David Brooks, New York Times, taxes, deficit reduction, income security for all, basic income, Peaceful Positive Revolution, Steven Shafarman www.IncomeSecurityForAll.org, Steven Shafarman
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Monday, September 6th 2010

Conventional Ignorance

Arguments in favor of basic income are everywhere, just about, when we are willing to look. But too many people don’t look or won’t think about this idea, and their ignorance or blindness is what makes our campaign so challenging.

Here’s something from former labor secretary Robert Reich, quoted in a respected liberal blog:

One big reason we are in the crisis we are in, apart from the meltdown from financial markets, is that consumers have run out of money. [...] If they can’t borrow any more and have to rely on their sinking wages, the entire economy is in trouble, because there’s simply not enough demand out there.

Note those phrases: “consumers have run out of money” and “not enough demand.” An obvious solution, it would seem, is to give people money and stimulate demand. That’s precisely what Citizen Dividends will do — give people money, and will do so directly, efficiently, equally, democratically.

That blog post goes on to demonstrate a different aspect of the same ignorance.

There is over-capacity in everything,” said Richard Yamarone, chief economist at Argus Research. “If capacity is too large, you don’t need that many people employed, which is another reason we’re seeing such high job losses.”

The conventional answer, create jobs, doesn’t address the problem of over-capacity. Basic income does. When everyone has a secure monthly income, people will find or create their own jobs. That’s a lot better and more efficient, and more just, than bailing out the auto industry or other big companies. The bailouts are attempts to save the jobs of the past. Much better is to help us move forward with creating new businesses and industries, the jobs of the future.

That blog post is consistent in its liberal outlook, and concludes be calling for “increased unionization”

As David Madland and Karla Walter found, “if unionization rates were the same now as they were in 1983 and the current union wage premium remained constant, new union workers would earn an estimated $49 billion more in wages and salaries per year.” That’s $49 billion in demand that the economy could desperately use right now.

Unions may be part of the solution long-term, but it’s a rather convoluted path, particularly given the political obstacles to increasing unionization. And there will always be millions of workers who are not in unions, and many more millions who do not work or cannot work for some reason. Each of those individuals is another reason to endorse Citizen Dividends.

Steven Shafarman

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