September 2022

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
181920 21222324
2526 27282930 

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Monday, April 30th, 2018 03:18 pm
It should come as no shock that I'm generally in favor of basic income/negative income tax/whatever you want to call it. However, there are a lot of aspects of it where there is a disconcerting lack of discussion.

I often see BI framed as a blanket replacement for all existing social service systems. This is often touted as its main benefit, it being far more efficient to simply send people checks than run multiple complicated bureaucracies. It should not take much reflection to realize that this is both wrong and dangerous. Even with basic income, there will still be people in need. There will be people who spend their money on alcohol, or other drugs, or invest in crypto-currency scams, or convert it to cash and get robbed. Maybe you're comfortable writing off those who spend their money in counterproductive ways (I'm not, for the record, and I think you're failing a basic moral test if you are), but even that dodge doesn't solve the problem. Those people will sometimes have kids, and those kids will need social services. I absolutely refuse to countenance any system which doesn't try to help children in need.

BI as blanket replacement is also dangerous in a strategic sense -- it creates a single point of failure. The social support systems in the US have been under attack for decades, and while they are deeply wounded at this point, they still exist. Having a complex network of overlapping, partially redundant social programs is a feature, not a bug. They can only be eliminated one by one. We need defense in depth against short-term political swings.

Neither do I see any effort to move society into a place where BI would flourish. Our society deeply values having a job. That is the main source of meaning for many people. This is dramatically shown in the jump in suicide rates after retirement and in depression rates in the unemployed -- even the unemployed who are not hurting for money. It would be foolhardy to switch to BI without trying to address such an obvious problem. Since it's a general values change, it's an effort anyone can contribute to by interrogating their own emotional responses and changing their actions. For instance, I know I tend to use "amateur" as a pejorative and "professional" as a compliment. I find the aesthetics of cheaply 3D-printed objects to be downright repulsive. I have trouble using any conversational ice-breaker other than "so what do you do?". These biases are natural enough, given the culture I was raised in, but they would be highly toxic in a world with basic income. This hasn't been high on my list of personality pruning, but I've been trying to change my thinking (or at least outward actions) on these subjects for years. Changing these kinds of cultural values isn't easy, but we know the curve can at least be bent by concerted effort. Internet groups have developed extensive intellectual tools for discussing and approaching these kinds of problems. Yet I haven't seen any effort to even start such a discussion when it comes to forming a society that can safely and humanely deal with permanent 25%+ unemployment, and I'm troubled by that.

I find these issues concerning primarily because I've yet to be convinced in the goodwill of many of the most prominent basic income proponents. A much simpler explanation is that the idea of BI provides a convenient smokescreen for dismantling the social safety nets that we currently have in place, while never actually instituting anything new in return. (I.e., the social equivalent of dismissing mass transit development needs because autonomous cars are going to solve everything in 5 years.) The relative lack of visibility of issues such as the above only reinforce this fear for me. We're a supremely rich society, controlling an amount of surplus value that is almost unthinkable. There is no doubt we could implement BI if we wanted to -- but we still need to face potential issues humanely, rationally, and as soon as possible.
Tuesday, May 1st, 2018 01:11 am (UTC)
I would agree that how we give meaning to our life is a very important question. Valuing paid employment over the choice to parent or care for other friends and family may play a part in how women (in their frequent role as primary caregivers) are seen. Basic income can help creators, artists, entrepreneurs, mentors, and those involved in non-profits have the time and energy to not only live their dreams, but make the efforts of those talented and dedicated people more available to us.

I think it is likely that any effort "to face potential issues humanely, rationally, and as soon as possible" (which I agree is needed) will continue to be stymied by an apparent movement, crossing different levels of our society, to let people seen as non-productive, or unnecessary to the success of the rich, die off as the social safety nets are removed piece by piece, and often, in the cruelest ways possible.
Tuesday, May 1st, 2018 01:16 am (UTC)
I have a smaller worry about UBI: it seems to me that people who have the capital to dominate non-negotiable needs, like rent, may just raise the cost of those to match UBI, and convert it to a funding system for them.
Tuesday, May 1st, 2018 09:02 pm (UTC)
I have trouble using any conversational ice-breaker other than "so what do you do?".

This is where clothes & shoes come in handy.

Seriously, though, I think of Brazil's Bolsa Famalia, which I understand to be a form of BI. It's apparently been a roaring success. And there was a much smaller-scale experiment in the UK in which about two dozen homeless people were given £5000 cash, no strings attached. The majority got homes quickly.
Wednesday, May 2nd, 2018 08:23 pm (UTC)
I think of BI as part of a much larger conversation about economic limits. If it's a good thing to have a minimum wage, would it not also be a good thing to have a maximum income as well? What about things like for-profit medicine with its problems of perverse incentives, or human trafficking that's misused to try to shut down consensual prostitution?

I agree that BI must be one part of this nutritios breakfast in order to make a useful difference. I'd love it if there were a larger vision of what that meal would look like.
Thursday, May 3rd, 2018 12:37 pm (UTC)
> I have trouble using any conversational ice-breaker other than "so what do you do?".

Minor stupid tangent: I'm not sure I've *ever* asked anyone this, nor that it would occur to me to do so. Partly this is because I am about as social as a moldy sneaker lost in the back of a closet. Partly this is because given MY lifestyle for the past 10+ years, I literally have to be reminded that other people have jobs.

It's not like I don't work, and stress about my work, and so on. But at the same time I guess on some level I think of it much more as a 'what I am' than 'what I do' question? I work, but I don't have a job, I certainly don't go TO work.

In the rare situation that I'm forced to mingle with complete strangers, the much more common question is "What are you working on?" Which doesn't actually specify that it's a commercial project, and often isn't, but will usually get you a solid earful from any of the writer/artist/programmer/etc types I'm likely to encounter. (And sometimes from the non-creative types, although understanding the current work project of an actuary usually goes over my head.)
Edited 2018-05-03 12:37 pm (UTC)