the investments that they own.
So if you have money in a mutual fund, or if you're a bank and you loan money, you can get
interest and dividends and rents and that kind of stuff. So the income that flows out to capitalists,
we call that capital income, and the income that flows out to capitalists, we call that capital income,
and the income that flows out to workers, we call that labor income.
And what you see in the United States and in other developed capitalist countries as well is that people at the very top of the economic ladder own a lot of capital assets. They own a lot of equity and bonds, and they just,
in a given year, receive a lot of capital income. The top 1% of income earners in a given year,
they receive around 10% of all the income in the country from their capital income. So,
all the income in the country from their capital income. So one in $10 of income produced in the U.S., in the U.S. economy, goes out to the 1% without them having to work for it. And my piece
tries to sort of say capital income is, in a way, very similar to a basic income. Because if you have a whole bunch of money invested, and every quarter,
you get these big checks, dividends and interest and rent, that's really not any different from
UBI in the sense that you get this flow of money that comes to you, and you don't have to work for
it. Matt's proposal is actually quite similar to the Alaska Permanent Fund, except instead of being seeded by royalties paid by the fossil fuel industry,
it would be seeded by the unearned income, or capital gains,
of the richest in society, creating sort of a capital income for all.
Not only do we have income that's paid out to people
without them having to work for it, which we call capital
income. But we also could just, you know, socialize capital income to an extent. So
the way capital income works is rich people own a lot of stuff and then they get returns on the
stuff that they own. But the government's also capable of owning a lot of stuff. And so maybe
it makes sense if we're going to, you know to take the analogy further to say that let's just have the government build up a huge capital fund that it controls and owns without planning anything.
I'm not talking about central planning or anything like that, just owning a bunch of stocks and bonds and other return generating assets.
Just build up a big fund, and then every year you look at how much do we make collectively,
and you take that number, you divide it by the number of people who you're going to pay out the basic income to,
and you send it out to them.
That's my, I think, ideal way of funding it, as opposed to taxing workers or increasing sales taxes or things like that.
Just take the money that's already being paid out passively to people in society without them having to work for it and pay it out to everyone.
And just to clarify, how exactly would the government acquire the original capital for the capital gains fund?
capital gains fund? That would, yeah, basically you would, over time, you would move the wealth that 1% or even the top 5% or top 10%, you would move the wealth that they currently hold privately,
you would move it into public hands through things like wealth taxes and mandatory share
issuances, which basically just means that you go to big public companies
and you say every year you need to print shares equal to 5% of the value of your company
and hand it over to the government.
There are a number of little strategies basically to slowly move the wealth out of private hands
into public hands very gradually, and you would probably never move all of it over.
You may only move 20,
30, 40 percent over. And then as the wealth gets moved into public hands, that wealth will not get
spent. It won't get sent to anyone. It'll just be held in a fund. And then the return on that wealth
that you get each year, the dividends and interest and rent, that stuff would then go out to everyone as a basic income.
Even though we'd still be operating within the current financial system
and still dependent on economic growth, Matt's basic income funding proposal is compelling
because it would begin to socialize much of the income held by the capitalist class,
putting it firmly into public ownership. And if basic income is
going to have the potential to move us away from capitalism, it will have to tackle the structural
flaws within the system, either through its design or through the larger movements and
campaigns that accompany it. We have to sort out ownership of the means of production. This is going back to Marx, but is still, I think,
really, really relevant. This is novelist, columnist, and broadcaster, Manda Scott.
At the moment, ownership of the means of production rests in the hands of a very tiny
few, and those few are getting fewer. We have to somehow bring things back into public ownership,
into generalized public ownership. We have to make the code open code. We have to somehow bring things back into public ownership, into generalized public ownership.
We have to make the code open code. We have to create kind of open source everything so that
the potential for the accumulation of capital no longer exists. I think that's really,
really important along with UBI. I would say on a very utilitarian level, we have to absolutely accept that certain things are the duty of the state to provide.
So housing, health and education are absolutely the duty of the state to be provided free to everybody.
And so we need to start looking at what is it that a government is for?
And government is not there to promote the accumulation of capital
in the hands of a very few.
It's there to promote the flourishing and well-being of everybody.
But we're also going to have to build towards communities
that understand how to be self-sustaining and that understand how to work
in solidarity with other communities. I think we need to move very much towards a solidarity
economy rather than a capitalist economy. And by a solidarity economy, I mean one where profit is
not the primary motive, where sustainability, the whole concept of economy for the common good begins to come to the fore,
and we assess business, if business is going to keep going, on the basis of its inputs to the
culture and to the society it's embedded in, as much as its ability to make profit for its
shareholders. Shareholder ownership has to go. I don't know how we do that in a safe way
because what we don't really want
is to take capitalism and crash it.
That's not a good thing.
We need to be able to design
the soft landing in capitalism
and the rise of the solidarity economy
so that the two cross over
in a place where everybody is still functioning.
Or we've failed, really, in our attempt to create a better world.
So what do you think?
Could a universal basic income be a bridge from capitalism to a new system?
What are the movements, campaigns, and policies that would complement a UBI to really help us in this transition?
This great turning from life-destructive to life-sustaining.
What do we want that world to look like?
What do we want it to feel like?
And what is your role or contribution to this journey? Thank you. When it comes to economics, you really need to start with the big questions.
So economics is, in my opinion, about the meaning of life, or it should be about the meaning of life.
So it's about big questions.
What is work?
What is value?
What is productivity, etc., etc.?
And neoliberal or neoclassical economics have definitions of that.
They just hide those definitions.
So a mainstream economist, when you ask him the question,
what is productivity, he or she would say,
well, productivity is the amount of money you earn
or how much you contribute towards GDP.
Well, that's a ludicrous definition of productivity.
I mean, then a flash trader at Wall Street would be really productive
and a garbage collector would not be productive at all. Now, what I try to do in my work is go back
to basics and ask a very simple question. For example, what happens if you go on strike? Well,
if a garbage collector goes on strike, complete disaster. If a flash trader on Wall Street goes
on strike, no problem at all. That's great. I wish they would all go on strike.
I mean, I found only one example of all bankers going on strike.
That was Ireland 1970.
Strike lasted for six months and nothing much happened.
You know, the economy just kept growing.
So I think that's really the task we have,
especially after the financial crash or especially after 2016.
We really need to go back to the big questions.
You know, what are we actually doing here?
What is meaning? What is value?
It's completely ludicrous that we still use words like productivity
or you need to earn a living or whatever.
You know, it doesn't make sense.
What is humanity for?
Just at the moment, if you were to look out in the world
out there, what humanity seems to be for is to spend our lives doing jobs that we don't particularly
want to do in order to pay off debts that we didn't really need to rack up. And I don't think
that's what humanity is for at all. In our rush to look at capitalism and how to change
business or how to be sustainable, we haven't stepped back and asked ourselves, as a species,
as a culture, as a nation, as a tribe, as a family, as an individual, what are we here for? What do I
actually want to do? If I didn't have to earn a living, what would I choose to do? And UBI gives us a step on the
way to that. And I think, like the other changes that we're seeing, it's a step that will snowball
very fast, because if you give people a taste of freedom, they're going to get to like it.
On the one hand, it's clearly a reformist proposition, not a revolutionary one. So that I think if we did institute
a guaranteed basic income, it would not spell the end of capitalism. So I don't think of it
in itself as a revolutionary proposition, but I do think of it as opening up a path.
I think the conversation that generated it would be very interesting. I think people would be provided an opportunity
to engage in some really serious critical thinking about the economy and what's working and what
isn't. I really think of it as expanding our intellectual horizons in some ways and our
imagination of what's possible. So I think in that way, it really does provide a path to our attempts to build a different future.
What I've seen from my personal experience is that most people, when they are introduced to the policy for the first time, they think it's a crazy idea.
Here's Juliana Bidadinure, a professor at Stanford University who's teaching a course on universal basic income who we heard from in
our last episode. But then it's not the kind of idea that you can forget about. You can unlearn.
The minute you've been introduced to it, it's going to be with you forever. And I think you
sometimes feel like people haven't been convinced at all and they are really skeptical and they
think it's a crazy idea. And then you meet them a couple of years later and and they have a different perspective on basic income, simply because it's the kind of idea that
forces you to think completely differently about what society would look like, what people actually
decide to do. Then you start thinking about crime and the impact that it might have on crime when
people don't actually have to still to feed themselves. And then you start thinking about
health and mental health and what would happen if people were less stressed and less anxious.
And then you think about innovation and creativity
and you think about all of those things that didn't occur to you
the first time you were introduced to the policy.
And I think that that little path that everyone does
with the idea of basic income is what's really interesting about it.
My name is Joseph.
Joseph, good to meet you. Della.
Nice to meet you. So Della. Della. Yes. I have a question for you. Please. If you were given
$1,500 a month from next month till the rest of your life, how would your life change? How would it be different? Yes, life will change tremendously.
And especially I'm out from operation,
open heart, three bypasses, surgery.
I have no income.
My life will change tremendously.
Definitely.
Definitely so.
Thank you.
Sure, my pleasure.
My pleasure. You have. Thank you. Sure. My pleasure. My pleasure.
You have to educate people.
This kind of question,
the folks here, they have to be more open,
more aware.
Any system you put in charge
is not for the system.
Is the system working or not? For us, we are not for the system is the system working or not for us we are not
for the system we don't live for the system the system is for us to serve us
God bless you Thank you to all of our guests
and to American Football, J.T. Herichmach and Pele
for the music that you heard in this episode.
And to Ben Henderson for designing the cover art.
Thank you also to the Economic Security Project and Sound Art Radio for helping to make this episode happen.
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