General subjects with a focus on philosophy, morals, epistemology, basic income, the singularity, transhuman
Undercutting the War for Power
Published on November 17, 2013 By Phil Osborn In Economics

 A Solution – The Shorter Version

 Last update: 06/31/17

 

Reasons to support a basic income:

http://www.basicincome.org.uk/reasons-support-basic-income

What is different, important and unique in my approach to the "Basic Income" proposal?

See the source above for the first mention - so far as I know - of the integration of social justice into the debate.  My version (below) focused almost exclusively on this as the main supportive theme.   

See items 10 and 11 in the UK list of reasons why the universal basic income is a great idea.  That was my starting point, triggered by the Great Recession, as I witnessed the reverse of social justice, with the people at the top who caused the problems ending up being rewarded for their malfeasance, while the people who could have gotten the ~$3trillion and saved their financial assets, instead lost their homes by the millions, both ruining the large portions of the middle class and draining large portions of the resources that could have gone into that recovery.

My starting point is and was primarily moral theory or meta-ethics entwined with property law.  In summary, I challenge the notion of "property" propagated by the myriad followers of John Locke, the so-called "Mixing your labor with the land."*

*E.g., since your labor belongs to you, by extension it creates a legal, moral claim or lien on the "land" that labor was mixed with. Your inalienable right to take action in support of your life includes action beyond the immediately frame of here and now and that right becomes a key element in the justification of property.  Nice and simple, right? Just apply it consistently and see how it resolves all manner of difficulty...

Not so fast, though.  What happens when someone makes a claim for a title, a written verification and authentication of a valid property claim, and someone else has already made a similar and conflicting claim?  What about all the thousands of such conflicting claims that any new claimant must deal with.  Locke explicitly states to the effect that prior claims must be granted precedent. 

In opposition to the "mixing" method, I note that all property has an infinite number of potential and/or existing claims and therefore this would effectively outlaw any and all property claims, which would be a damned shame, as property - and, more precisely, proprietorship - can accomplish virtual miracles in the real-world economy.  See my blog on property for a more thorough treatment:

http://philosborn.joeuser.com/article/449510/Property_Foundations

 

So, how do we resolve issues such as right of passage? I want to build a dam and back a stream to create a lake for many good reasons, and I invest the labor in performing that assessment through means such as surveying or photography or staking out. But, meanwhile, you are attempting to farm and carry your produce to your hungry buyers, and the path to accomplish this would be under 20 feet of water if the dam is in place. You farmers have been using this passage for much longer than I have been around with my mixing claim, but the dam would more than offset the losses by the farmers. 

Under Locke's formula, whoever first puts the land to use has an absolute right to claim it as property.  So, even though there has never been a formal request for a title, the farmers have a legitimate claim.  Unless, of course, I can find someone with an even earlier claim.

This kind of claims conflict is ubiquitous and if not equitably resolved will end up as a permanent bone of contention, perhaps halting all progress. Yet, the Locke mixing, while recognizing the primacy of prior clams, does not admit a method for resolving such conflicts that are inherent to the ongoing and/or preceding use. Do I own the moon, having invested my labor on drawing representations of it? If not, then does that not require some other and different factors to enter the arena?  And then, does that not imply that the mixing argument is flawed, requiring yet another external justification?

Inevitably, if a title is granted, one set of claimants will lose; another will win. However, what factors determine the granting of a title that are not simply a reflection of political power? If mixing ones labor is the source of valid property claims, then what additional determinants can override it?  Do not those hypothetical factors then become the actual basis for property, rather than the mixing?  We say that we have an objectively based self-sufficient system creating property that corresponds one to one with reality.  Yet this system, because of all the prior rights issues, ends up requiring additional criteria to validate a claim.

My claim is that while the Lockien argument represents a theoretical justification for the morality of property in general, real concrete property claims derive their validity from the fact that each and every one of us has a claim on planet Earth. We are the joint inheritors of the (mostly intellectual) wealth created by 3 billion years of evolution.  Each of us has an equal claim to that inherited wealth, and we collectively have the moral authority to determine how it is administered. 

This is not a claim in favor of socialism, despite what many readers may have assumed at this point.  Much variation exists in human nature and character and people who contribute greatly - e.g., Newton - usually deserve every penny of their wealth.  Rather, I will be pointing out how the Standard Model of property has lead to general impoverishment, while a radically different model based on allocation of property titles via bidding on them, leads us inevitably to the Basic Income as a key element of a rational and just economy - especially during the transition from the disastrous state-capitalized positive feedback system that dominates the world economy now.

To be continued...  Please note that this is a BLOG!  It doesn't have any necessary function or structure and could very easily be diverted if my attention stream gets held up by a new question or possible insight.  As in...

While I don't recall seeing any explicit reference to "Basic Income" in David Brin's monumental HUGO winner - "Existence", I may go back to it to verify, as it seems to be implied or at least hinted at.  If it is there, it is probably as background info related to the "Great Contract"*, that temporarily restructured the balance of economic life, setting restrictions on the power of the masses as well as that possessed by the .0001% Billonaire elte.  *I probably got the nomenclature wrong, but you get the meaning.  And, on that note:

IMPORTANT  BREAKING NEWS!  Zuckerberg and Kurzweil get on the bus for Basic Income:  http://www.kurzweilai.net/letter-from-ray-supporting-universal-basic-income-as-step-in-world-progress

IMPORTANT BAD NEWS: The power freaks of the planet HAVE TO defeat this.  Basic Income undercuts every two-bit sociopath's sadistic joy ride.  So many of us live in unspeakable poverty, both physically and spiritually, most of which is caused by the economic and social leverage that evil has acquired over us. 

Let's break FREE!  First, we give everyone the capability to exist as joint creators and advocates for their own values; then we create an explicit Social Contract that spells out how we treat each other, especially with regard to stable, sustainable resolution of disputes. Can you say "sine qua non?" Is this a plan, or what?


(In passing, I note that Brin's "Existence" - as best I recall - completely fails to take into account the entire concept of "evil." I suggest that this is a serious failing. People pursue all manner of ends, and sociopaths, for example, lacking some major brain circuitry - such as support for empathy, will more likely than not assume whatever diabolical life path engages them.  Self-interest as normals perceive it may not apply.)

Good, independent news:  https://thecorrespondent.com/

Checkout: http://www.grundeinkommen.ch/ !!!

NPR is running some kind of extended analysis of hot new ideas.  I've only been able to catch bits and pieces and thereby missed a major piece that focused on the Basic Income proposal.  Perhaps I will be able to track it down... Ah!  Public Media's Marketplace Morning Report:

https://www.marketplace.org/2017/04/18/economy/robot-proof-jobs/basic-income-y-combinator-oakland-krisiloff

AND:  http://www.npr.org/podcasts/452538045/freakonomics-radio

On Sunday, I attended a meeting where the speaker was former Irvine, CA Mayor Larry Agran, speaking on the topic of how humanists - the hosts of the meeting - could effectively deal with the Trump era.  The issue of the minimum wage was one of his last points, and several attendees were pressing him on the issue of the basic income as a better alternative.  He did not seem opposed to this, although he said that the public support was not yet there.  There were perhaps 40 attendees.

Analysis:  Note that out of a couple hours of presentation and virtually unlimited discussion, this was the only issue that I recall in which there was the element of debate.  People engaged.

03/18/2017  Just noticed that I had some interesting related material on another of my joe user blogs:

http://philosborn.joeuser.com/article/472400/Peeple_watching

In the above article, I cover some of the darker side of an evolving contest, related to the opposition to a Basic Income as a piece of something much bigger.  My predictions as to what I'm going to write next are typically ambitious and hopeful and not particularly accurate, as my readers can attest, but in this connection I will try to get back to my analysis of evil and what I'm going to assume up front involves a very large conspiracy of sociopaths who I strongly suspect are at the root of a lot of BAD stuff, including an elitist opposition to the planetary dividend. Not that every person who opposes UBI is evil...  Twenty years ago, I would have been in that opposition, no doubt working on yet one more refinement of the Pseudo-Lockean property concept.

It may turn out, of course, that "conspiracy" is too strong.  What then can I use to refer to synchronistic actions that have the appearance of top-down or networked coordination?  Often it appears that a set of common principals defines how an adherent to them might be expected to act. But what if you have people gaming the system? A sociopath may well project a particular set of beliefs and urge on otherwise normal people by challenging them as hypocrites, pointing to his or her own put-on radicalism.

https://www.amazon.com/Political-Ponerology-Science-Adjusted-Purposes/dp/1897244258

Furthermore, on another mental thread, I'm guessing that if you could get a ground level assessment of all the misbehavior and crime committed by sociopaths and map it to individuals, you would find that the same people keep showing up, causing the same sort of trouble over and over again. 

https://www.amazon.com/Small-Worlds-Randomness-Princeton-Complexity/dp/0691117047  (This is a GREAT read...)


This was found to be the case in South Africa, with regard to the AIDS epidemic there.  A small number of individuals were found to be network nodes, having dozens of sexual encounters, infecting large numbers of victims and undermining disease control efforts.  I wonder if the people committing the vast number of rapes in South Africa could be somehow correlated to this. And what about the child mutilation and murders that are allegedly used as a path to move up in the state bureaucracies of S. Africa? 

http://hrbrief.org/2012/09/the-practice-of-ritual-killings-and-human-sacrifice-in-africa/

It just occurred to me that there is an even darker note.  Sociopaths get their pathetic jollies from destroying the good.  Paradoxically, as has been thoroughly documented, sociopaths will often do all kinds of good deeds, often projected over years of effort.  There are two reasons for this. 

First, it provides cover.  How could this virtual Mother Teresa possibly be the soul-eating monster you are claiming?  For SHAME!  What in fact is wrong with YOU?  (See the character of Ellsworth Toohey in Rand's "The Fountainhead.") 

Secondly, it sets them up for really big acts of destruction.  So, who can we think of who allegedly has many of the marks of a sociopath, and several thousand nuclear weapons at his disposal?  Actually, two names come to mind.  How nice, when we as a species are finally getting our act together, to be vaporized in a nuclear hell.  When would there be another such opportunity? The odds for a 2nd run at the Singularity are not good.  A major nuclear exchange would so poison the planet that for 100 million years or so only single-celled organisms could survive, and there may not be sufficient time for a restart before the sun itself radically and lethally changes. 

Note: Virtually every week now for the past several months has featured some major investigative piece on NPR or other major media with regard to the Basic Income idea.  I have listed a few of them below.  There are a lot more. 

My original take was somewhat different from any of the other versions that are extant.  I started from a critique of the Lockean concept of property, the "mix your labor with the land" concept, which Locke saw as a philosophical justification for property - not a legal prescription, which is where the idea manipulators have taken it in order to justify their own positions.

If property is seen, not as an absolute individual claim, but rather as a social contract between society in general and an individual or group, reflecting the costs to society of withdrawing property from the commons for personal use, then a radically different outcome is implicit, and one of the secondary implications is that everyone should be getting a share of that collective pie generated from property title fees - not on the basis of "need," but on the basis of equity or justice. Not an unlimited share, but a fair one reflecting reality and making basic survival possible.** 

What I call a planetary dividend reflects the fact that value is created from an existing base of physical and intellectual capital, starting from the first Unicellular 
organisms - which themselves owed the capability of control of resources via a cell wall or membrane to trillions of prior generations of increasingly efficient energy accumulating molecules.  

There is the portion that a business or individual can claim as its own, based on the value actually added.  Then there is the equity that we all inherit, which comes into play when whatever agency is entrusted with signing off on property titles ensures that the books balance, that the property owners pay for the costs they impose, as well as providing the highest bid for the title.

The alternative is the pseudo-Lockean (pL) approach, by which any mixing of ones labor with a presumed plethora of unclaimed potential property is sufficient to form the basis for a title claim into perpetuity.  I discuss this in more depth elsewhere in this article as well as in my Property blog.  The pL approach fails on several grounds, the first being the question of where this unclaimed property actually is..  On the moon?  Oops, too bad.  Even long before the first lunar missions, people invested in telescopes, cameras and all sorts of technology specifically for the purpose of gaining value from the moon.  They mixed their labor.  Right? Can they now claim the moon?

Given that there are a virtually infinite array of mixings that are at least as valid on the surface as a typical 19th century gold mine claim, which required only staking out one's geographical position and filing your papers, and given that there are surely other intelligent species that have been out and about the local galaxy long before there were Homo Sapiens, it is a fair likelihood that there would be no actual pL property that could stand investigation.  However, we can establish for certain that we each on birth inherited a VERY long stretch of capital accumulation.

http://philosborn.joeuser.com/article/449510/Property_Foundations

**How much?  If the dividend is to be national, from a wealthy 1st World nation, as in the recent Swiss referendum, then ~$20k/yr seems to be a reasonable figure.  However, worldwide, such a payment would bankrupt the planet, or at least impose major dislocations and rampant inflation that would likely result in a net loss - along with mass resistance from people with actual resources to lose. 

The world could handle ~$1k/yr, which would have little impact in the 1st world, some minor but significant impact in the 2nd world, especially on the most needy, and a HUGE life and death impact in the 3rd world, also defusing much of the politics of despair that have foreclosed many potential options, as such vulnerable people simply do not have the resources to plan past the next week. 

12/20/2016: The Truth on the Ground  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mincome - see related articles as well as today's NPR/CBC coverage of the breakout of this long-delayed news:

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/1970s-manitoba-poverty-experiment-called-a-success-1.868562

AND!  (I LOVE THESE GUYS): http://freakonomics.com/podcast/mincome/

(09/17/2016:  For a really insightful take on some of the issues raised below, please check out http://frogboy.joeuser.com/article/479588/Economic_Singularity_The_Gods_and_the_Useless)

(12/10/2016:  For a recent new take see also - http://finance.yahoo.com/news/give-poor-money-directly-and-they-dont-spend-it-on-alcohol-and-cigarettes-135858208.html

Short Summary: (11/13/2016)

The core of this solution to poverty is justice.  What is justice?  Part of the difficulty of formulating the answer is that we generally don't notice when we have it; it's only the lack that sets off the alarms.

Intuitively, most of us recognize some form of justice or injustice in practice.  Most of the evidence would seem to suggest that we are either born with or strongly disposed to this recognition, and further evidence comes from the behavior of other animals who could not have "figured out" the concept. We and many other animals notice injustice (and other fundamentally social attributes) and often respond with outrage, even when the actual loss may be trivial. Implicitly, we grasp that justice is personal.  A just person will neither steal a candy bar nor rob a bank.  Catching him or her at any dishonesty carries the implication that the tip of an iceberg is showing.

(BTW I will have more to say about the impacts on limbic resonance as I get more up to speed in that area.)

However, a primitive recognition of a social or interpersonal situation is not sufficiently robust to take one directly to a fully formed conceptualization that could support a set of economically valid legal principles.  We cannot simply take our feelings, however well grounded in custom and perhaps basic brain functionality, and translate them directly into law or sustainable culture. 

Biological evolution for humans does not, by itself, explain the point we are at now. We have certainly not stopped our physical evolution, but our various technologies put us typically well outside of that box. We are winging it and trying to substitute other resources to stand in for that which we are not specifically prepared by natural selection.

On the bright side, we can look at such outstanding feats as the various space programs, which required that millions of decisions be RIGHT.  (But why does Snow's position on the "Two Cultures" still prevail?  How is it that we still have a multitude of naysayers denying that the moon shots were real?  Would everyone have to get a degree in physics to resolve this onrushing crisis in general - especially scientific - credibility?  Would it even help?)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Two_Cultures

On the dark side, we do not seem to be improving in general in the ways that we treat each other. There are major truths that are not spoken.  Part of the reason is connected with what I just wrote above about the limits of human evolution.  We will drive a mile to save $1 on a discount hamburger, while signing off on a $20,000 car purchase after 15 minutes of negotiating. Our biological core never evolved to handle large quantities or urban life.

On the way to the library tonight I was thinking about how trivially easy life has gotten over the past decade, mostly due to ubiquitous computers and smart phones. I was trying to recreate in mindspace what it would have taken only 30 years ago to accumulate the resources for this blog.  It was daunting.  I got a feeling of panic just from thinking about life without my smartphone - and I am far from being a power user.  But the social impact is that iceberg that we haven't noticed yet, and, with it, the berg will carry even more powerful and new technologies, such as private virtual advisers on buying a car, financing a home or whatever, expertly guiding us to optimum behavior that might otherwise overwhelm us.  

Q?  At what point does the digital assistant become fully integrated with our bio-mind?  What are the criteria?  Could we be fooled or duped?

And, just as an aside, for those among us of the entrepreneurial spirit, I think that I can make the case that a whole world of opportunity lies with the breakthroughs in limbic resonance that are like inrushing tidal waves of new realms of thought.  In the near future there will be spinoffs of this as people of complementary and synergistic resonances identify their soulmates or soulmirrors and there will likely be clinics, clubs, online communications aimed at making us more personally aware and also more socially and interpersonaly active.

https://www.amazon.com/General-Theory-Love-Thomas-Lewis/dp/0375709223

I may decide to spin this into a new narrative thread, focused on the limbic aspects.  That the BI synchs nicely is up to the reader for the moment.  But I HAVE THE CONCEPT!!!

 

http://www.drdouggreen.com/wp-content/Invisible-Gorilla.pdf

Most of us will also spontaneously respond to threats to life on an emergency one-on-one basis - such as someone having a heart attack, but we cannot translate the pixel images from Syria into something of felt significance beyond it's moment on screen.

JUSTICE: In general socioeconomics terms, justice is a measure of how well outcomes reflect the value of input.  A just system promotes a proportional Return On Investment (ROI), which in turn incentivizes rational productivity and punishes destructive behavior.  In contrast, an unjust system penalizes or fails to optimally reward productivity, reducing the typical ROI while often allowing predators and parasites to cash in on illegitimate rewards.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socioeconomics

For the individual, justice can be paraphrased as a fair deal, e.g., as exemplified in the breach by the Marxist position that the return on capital unfairly outweighs its contribution to productivity, such as when we see the wealthy son or daughter of a factory owner partying on the value-added produced by the marginalized, disrespected workers.

But justice is an inherently complex subject. What appears to promote justice within a particular legal/political/historical/cultural/moral space may be totally at odds with it if any of the dimensions of analysis changes significantly. E.g., a hypothetical dam project might be on track right up to the point that a native tribe brings suit over sacred land that would be inundated, or the discovery of unforeseen damage to the ecology may emerge from academia, or a new source of cheaper energy may make the dam obsolete before it is started.

And perhaps we all, more often than not, reap the rewards of proprietorship, despite our feelings of envy or outrage.  After all, even star cooperative performers such as the Mondragon Cooperative find it desirable on many occasions to bring in outside profession management, to take the internal infighting and politics out of the daily workplace.  A single proprietor has a natural vested interest in the success of the entire enterprise, as opposed to the narrowly divided interests of individual workers in a large workplace, much less a Board of Directors. 

http://www.mondragon-corporation.com/eng/

While Mondragon often limits the pay ratio for one of their enterprises - 20 to 1, typically, I believe - they also recognize, I'm sure, that a competent, incentivized management is worth a premium wage - within reason.

Let us examine an extreme, yet frequent, controversy over economic justice:

Joe Doe likes to kick it on weekends, drowsing in his back yard as the local house mice literally eat his lunch. One day, just from idle speculation in his back yard, Joe Doe invents a really better mousetrap, one that works, that the mice haven't figured out!  He patents his new trap and sells it worldwide at twice what all the R&D, manufacturing, quality control, marketing, distribution total up to.  His trap costs him $1 each and does a better job.  He charges a suggested retail of $2, essentially the same price as the ones his better mousetrap supplanted.  He personally makes $1 per new mousetrap purchased, and his market is one billion strong.  He makes a cool $billion - for a simple mousetrap that he almost napped through.

What is WRONG with this?  If we say that it's wrong for Joe to make a $billion off a simple mousetrap, while other inventors starve in their garages, pouring their lives into the technology for some complex product such as Oculus's Rift VR system, then where did the error occur?  What would be the alternative?

A hard-core socialist, such as the "father of socialism" August Comte, might make the following argument:  Everything that you possess, including your knowledge, character, skills, physical and intellectual properties, etc., is mostly the product of millions of other humans and their efforts over millennia.  Thus, as a child of humanity and the Earth, you begin with an equal claim to the inheritance of this wealth, and society has a corresponding claim upon your life and and the fruits of its labor.  I.e., forget individual rights, including property.  And forget about becoming Joe Doe, billionaire.  His better mouse trap could have been invented by virtually anyone.

Of course, somewhere in there, Isaac Newton got misplaced.  His contribution was probably in excess of a century or so of general human progress and there are many, many more like him.

How does a uniform theory of justice encompass both Newton and Comte?  I'll get to that. 

Cultures also influence our assessments of justice.  The Christian ethos, for example, discourages "judgment," leaving it to God.  This is an example of the authoritarian school of morals.  The buck stops with God, who cannot be challenged, as He is the source of reality itself - the game designer.  God may, for example, reverse what we mere humans regard as just, as in the cities and land that the Torah specifies as God-titled for his "Chosen People."  Oops.  No wonder we're still fighting over the "Promised Land."  (The lesson: don't fight God??)

Secularists often have a similar authoritarian position, that justice is the vox populi - or at least the voice of the elite closer to the mouth of Plato's Cave.

A major factor in achieving real justice is the correct identification of who was actually responsible for the value added - or subtracted - against which we measure the ROI.  The current system of analysis here in the U.S. pretends that for the most part, the last or most current claimant deserves all, which seems to directly contradict our intuitive understanding that any value one possesses reflects the combined efforts of humanity.* 

Yet how does anything get done if we are restricted to collective decisions?  There are reasons for the success of the proprietary model.  Property is simply a way for an individual or group to claim the right to unimpeded action over time.  If you want to farm, then you generally need to restrict people from walking over that territory.  Property also provides an enhanced feedback loop.  The owners benefit from good thinking and learn from errors - signals that can be lost in a collective.

*(This is actually a reflection of the pseudo-Lockean theory of property, starting with the original claim based on "mixing ones labor with the land."  It has been remarkable helpful as well to all the various private and public thieves who cashed in on the idea that native peoples did not possess valid property rights - a  position which Locke himself vigorously opposed, BTW.)

And, just as we write off the costs that bankrupt and/or corrupt corporations impose on us on the theory that we needed to add additional incentives - specifically to encourage risk taking - to the process, so we fail to take into account the downside on the property end in any systematic way.  There is no room in the Lockean calculus for losses in the creation of property.  That calculation requires a very different model for property as such, which I will discuss further on in this piece as well as in my blog on property itself. 

http://philosborn.joeuser.com/article/449510/Property_Foundations

This all leads up to the following central thesis: A major problem facing our species and life in general on earth is the failure to reflect basic justice in our economies.  How is it that we humans, the greatest problem solving engines in our solar system by far, tolerate 1 in 6 of our fellows on the edge of starvation - a billion people living on less than $1 per day?  How is it that we know about this and yet do nothing? How is it that we let it happen to begin with?  Something is very, very wrong.

Injustice emerges and grows like a cancer when the moral/political/economic systems that are supposed to promote a close relationship between return and investment break down and instead become promoters and protectors of systemic corruption, a corruption that only survives by control of what poses as the truth...  For example, the disaster around Apple's Siri, in which reportedly the developer ended up making nothing due to apparent troll suits over patents.

https://9to5mac.com/2014/02/10/apple-speaks-out-against-patent-trolls-after-facing-a-record-92-lawsuits-in-three-years/

Paradoxically, on the surface, the perceived ROI may be quite positive, even while the real ROI is very negative.  This often happens when the values measured exclude key factors.  E.g., toxic gold-mine tailings that represent billions of dollars in return to the mine owners, so long as we fail to notice those Superfund sites in the making, externalities that will be billed to the general public as the original mine owners disappear and the mine goes bankrupt.

The current situation is that any increase in general wealth is being ever more concentrated in the hands of a tiny minority, without much evidence of that tide that raises all boats. In addition to the privileges of wealth to buy out of liabilities, there is an increasing load for all producers in terms of fixed costs, such as maintaining an army of lawyers.  But, as these costs keep rising, many of the lower end small and medium businesses are being squeezed out.

We are in fact in a runaway collapse in which economic power fuels political policy conducive to its own interests - and damn those externalities. But those hidden costs do not magically go away. Instead, the artificial person of the corporation stands in like the lamb on the altar, absolving the actual persons who are responsible, while foisting off the costs to the public.

Nowhere is it reflected in the accountings of our economies that we each as individuals and everything that we value are largely the consequence of thousands of generations of pooled effort. Meanwhile, on the other side of the world ledger, externalities are written off, to be paid for by unknowing, powerless victims who are incapable of enforcing any real solutions and are thus fodder for violent and destructive forces. 

(Consider the nuclear power industry, which only became economically possible when Congress imposed an arbitrary $800Million cap on liabilities per accident.  Prior to that point, the insurance companies, whose job it is to accurately assess projected liability, had refused to insure the proposed plants, on the basis that they had no good baseline or analysis to support any limit.

So, the power plants represent an unsecured risk, riding a wave of hopeful nonsense.  Yes, it is in their interest to deal with risks up to $800Million, but past that point there is no additional incentive.  An $800billion - note "Billion", not "Million" accident, such as well might have occurred had a few brave airline passengers not taken personal responsibility on 9/11, is certainly within reason, but it makes more bean-counting sense to put the money for risks under the $800Million wire as they will not be held responsible for anything over that fiat base.  The real liabilities might well make nuclear power financially impossible, and how many power company lobbyists do you see promoting that position?)

As this situation worsens on its own, with ever more costs being foisted off on those lower down on the pyramid, while the perps rewrite reality to justify their theft, additional factors have recently been at the top of the news, especially the recognition that advances in robotics and AI will soon eliminate a great number of "unskilled" jobs.  What will happen as that pool of unemployed, often severely impoverished workers grows?

One of the canaries in the mine is the coffee shop.  When anti-remedies such as a minimum wage are instituted, then the traditional coffee shop is in trouble, along with all the disabled net-workers doing medical transcription or tech support out of their homes or a plethora of other contract net jobs that often pay $2~$5 per hour.  For someone who is elderly and/or disabled, often dependent on Social Security, that $2 per hour freelance money may make the difference as to getting $300+/month medication vs food or shelter.

The usual "solution" that is posed, is to try to outlaw net jobs altogether.  However, a crackdown on such "loopholes" means that many jobs are simply not affordable, as well as a shift to automation and foreign outsourcing - and the death of many community coffee shops, as well as disaster for the multitude of low-income workers on Social Security who were just barely making it on $1500/month plus the contract labor money from their net job. 

A case in point involved a long term friend of mine with a college degree who had originally done reasonably well as a professional medical transcriptionist working out of her home with her life partner, who was blind.  About a decade ago the higher minimum wages, together with
ever better transcription software began reducing her net income, eventually fording her to move to another state to find affordable housing - and then move again to even cheaper housing.  Finally she lost the gig and ended up on straight disability, which meant choosing between health care and medication versus food.  I knew Pam from the late '70's.  She fought the good fight to survive and died about a month ago.

The "solutions" to all these problems so far have been piecemeal, targeted band aides whose funds often end up in the pockets of corruption, creating incentives for more problems, not real solutions.  However, in Switzerland, an actual movement very similar in focus to my blog below, made worldwide news in 2016 with a referendum on the issue of a basic income, citing the ongoing move to robot labor as a clear and present danger to lower-skilled human workers.

The real solution that closely reflects the underlying ledgers of injustice is a world dividend, a uniform settlement that matches roughly the legacy of value added that each of us inherited as humans. As a first step, calculated on the basis of general need and affordability, such a world-wide uniform income would enable a billion or more people who currently have dismal prospects at best to move up to a sustainable lifestyle, empowering many of them to actually become contributing members of our human community, instead of a net liability.  

Such a change would actually reduce the net costs of treating "needs." Large problems at present in the "need" complex are the high costs of targeting such as "means testing," plus the incentives of corruption to make matters worse. A basic income or planetary dividend could reduce that total expenditure as targeted needs programs would be phased out or reduced, replaced by a much more efficient uniform sum that would take care of the essentials for most recipients. For those remaining who have special needs, the existing need-based welfare payments should be more than sufficient.  I.e., the BI does not eliminate the existing safety nets for them and should actually make more funding available.


This means that the uniform dividend would eliminate all the effort that the recipients have to lose in the process of applying for targeted needs programs, as well as the associated uncertainties and the disincentives for becoming productive that such programs usually include. "Sorry. You have to be needy to qualify...  OK."  Perhaps the worst case example of this was the alleged deliberate self-infection with AIDS by African teens in order to get food aid.

My estimate is that a $500 ~ $1000 per year global dividend would be affordable - not killing or significantly impacting the incentives to be productive - and would be sufficient to tilt the balance toward a worthwhile life for most of the people who are in the worst dire straights. 

The opposition:  There are three main clusters of groups apposing any such idea.  

The first are those who appose any kind of "socialism" on principle, as a slippery slide to a dismal future exemplified historically by the USSR and China under Mao.  

The second are those various groups whose bowl of rice is the return on corruption that the current non-solutions such as targeting needs make possible, as well as the huge number of social service jobs held by the bureaucrats whose incentives are to make needs assessment ever more costly.  

The third group are those with practical objections to the implementation of such a plan, such as "where will the money come from?"

The first and third groups can be addressed rationally, as they reflect real, legitimate concerns. For example, one influential subgroup are the libertarian oriented business communities, who see such programs as social engineering and a violation of their concept of morality as applied to property.  They see property as something outside and independent of any implied social contract, typically citing Locke's derivation of property as originating with the owner's mixing of his labor with the land.  This is itself a complex issue and one whose roots and derivation have gone far astray, IMHO.  See my JoeUser blog on property for a detailed analysis.

http://www.philosborn.joeuser.com/article/449510/Property_Foundations

First, breaking news... this is for real:  http://www.basicincome2016.org/

This Swiss group thought of a lot of dimensions to the idea that I didn't or didn't find time to include anyway.

I came at it primarily from a moral-economic analysis.  I claimed that a basic income is a moral right, derived from a proper, moral concept of property as such.  Property, I claimed, by its nature deprives all but the owner of its use.  Unless you want to argue that some people have an inherently greater claim to the resources of the universe than others - which is how wars get started - then morally sound property titles have to incorporate a just compensation to everyone else for their loss of access and use of that part of the commons, either actually or potentially.  Not a confiscation of wealth, but simply compensation for what is reasonably due.  Thus, in a nutshell, we arrive at what I called a dividend - what the Swiss call a basic income.


Check out their site (above) for a wealth of additional reasons why the concept is both sound and beneficial, as well as ideas for how to implement it. Note that the Swiss group wants to end other such transfers of wealth, abolishing Social Security and Medicare kinds of programs up front, whereas I suggested that this would evolve naturally over time...  What I'm trying to do is keep the politics out of it - for many reasons, not the least being the costs inherent in any political issue.  Factoring in the multitude of separate political claims, such as welfare or medicare, in a determination related to the Basic Income will kill it.  Cancelling or reducing transfer programs will happen, very likely, as people have more disposable income, but introducing it as a starting issue is a formula for disaster.

It all started here on JoeUser.

Please note that this blog came out of a wider context, including major blogs on morals  ("On Morals") and property as such.

http://philosborn.joeuser.com/dashboard/edit/449510

I.e., this is not an ad hoc compilation of mere opinions or isolated positions.  It has a coherency and little by little I stitch the various dimensions of analysis in the six or so major blogs on these subjects together like a Bucky Ball, ever stronger.  I could use some more intelligent critique, BTW.  The various threads of what I'm doing sometimes lose themselves in abstraction.  I try to maintain a style similar to Robert Pirsig in "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance," shifting back and forth from concrete example to abstract idea. Restating from a slightly or radically different view to enable the reader to see the commonality.  Sometimes it works.  Thanks for any help.

Phil Osborn  07/06/12, 11/16/13, 12/28/13, 06/30/14, 07/17/14, 12/1/14, 06/05/16, 06/22/16, 08/28/16, 12/10/16

08/28/16  Some new relevant links:

http://www.kurzweilai.net/clear-and-present-danger-to-your-life-as-of-now-from-cyberblitzkrieg

http://www.millennium-project.org/millennium/AI-Work.html

http://www.kurzweilai.net/one-second-after

06/22/16: News. A recent editorial in "Scientific American" threw its weight behind some form of world-wide guaranteed income.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-to-prevent-the-end-of-economic-growth/

And, now the "Wall Street Journal" http://www.wsj.com/articles/a-guaranteed-income-for-every-american-1464969586

06/05/16:  http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-36454060  

http://www.basicincome2016.org/blog/unconditional-basic-income

A good start.  Note that I suggested this for the U.S. when the recent recession hit, and extended the concept in the blog below.

02/19/15:  Further problems with the Standard Model of free market economics (This is REALLY GOOD!):

http://www.radiolab.org/story/worth/

I.e., what if the "market price" for property conceals the real cost?  As in the $billions needed to clean up mining tailings and ground water pollution, long after the mining company has taken its profits and is long gone.  What if you could place a precise value on those pesky "externalities?" up front and explicitly taken into consideration regarding that application for a title? 

(Q: Is "property" that fails to take into account prior claims by others and future expenses billed to them without their sanction legitimate at all?)

This excellent and thoughtful take by RadioLab reflects a study conducted by Scandinavian economists at least a decade ago, wherein they established that in many cases, such as replacing a wetlands with a parking lot, when you calculated the loss in fishing and other eco impacts, you had to conclude that the parking lot ran at a huge net loss, which was paid for by the victims, most of whom had no idea that the reduction in take-home had even occurred, much less who to hold accountable.

So, if we did take that into account up front, in the act of creating titled property, then, ultimately, it would have to involve a calculation over the entire human population and perhaps the eco-sphere and the stored value implicit in the DNA of all organisms on the planet, reflecting the past 3 billion or so years of selection.  On the basis of such a calculation of universal value, many proposed titles would not be worth it - eaten up by inherent externalities, while others would turn out to be hugely profitable.  The objective basis for title would not have changed - just the relevance and accuracy of the calculations.  (Nuclear power plants would likely not survive any such reasonable accounting.)

I could make an additional moral argument here, as to the selection pressures that determine who succeeds under what model.  In today's world, the failure to objectively assess costs and benefits in the granting of title, coupled with the shielding against liability provided via the corporate model (Ltd) and the natural advantages accruing to concentrated interest, pays off to the least responsible players in proportion to their ability to identify opportunities to profit off the hidden or diffuse losses to others.  I.e., we are breeding sociopaths, some of whom are well aware of their evil and who search out and destroy incipient agents of change that might threaten their good times.

There is also, of course, the scary possibility that we are already existentially bankrupt, reflected not just in potentially catastrophic climate change, but in having eaten our seed corn in way too many cases, accepting quick and easy profits that concealed real costs and selecting for a system in which the supporting rip-off memes are themselves selected for, perhaps constituting buy-in and support for the meta-perversion that enables the perverted version of an ecosystem that we all too frequently endure.  

On that note, I suggest and recommend Vinge's "A Fire Upon the Deep," in which he never truly identifies "the Blight," but posits an obviously parasitic ultimate evolution of purest evil.


This perspective naturally fits right into my proposed solution for poverty below. 

(Note: I DO appreciate the ~200 comments so far, but how can I possibly read them all?  I have tried to skim or sample from the existing logjam of comments, but it will clearly take most of a day to sort through.  Does anyone have any suggestions as to how to deal with this so that important information is not lost and spam or completely new threads can be bypassed?  Thanks...  

If someone were to actually carefully read all 200, then they might well learn a few things about different economic perspectives, but nothing that I spotted in the way of a flaw in my post or anything that I was not already personally aware of, at least as a principle.  If there were a way to separate out the thread diversions without deleting someone's otherewise good effort, it might be nice, but I don't so far see any point in my intervention.  Most of the time, the critiques of my post were answered by someone else or were clearly based on imposing unjustified assumptions on top of what I actually said.  So, I stand with my original analysis.  Thanks, people.)

My own comments on some random issues raised by other people here:

Nobody paid much attention to my subtitle.  Most real-world attempts to deal with poverty have wallowed in corruption as various middlemen have taken their cut and ensured that the problem continues.  That's an inherent danger in any "need-based" system.  The more you "need," the more you get.  As Jarret Wollstein pointed out at the Ist Southern Libertarian Conference in 1971, Police get bigger budgets when crime increases.  When you add in the factor of a required detailed analysis of how much any particular individual "needs," as in most U.S. welfare programs, you end up spending huge amounts of energy on a political football, without any major improvement in ROI.  

For a really good  - often hilarious - analysis of how incentives work, google on "freakonomix."

As Milton Friedman recognized, the beauty of a guaranteed minimum is that it undercuts a big chunk of the political transaction costs.  The "Give Directly" people have meanwhile been demonstrating that eliminating the "need" analysis and simply giving works pretty well in comparison to most of the NGO efforts.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/give-poor-money-directly-and-they-dont-spend-it-on-alcohol-and-cigarettes-135858208.html

And, of course, I recognize the differences between my own worldwide plan and Friedman's. The world could not afford what I suggested back around early 2008 - giving everybody in the U.S.  $10,000, twice a year, similar to Friedman.  The U.S. and the rest of the comparitively wealthy Ist World could do it, but the limit for the entire planetary population is probably between $500 and $1,000, which would net/net save about a billion people from useless lives and miserable deaths, and put a lot of them on a track of positive contribution to the world economy. Reality is. Trying to finance the 3rd world to a 1st world economy would be a disastrous failure. But we could get there incrementally by first providing one step beyond mere survival and then letting the market take its natural course.


I will end up repeating my original post here, if I'm not careful:   My plan is grounded in natural law and the inherent obligations that we inherit as the product of our history and evolution - detailed by August Comte.  "Privilege" (literally "private law") in general is a violation of the implicit social contract, setting us against each other as predator and prey.  The opposite of "privilege" is the Commons, to which each human has an equal right.  But this is nowhere similar to "communism." 

Free markets and capitalism are natural social technology that are fully consistent with the Commons.  We have to have some method of "proprietorship" in order to organize long term efforts, such as farming.  "Property" and markets (and money) are a brilliant solution to the need to be able to organize and act long-term in a social context.  However, they are derivatives of the Commons.  There IS no "unclaimed" property to mix ones labor with.  And Locke didn't mean it that way anyway.  See my article on Property.

http://philosborn.joeuser.com/article/449510/Property_Foundations

So, the long term idea is that we establish legal mechanisms by which a bundle of rights called a lease allows the accumulation of property, wealth, capital and trade, while at the same time requiring that the lease-holder compensate the Commons for privatizing, and forbidding the property owner from imposing externalities on his neighbors.  Under this system, that part of the lease fees over and above what was required to maintain the Commons itself, its infrastructure, etc., would be paid back directly to the people of the Commons, equally, as their rightful due.

And, of course, the property owners - who are also commoners - would get the same cut of that compensation as everyone else, plus or minus their earnings.

But, since we are not in that mode, or only partially so, having inherited a motley conglomeration of different legal/property systems, usually based on conquest or corruption, the best we can do as a stopgap is an approximation - what I call a planetary dividend, based in part - I hate to admit - on an assessment of global "need."  I.e., given that this is at best an approximation, what level of dividend can we afford that would have the maximum impact? 

We don't want to be killing incentive or ignoring critical global infrastructural problems such as climate changes.  We definitely need to deal with 1/7 of population living and dying on the edge of survival.  But we don't need any more "need" contests and political chicanery, which means that EVERYONE gets the dividend.   And, BTW, we are running a global shortage of children to take care of the growing bulge of elderly.  Children are included in that "EVERYONE."  And, of course this can be seen as an "inflation tax."  Is there a better way?  

If you have a specific bone to pick that you think was not covered, of course feel free to comment further...   Meanwhile, I will attempt to come up with a better way to deal with an overload of information here.

Also, on the onrushing robotics revolution, check this out from a few months ago:

http://philosborn.joeuser.com/article/477494/New_AI_breakthru

    ************************* MAIN BLOG *****************************

The problem:  People are starving while the disparity between rich and poor is growing.  Meanwhile, class, ethnic, religious, etc. divisions are created, nurtured and exacerbated for the profit and power of people who are fundamentally sociopaths, and profit from misery.  While the planet heats up, due to our failure to incorporate externaities, such as Carbon emissions and their impact, into our economic decisions, more and more of our available resources are wasted in political battles based on and resulting in a limited planetary pie of wealth and productivity, at the same time that our actual capabilities for positive production are on a steep exponential curve.

And, we are undercutting our own future intellectual productivity by leaving people so undernourished and stressed that their brain functions are often seriously impaired.  And, on top of all that, we are finally facing a serious competitor in the smart and cheap robots that are moving into virtually every area of production and will soon obsolete all the low-tech jobs, leaving a HUGE block of humans without employment.

A solution: Give everyone money, the same amount to every man, woman & child, to the tune of at least $500, but no more than $1,000, going – with U.N. supervision – directly and solely to the individuals, untaxed and secured against private or state confiscation.  And keep doing it, on an annual basis, so that everyone can make rational economic decisions based on it.

Impact:  The 1.1 billion people barely surviving on less than $1 per day would suddenly be able to purchase reasonably healthy basic food, cheap multi-vitamins, basic medicine and vaccinations, school books, seeds and a plow perhaps - or at least a plow rental - and a cheap cell phone.  I.e., they would have the capacity to be productive, instead of a net drag on the planetary production, existing only through charities that generally go to the most needy, thereby incentivizing failure and setting class against class. 

The 2nd world, such as Mexico, would see a minor windfall that would help boost their struggling economy.  In the 1st World, the lowest income rung – who are still richer than most of the world’s population – would have a significant chunk of cash to repair their car or go to the doctor, etc.  The working class would about break even with the inevitable inflation of 5~10%.  The middle class would suffer a slight inflationary net loss.  And the 1% would experience it as perhaps a 5% drop in net worth.

(Note that the middle class – the home owning class – in the U.S. has suffered a 40% decline in their average net worth since 2007.  Another measure of this is to look at the $3~6 trillion of bailouts and divide by the population.  That’s $10,000~$20,000 per man, woman and child that was given largely to the very crooks who caused the mess, in hopes that they would reform and give it back to us in the form of legitimate investments and jobs…  Still waiting…  (05/17/2015 - recent news reveals that the apparent recovery was largely limited to the manipulators of capital and management with unused options.  Family wealth has remained fairly static since the crash, while only with the con-artist trick of writing off those workers who are no longer seeking a job has the employment picture looked reasonably good.)

What would have happened if the fed had simply printed the money and given the same amount - ~$10,000 – to every individual U.S. citizen?  They would have kept their homes in most cases, bought cars, etc., anything but sit on it, because they would have known that inflation was coming and their dollars would be worth 5~15% less in a year or so.  Of course the major state creditors – such as the Chinese – would not have been pleased.  Too bad.)

By the numbers:

Justice - is it fundamentally fair? – We KNOW that much of the money and assets held by the ultra-rich and the banksters, etc., was stolen and there is no practical way to get it back in most cases.  In the case of long-standing disputes such as natives vs. colonizers, often the property in dispute was stolen repeatedly by waves of aggressors.  So, let’s make a reasonable assumption that some portion of the planetary wealth rightfully belongs predominantly to the people at the bottom, as the disparity in wealth is often provably the result of theft of the poor and powerless by the wealthy and powerful.  People are generally pretty productive, given half a chance, so a lot of the poorest of the poor are there through no real fault of their own.  See the Drunkard's Walk for a clear, cogent eye-opener on the basic issue of just how much of our lives are subject to random influences - and how we systematically mis-assign causes to random events.  http://www.amazon.com/The-Drunkards-Walk-Randomness-Rules/dp/0307275175

Practicality - can we physically/economically do it?  -  The planetary net income is on the order of at least  $70 trillion.  Paying everyone $1,000 would cost one-tenth of that.  However, the money would be going mostly to people who would spend it, rather than sitting on it in hopes of deflation, as in our banking system.  That spending and inflation would have the impact of forcing the money that has just been sitting back into investing - which is better than the fed has accomplished to date.

Alternatives - after all other considerations, are there alternatives that might be better?  Maybe…  Let’s hear them! 

(The Progressive Left to whom I’ve marketed this likes it up to a point.  Of course, what they want is more like having a bureaucracy of sociologists design a system that evaluates what people “should” need – food, housing, medical care, etc. - and then target the “needy” with those items that they “ought to” value. 

An alternate solution, however, is providing a very nice counter example.  Check out http://www.givedirectly.org/. This NGO has demonstrated that very low income people actually make generally good decisions when simply given a lump sum of cash.  Give Directly was interviewed at length on NPR.  They are financed by some of the major players – Google, for example – with the goal, not to provide succor to the needy as such, but rather to do exhaustive research on actual policy and its outcomes.  They are currently analyzing the data from a comparison project in which they matched up recipients of cash with people who had received a cow or goats, etc., via the well-known and well-respected “Heifer Project.”  So far, my understanding is that the data indicate that simple cash is at least about as good in long-term relief of poverty as the targeted planning that Heifer engages in, where the "targeting" itself costs $1200 per $300 cow, which seriously undercuts the Progressive Left’s objections to my proposal.) 

http://www.poverty-action.org/blog/cash-or-cows

Acceptability - will people actually buy into it? – If people label this as left-wing, socialist, one-world, etc., then the labels may block them from accepting this as a reasonable plan. If it is seen as charity stolen from the productive to subsidize the lazy and unproductive, then the Republicans and everyone to their right will reject it out of hand. But if it is seen as simple fairness, then it may fly. 

And if it is sold as a planetary dividend, based on the Law of the Commons, applied to the planet, then the smarter people will realize that it actually gives the entire planetary population a vested interest in productivity.  I.e., this should not encourage people to vote themselves ever more money,* but rather to look for how to optimize returns for the planet via public policy, as productivity in general will result in larger dividends for everyone. 

*Alexis de Tocqueville - Wikipedia

(Imagine if everyone’s income came from a position in Google stock.  Would most people vote for a Board that favored more dividends at a cost of lowered future profits or would they vote for more reinvestment of profits into expanding the income base via marketing, new products, and R & D?  That’s a very different perspective than trying to lobby for more welfare to finance “needs.”  In the first situation, keeping the Golden Goose alive and well has to be a major decision factor, whereas the second position pits every group against every other group in a political battle that eats up the general resources.   Which decision process is preferable?)

Sustainability - is this part of a long-term perspective or just a stop-gap?  (Note: Stop-gaps are better than nothing.)

There’s no apparent reason why this should stop.  I.e., assume that for the future everyone on the planet will expect to get that regular dividend.  Recent studies have indicated that more egalitarian societies, where there is less disparity between rich and poor are also happier and have fewer internal conflicts.  The wealthy also benefit as they are seen as being valuable super-contributors, rather than class enemies to be taxed. 

Objectivity - are we considering this as far as possible without bias or preconceptions, basing our thinking solely on facts and logic?

So what IS the underlying philosophy of this, beyond the practicalities?  I suggest the Commons model, or Bucky Fuller’s "Spaceship Earth." 

Under the Law of the Commons,* all land and natural resources are owned in common, equally by everyone.  However, this is a lousy way to get things done.  Privatization and proprietorship are powerful mechanisms by which people invest their energy and talent into long-term projects, such as farms and businesses. 

The Common Law handles this by opening up the commons to bidders, who have to bid at least enough to cover the losses to their neighbors of the privatization, and then cover insurance against future damage.  And, once there is a market economy functioning, then would-be entrepreneurs will bid the prices up, and there will be a surplus from the leases coming into the Common treasury.  This surplus from the fees or land rent is used first to deal with infrastructure issues and then the remainder is split equally and paid out to every individual as a dividend. 

The logical sequence of derivations is as follows:  We all owe our existence to the Big Bang or however our universe got started.  As living creatures we also have a debt to the planet earth and to the two billion years of reproduction and evolution that resulted in our generic species – homo.  As humans, we carry with us a specific history of two million or so years of choices and ongoing physical evolution to where we are today.  And, as modern men and women, we owe 99%+ of everything we have or can do to the history, culture, knowledge and organization that enabled us to survive and prosper, not to mention our parents and families. 

Of course, we individuals also contribute or detract from that embodied value.  There are Newtons and Hitlers.  Some people make a net positive contribution and some people are parasites or predators.  Newton probably set us forward in overall wealth as a species by a hundred years.  Hitler probably wiped out thirty or so.

For most of the 2 million or so years that we could be called human – educable to modern human capability – we lived in small tribes in which everything was held in common and hoarding got you expelled or killed.*  When we finally broke through the barriers to larger groups (mostly infectious diseases that rely upon a larger population) and developed specializations and long-term land use for grazing or farming, we had to invent rules for use of the Commons to prevent Garrett Hardin’s  “Tragedy of the Commons.” 

The need for proprietorship as a means of protecting long-term investments of labor – raising a crop, for example – fueled the evolution of private property.  However, recall that most of what we own, including our capabilities in every field, were inherited or are acquired from our association today with other human beings, themselves products of eons of effort to survive and prosper.

*see "Sex at Dawn"  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_at_Dawn

To claim that an individual then has the capability of owning something absolutely is absurd.  We carry into our every action the claims upon us from our ancestors and family and friends and the culture that supports and protects us.  What we do own as individuals is the moral right to our lives.  And, since we cannot survive on a range of the moment basis, we have the abstract right to physical property, ownership – the right to morally prohibit other people from interfering with our long term actions.  One legal vehicle by which this is accomplished is private property.

However, to get to private property, we must satisfy the moral obligations I have sketched above.  We must specify a moral route by which that which is owned in common – the Commons – can be held privately.  That route consists of a binding contract with the rest of humanity (in practice, a court or title agency), in which every member of the Commons is compensated for real or potential losses from the removal of that property from common use.

Which brings us back to where we started.  If we had a Common Law society, then there would BE a net dividend from the leasing of the commons, unless we were totally destitute.  That is clearly not the case today.  Whatever our common problems, we are incredibly wealthy as a species, at least 100 times as wealthy per capita as our ancestors only a few generations ago, and there is no end in sight, unless we kill the biosphere via something like global warming or nuclear war.

So, how is it that we are in the process of destroying the planet for living creatures, anyway?  Maybe one reason is that we are using an invalid concept of property, namely the Lockean idea of creating property by mixing your labor with the land.  Not a bad idea, as a moral theory, but it actually does not provide a basis for the reality that everyone has multiple claims on the commons.  And, every potential piece of property has many claimants. There is no “un-owned” land to mix one’s labor with. 

Instead there is a legal process based on fairness (one that we have largely abandoned in favor of the law of conquest) that sets out reasonable methods by which property can be legitimate and responsible, instead of the slash-and-burn corporate practice of simply off-loading ones externalities…

So, what I’m suggesting is not a perfect solution, but I haven’t seen many of those anywhere else, either.  A planetary dividend can be justified as reflecting the known practical and moral realities that I outlined above.  It won’t solve many of the problems facing us, but it should substantially improve things, and it is the fair thing to do.  It doesn’t suffer from the problems endemic to “need-based” give-aways.  It makes no claim that mere “need” can constitute a moral claim on the lives of other people. 

It is simply based on an approximation of rightful claims and for how things should be done.  And, supplying the bottom 15% or so of the global population with the means to survive means reducing the power and the struggles for the power of all the brokers who use extreme need as a stepping stone and support for their predations.  People whose daily bread is assured are much less likely to join some warlord's army just to eat - and much more likely to oppose such a person and act to reduce and eliminate that position of power.

We don’t have the capability practically to charge each individual for his or her existing use of the common resources.  That would be an enormous effort fraught with enormous resistance.  It could never fly in today’s world.  But by simply printing the money and giving everyone an equal share, we can offset the worst results of not doing things better to begin with, and, by and large the beneficiaries and those who are net losers will probably roughly approximate what would have been the results of a complete overhaul under the Law of the Commons.  We have higher priorities today – such as survival.  In some far tomorrow perhaps we will have the luxury of a more precise accounting.

12/29/13  Recent commentary and developments:

1) Still trying to locate that NPR site that interviewed or reported on an NGO or business called something like "Pays," or "Paze," or something similar - shareholder investments in young people, as I understood it.  Nicely synergistic to what I proposed and in-line with a similar idea that I tried to market several decades ago, running head on into the NIH syndrome.  The typical response was of the form, "If it's any good, the market will decide."  Imagine a prospective investor saying that to Henry Ford.  Imagine if Ford had listened and given up.  Anyone have a connection for us?

2) Also in the news in the past few days a story about  a stone age tribe that had been studied to assess the relative level of support for "sharing" vs. personal property.  The language used by the researcher was so close to my own in this blog as well as my piece "On Property" here at JU, that I seriously wonder if my work that might not have been an incidental input.  Gist was to the effect that someone who didn't share with the group would soon find himself an outcast and be unable to share with the successful hunter of tomorrrow.  Thus, personal property was nearly non-existent.

3) A clip from Bucky Fuller on one of the Occupy FB sites that I responded to:  Fuller was arguing that only sheer ignorance kept people from realizing their birthright - that we are all effectively billionaires.  Instead we are maintained in a state of artificial scarcity via that ignorance...  Posted by Ryan Firebrand.
 
My comment: "Except for sheer ignorance part.  That's not the only factor.  Sheer ignorance doesn't explain wars and pogroms very well.  Most wars are not fought for food or any tangible objective physical asset, but rather because war is the natural state when people are hypnotized and sociopaths are running society via neurotic memes.

People are taught in virtually every existing society that everything they naturally want is suspect or downright sinful and that God or the State or some similar abstraction is their highest value.  And only we of the "In group" who know the Truth are worth listening to or treating well anyway, so make sure to prevent others from speaking out or defying the natural order of things - as defined by the sociopaths.  So kids starve while we pay thousands of dollars for an SUV with a V8 because it sounds louder and meaner than our neighbor's, never challenging the memes that tell us how to measure ourselves and our tribe."

4> The recent robotics challenge from DARPA, which Google won, the idea being to create a roughly humanoid robot with human level sensory/motor skills and the functional intelligence of a two year old child - able to take simple instructions in natural language and implement them naturally as a child might.  Let's see, using Moore's Law...  (year/age equivalent) 2013/2, 2015/4, 2017/8, 2019/16, 2021/32, 2023/64, 2025/128... I.e., by about 2029, we unaugmented humans are history.  And that 1 billion who I targetted with my proposal above will be 2 billion and then 3 billion.  (17/04/23 - So, what happened with this?)

We can let them starve while the robots take over all the jobs, or we can do something to bootstrap ourselves as a species to the next level of evolution.  If we choose the former, then what kind of treatment can we expect from someone with an effective IQ of 1,000?  Can you say "Termination?"  As in, "These fools aren't worth preserving AND they don't deserve the help to do it."  Or, we could start planning to provide real equity, with a planetary commons and a common dividend that brings the majority of that present 1~2 billion on the edge up to the point of positive productivity and contribution.

As I pointed out in my other blog here "On Morals," we are nearing the tipping point on this, while at the same time, the tech that threatens us also allows for a way out.  As the Boomers age, we will be needing replacements of various bio-systems - artificial retinas, hearing, augmented muscles, etc.  Once we have successful systems that barely make the grade, the door is open to major improvement.  If you are using an electronic retina, then why NOT have a playback function.  Why NOT use your memory chips in the head to access the cloud continuously, spawning search processes as fluidly as we move our biological eyes' focus?  I.e., we can integrate ourselves into the next stage.  Or, we can blow it.

01/04/14 And on that note:

If you haven't yet seen "Her," then time's a wastin.  I came out of the theater to find that a group of perhaps 25 people had apparently spontaneously formed a circle, some holding hands, some quiet conversation, but mostly just looking at each other and peacefully, calmly smiling.  Never seen anything quite like it - or re the movie itself, either.  I was thinking, "This is the best film ever."  One of my co-workers who is a Huge movie buff gave it at least best pic for 2013.  The underlying message...  but I'll leave that for the next commenters.

Addendum:  In response to a talk by Ray Kurzweil on the subject:

See: http://radioopensource.org/the-end-of-work/


See my popular (16k hits) blog on the subject: http://philosborn.joeuser.com/...
Altho it was written with a focus on other matters, it is equally applicable to the issue under discussion here.  Think Henry George melded with August Comp mixed with Ayn Rand.  George's position - which almost took over the U.S. in the late 19th century - was basically that the value of any particular piece of land is primarilly due to the value of the surrounding lands - the community, not as a product of the landowner's contribution.

Since that value was created by the community, then it should go back to the community as a tax - or "land rent," which accrues to the community then as the finance of infrastructure and of a universal and equal dividend, which is only fair, as privatization removes what was privatized from common use and availability.  George argued that the boom/bust cycle as well as stagnent wages - even while those already wealthy became more so (sound familiar?), both reflected a basic inequality in which the wealthy individuals and corporations benefited from a hidden transfer of wealth, in the increase in value of their land holdings - wealth that rightfully belonged to the community as a whole and was partially taken out of the pockets of the less wealthy.

However, while George's idea makes sense, he didn't carry it far enough.  In fact, reflecting the ideas of Comt, the "Father of Socialism," ALL wealth has a substantial portion that must be attributed to the people providing those "shoulders" that Newton said he stood upon. Everything of value has both an individual component and a societal.

In my blog, I suggested treating this as a planetary dividend - not socialism but a system in which everyone has a vested interest in productivity and in productive people rightfully earning their wealth as well. You go, free markets!  As the robots take over, the increased productivity will simply - under my model - result in a bigger dividend to the humans and their evolved offspring, meaning that there will be less and less reason to do any form of drudgery, while the really creative work will still generate individual wealth in proportion to its value.

The problem with many prior analyses has been a failure to frame the argument for redistribution morally.  Rand is right and so was Comt, up to a point. The synthesis comes with the insight that Henry George provided, that there is an objective measure of what is fair.  The producers deserve the value added that they create.  The species as a whole has a rightful claim on the value that came from their collective efforts, past and present - the capital that made the creation feasible.  Thus, a planetary dividend is fair from both perspectives.

Addendum:  I've moved my commentary re ebola to avoid diverting focus:
Update 9/22/14: http://philosborn.joeuser.com/article/457064/Ebola_Now   Finally, some good news!!!

See:  http://philosborn.joeuser.com/article/301081/On_Morals


The Comment function is not working for me.

In reply to Starkers - 10/12/2016

Thanks Starkers

Actually, if Gates or Buffet were serious, they could just burn their money, thereby reducing the bid against goods and services that money constitutes and reducing overall pricing for the rest of us.

Giving money away doesn't in and of itself create any new value.  It just shifts the purchasing power in the direction of the recipients.  In general, if someone has a lot of money, then most economists assume they must have done something productive to earn it, and they would usually be more beneficial for the rest of us by continuing what worked for them and their customers. 

Real value is created when people do things productive. I would call upon Gates to use his $billions to make Windows work properly for once. 

There's no way that even he could undo all the damage done to humanity by Microsoft over the past several decades.  I estimate that Microsoft cost humanity on the order of $15trillion, maybe more.   

I.e., if you want to help the world, then you should invest in the people who are most productive, not in the "needy." The needy of the world - those who require assistance from others to survive - are on average the least likely to use their meager resources effectively.

However, that position, while it seems economically sound, leaves us with a lot of poor people.

The reality is that our world economy is not a perfect market-driven system - not by a long shot. Vast resources are managed and held by state entities with agendas that do not reflect how private parties would behave in a free market. 

Dictators in 3rd and 2nd world countries use resources to purchase the military means to maintain their power, not to help anyone apart from themselves and their cronies.  Corporations ("Children of the State") use their limited liability status to ignore risks, future costs and general externalities or use their political/legal clout via the patent process or via tariffs to eliminate or marginalize competition.


Often, the result is that the mixed-market rewards the players most willing and able to work the political/legal system and assume risks, not the most innovative or productive.  These players rely upon a system that keeps a certain significant portion of the population utterly dependent upon the state and the bureaucrats who make the life and death decisions as to whether someone gets the medical help or approval for a specialty drug, just to mention a few of the avenues by which power instantiates itself and defeats any real opposition.  Don't believe me.  Just look up the scandel about the highway shutdown:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Lee_lane_closure_scandal

The beauty of the Basic Income or Universal Dividend is that it undercuts power at its base.  When everyone gets the same, there's no room for turning everything into a political contest. When people have options, they are hard to bully and selective about their associations - who they work for and under what terms. 

My stating these kinds of heresies makes many so-called libertarians crazy.  But who is more free - a person who has to watch everything he or she does or says, lest he lose that precious and rare job or someone who can walk away from the would-be bullies, the sociopaths who would like nothing better than a Hobbesian war of all against all? 

I try to look at the realities of power and freedom, and the fictions that sustain the standard libertarian mythology, such as a holy reliance upon a non-existent market dollar.  If only we could get back to the gold standard - right?  But a currency, like anything else in the market is only worth what it can be traded for.  The dollar is backed by the taxes due - along with the mortgage payments and all the other goods and services payable in dollars.  There's nothing wrong with this.  What is wrong is the political control over that dollar and its use worldwide to finance slavery.


Comments (Page 9)
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on Dec 06, 2013

GeomanNL

I think it only works for the better if in combination with a fairly social form of a democratic government.

I think that the only really succesful example is formed by Europe. And also the US in the early days when the people still paid their fair share of taxes. Maybe Canada too.

The rest of the world still has a long way to go 
 

Please leave your "fair share - I only watch MSNBC" talking points at the door.  The facts matter.  In the US the top 10% of income earners pay over 70% of the taxes.  The top 25% pay almost 90% of all taxes.  The top 50% pay roughly 98% of taxes.  The "fair share" nonsense is a vapid bull shit political talking point.  Nothing more.  

The US and the EU have the same damn corrupt corporatist system.  Make no mistake, I've said no less than a dozen times in this thread, that the US system isn't the model to uphold.  There is huge room for improvement.  We currently have (and are moving more into) political corporatism where winners are chosen by politicians and not by company merit.  This is the fact that progressive, "we need more government involvement in business"-types, completely fail to realize.  You're making the problem worse, not better.  Excessive regulation benefits large corporations significantly more than small companies or individuals.  The more complicated the government makes a market the less competitive startups and existing small companies in that market become.  

There is a reason GE supports every environmental, medical device and energy regulation under the sun.  They get to be in the room to help write the regulation. They have huge predictable revenue streams that can afford the necessary lawyers, accountants and lobbyists to work around the regulation.  They can afford throwing another dozen engineers at any regulation to make sure the products are compliant.  They like regulation.  

GeomanNL

Only in theory. In practice the big corporations that fail to innovate because of excessive bureaucracy, they just use their wealth to buy the little guys.
 

Big corporations that fail to innovate will die unless they are propped up by political friends.  Innovation in a large company is different than innovation at a startup, but that doesn't mean it does not exist.  As for "buying the little guys", that's exactly what the little guys want.  Nearly every tech startup has a five year plan that they present to their investors.  In it, they explain what their exit ramp looks like.  That exit ramp is either IPO or sale of the company.  They also go so far as to analyze the tech portfolios of larger companies and predict who their target acquirers will be based on where their technology fits into the larger company's technology stack.  

on Dec 06, 2013

Kantok
Please leave your "fair share - I only watch MSNBC" talking points at the door. The facts matter. In the US the top 10% of income earners pay over 70% of the taxes. The top 25% pay almost 90% of all taxes. The top 50% pay roughly 98% of taxes. The "fair share" nonsense is a vapid bull shit political talking point. Nothing more.

Well they don't. The US government has to borrow a lot of money... like a third of their total budget. On top of that, the US government doesn't spend much on fighting poverty, maintaining roads, having a good education system. I wouldn't call that a fair share...

Kantok
Big corporations that fail to innovate will die unless they are propped up by political friends.

Nah the big corporations have this tax-evasion advantage because they're all over the globe and work from the cheapest country. A local entrepeneur has to pay the full share of local taxes. Therefore a big company can outperform smaller companies even though it's less efficient.

Kantok
Innovation in a large company is different than innovation at a startup, but that doesn't mean it does not exist.

True... big companies can innovate in other ways. It depends on the leadership, if he/she want to invest in R&D. But R&D are the first things to go whenever the economy worsens...

Kantok
As for "buying the little guys", that's exactly what the little guys want.

I doubt that every little guy wants that... and it's not healthy. A small lean mean company disappears in a big bureaucracy and sometimes it just disappears.

 

on Dec 06, 2013

GeomanNL
I think the gap between rich and poor countries is slowly disappearing.

 

Really? To me it seems to be the opposite.. True, there are many countries that have a quickly increasing economy and quality of life, but it is not true for every poor country.. Just look at Africa.

 

GeomanNL
I think there are no real backward countries anymore.

lol wut

http://www.therichest.com/rich-list/world/poorest-countries-in-the-world/

What about these? Aren't they backward countries? And just look at Somalia, they don't even a real state..

GeomanNL
Also note, that the number of ultra-low-wage countries is shrinking. At some point, this form of capitalism will cease to exist.

Yes, but they will NEVER reach the centrum countries. And will always be peripheries, and there is a high chance they will always be (relatively) poor, but these are just predictions.

Kantok
This is about as one sided a description of Capitalism's effect on poor people as one could write. There is no attempt in what you've written to even pretend to discussing both its positive and negative effects.

Do you question that this centrum-periphery duality of capitalism is permanent? I think there will always be rich and poor nations, the rich already have huge advantage. And there weren't many changes in this system, only a few countries could get closer to the developed world (or surpass them, like Japan).

I don't think that is so positive to help those poor people by accident or by obligations.. That is not the interest of capitalist companies to help, to say Indonesian people to be wealthier. Or African. I don't really understand how is capitalism that good if the positive effects come by side effects? I do not like capitalism, as it is obvious from my comments, and I guess I will always be sceptical, though i do understand and realize what you wanted to say, it helps somehow after a while, but my intention wasn't stressing the positivities caused by capitalism, I wanted to highlight the problems.

Kantok
The process is bumpy and messy and can hurt the developing nations (or groups of people) at times, but it is also generally hugely beneficial in the long term.

I don't see much development in Africa yet..

Kantok
In all the talk of "capitalism needs poor people" everyone seems stubborn to ignore the fact that capitalism, as a system and as it exists in the world today (even in flawed form) has done more to lift people out of poverty than any other force in human history.

Yes, it's true, but this globalisation caused so much problems.. The gap between the rich and poor nations became so huge.. And there are only a few exceptions that could rise from poverty. I dislike that aspect of capitalism that everyone has the choice of becoming successful. I don't see much truth in it, everyone cannot be successful at once, not even at the scale of countries.

 

on Dec 06, 2013

GeomanNL

Well they don't. The US government has to borrow a lot of money... like a third of their total budget. On top of that, the US government doesn't spend much on fighting poverty, maintaining roads, having a good education system. I wouldn't call that a fair share...

You're talking completely out of your ass.  For someone who spends so much time quoting numbers and studies when the subject is AGW, you're just repeating boilerplate crap here. 

The US spends 38% more than the average OECD nation on elementary and secondary education.  The US spends more than double the OECD average on postsecondary education.  The US spends more per capita on education than any other G8 nation.  

Want to know which five countries make up the top five in education spending as a percentage of GDP (2009 numbers)?  I'll tell you, since you obviously don't know.  

  1. Iceland (8.1)
  2. Republic of Korea (8)
  3. Denmark (7.9)
  4. New Zealand (7.4)
  5. United States (7.3)
Like most progressive crap, the assumption that "we don't spend enough money" is generally wrong.  The problem isn't the quantity of money spent, it's the quality of return on money spent.  In the US the education system is a cesspool, but it has nothing, NOTHING, to do with spending levels. 

US liabilities on poverty programs, including Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid dwarfs pretty much any other countries total liabilities and would crush nearly any other economy in the world.  It will in fact crush the US economy at some point if things aren't reformed.  Estimates for total commitments of those programs are around $100 trillion dollars.  Trillion, not billion.  

As for your definition of fair share... if you make $1M/year in salary, but spend $2M/year on stupid houses and boats, does that mean your poor since you're down $1M/year?  Or does it mean you have a spending problem?  The US doesn't have a "revenue" problem (in normal people language a tax rate problem).  It has a drunken sailor, no budget too big money no object progressive "we always need to spend more" problem. 

GeomanNL

Nah the big corporations have this tax-evasion advantage because they're all over the globe and work from the cheapest country. A local entrepeneur has to pay the full share of local taxes. Therefore a big company can outperform smaller companies even though it's less efficient.

And the US corporate tax code is written by... I shouldn't have to drop such obvious breadcrumbs here. 

And you can dismiss the effect of regulation on insulating big business all you want, but you're wrong.  Economic analysis shows that the US GDP would be trillions of dollars higher if regulation was still at it's post WW2 level.  Now certainly, we can agree that some of the regulation since then is warranted and that the cost to the economy (in terms of jobs) is a cost worth paying.  But to pretend that those costs don't exist is foolish.  

Tell me, which companies are more likely to survive increasing regulatory costs?  Startups, who are generally on shoe string budgets or large corporations who help write the regulations and have recurring 10 or 11 figure revenues to help them absorb regulatory costs?  This isn't rocket science, it's simple economics.  

GeomanNL

I doubt that every little guy wants that... and it's not healthy. A small lean mean company disappears in a big bureaucracy and sometimes it just disappears.
 

Sure, not every little guy wants to be bought out.  Nice strawman.  But startups, not small businesses, but startups like tech startups MUST have an exit plan or they'll never get funding.  It doesn't mean they can't change as the market changes, but they all have it (unless they have some lucky angel investor scenario that most people don't get) and most of them are excited for it.  

on Dec 06, 2013

Turchany

Do you question that this centrum-periphery duality of capitalism is permanent? I think there will always be rich and poor nations, the rich already have huge advantage. And there weren't many changes in this system, only a few countries could get closer to the developed world (or surpass them, like Japan).

I don't think that is so positive to help those poor people by accident or by obligations.. That is not the interest of capitalist companies to help, to say Indonesian people to be wealthier. Or African. I don't really understand how is capitalism that good if the positive effects come by side effects? I do not like capitalism, as it is obvious from my comments, and I guess I will always be sceptical, though i do understand and realize what you wanted to say, it helps somehow after a while, but my intention wasn't stressing the positivities caused by capitalism, I wanted to highlight the problems.

It's not in the interest of large corporations whether or not Indonesian people are wealthy.  It is in the interest of corporations to turn a profit and do right by their shareholders, while obeying the law.  Given that, if Indonesia, as your example, has a solid government and a desire to attract corporations they can do so.  By doing so they bring money into their country via salaries, tax revenue and supporting local infrastructure required for those large corporations.  That money stays local and, over time, creates a middle class.  It's exactly what happened in China.  It's happening throughout Southeast Asia now.  

It is a slow and imperfect process.  No one denies that.  But it is the best we have.  

Turchany

I don't see much development in Africa yet..

Of course you don't.  Half of Africa, by your example look at Somalia, doesn't have functioning stable governments.  Why on earth would a business invest money in a country with no rule of law?  You're just throwing away money.  50 years from now parts of Africa will be what Southeast Asia is today.  The process takes time.  Look at how much the "third world" nations of 1900 have improved today.  Look at Japan, China or India and compare their progress in just 100 years. 

You're argument is basically that since we can't improve the lives of everyone everywhere simultaneously, we should throw it all away.  That's ludicrous.  

Turchany

Yes, it's true, but this globalisation caused so much problems.. The gap between the rich and poor nations became so huge.. 
 

This is a feature, not a bug although not in the way you might think.  

The reason the gap between the rich and the poor nations has increased so much (in QoL terms or raw GPD terms) isn't some nefarious plot by corporations to keep the poor people down.  It's because technology, as a driver for Total Factor Productivity, compounds.  The work of one person in the US or EU accomplishes drastically more than the work of a similar person in Kenya.  Computers, modern equipment, medicine, better health allowing for harder/longer working... all of those things compound from capitalist economic growth.  That's the beauty of the system.  As wealthier nations need somewhere to invest (to continue to see returns) they have to look for new opportunities.  That's what started the economic growth of China 45 years ago to begin with. 

Again, it's a slow system and it's imperfect.  People die in factory accidents in third world nations because third world nations can't afford safety standards, for example.  But it's the reason that we can talk about topics like increasing the QoL of the last billion people who live on $2/day to something better. Fifty or a hundred years ago we never even would have talked about that because the people living on $2/day (or the inflation adjusted equivalent) would have outnumbered those who didn't.  

This, ultimately, is a fundamental difference between conservatives and progressives.  Progressives believe that if you get enough smart people, or get people smart enough, you can hit some Utopian cascade event where all of the problems of humanity go away.  Conservatives believe that the problem isn't smarts, but humanity.  Or more precisely human nature or free will.  If you want the freedom to make choices you have to have the freedom to make bad choices.  Design a system that puts incentives on good choices and get out of the way.  This has been adjusted some over the last forty or fifty years to admit the need for a low level safety net. 

You want the perfect solution.  I think humans are imperfect, flawed beings and that no perfect solution exists.  Nothing created by humans will ever be perfect, because we aren't.  I prefer to set up a system that acknowledges that imperfection and includes it in the system's design.  That system will do the best, long term, despite having messy imperfection crop up in very obvious ways.  Capitalism does that, in theory (I say in theory because modern Corporatism ruins some of this) by aligning individual self-interest with what makes the entire system grow (that growth evidenced by increasing wealth and QoL).  The evidence says that the best we have is capitalism run on top of some form of democracy.  

 

on Dec 06, 2013

Kantok
Want to know which five countries make up the top five in education spending as a percentage of GDP (2009 numbers)? I'll tell you, since you obviously don't know.

That's impressive, but is that government spending or private spending?

Kantok
Estimates for total commitments of those programs are around $100 trillion dollars. Trillion, not billion.

The Netherlands have the same problem, despite large pension funds. Here the age of retirement will go up to 67 years.

To be honest I think that's a weird thing to do, given the unemployment problem in Europe... it's like stopping one leak with the other ^^

Kantok
It has a drunken sailor, no budget too big money no object progressive "we always need to spend more" problem.

The Netherlands have that problem too. They try to reign in the budget, but it's really hard. They did make several budget cuts in the last few years. And of course they increased the taxes as well ^^

Kantok
Tell me, which companies are more likely to survive increasing regulatory costs? Startups, who are generally on shoe string budgets or large corporations who help write the regulations and have recurring 10 or 11 figure revenues to help them absorb regulatory costs? This isn't rocket science, it's simple economics.

Given the power of lobbyist in the US, I share your concern that it's the smaller companies who'll be hit hardest.

 

on Dec 06, 2013

GeomanNL


That's impressive, but is that government spending or private spending?
 

It doesn't matter.  Your claim was that the US doesn't spend enough on education.  It's spends more as a percentage of GPD or per capita then nearly every other country.  The makeup of that spending is irrelevant to your point.  The US, as a nation, spends a TON on education. 

on Dec 06, 2013

Ok... sorry, the context was about taxes and government not about individuals... In the Netherlands, education is largely paid for by taxes and almost everybody has a chance to go to university. Even transportation is subsidized for students.


That means that in the Netherlands, rich people pay largely for poor people's education. I think that's fair, it would be a shame if smart children didn't have a good education just because their parents have no money.

The healthcare system is also "fair". It doesn't matter how rich one is in the Netherlands, they're treated with equal priority as other poorer people. Actually that's why rich people go to Belgium or the US for treatment

on Dec 06, 2013

GeomanNL


Quoting Kantok, reply 127It doesn't matter. Your claim was that the US doesn't spend enough on education.

Ok... sorry, the context was about taxes and government not about individuals... In the Netherlands, education is largely paid for by taxes and almost everybody has a chance to go to university. Even transportation is subsidized for students.

That means that in the Netherlands, rich people pay largely for poor people's education. I think that's fair, it would be a shame if smart children didn't have a good education just because their parents have no money.

The healthcare system is also "fair". It doesn't matter how rich one is in the Netherlands, they're treated with equal priority as other poorer people. Actually that's why rich people go to Belgium or the US for treatment

In the US it is virtually all made up of federal, state and local tax dollars (Federal and state transfer payments to school districts almost entirely based on district need  and local property taxes, based on housing, which go almost entirely to the local school district).  The "individual" contribution to education, as in I'm paying for my kids education by writing a check to a school, is trivially small.  Again, the problem in the US system isn't money.  It's the system itself.  It's a shitty system where money is misspent on the wrong things.  More money isn't the solution.  Spending it more wisely is.  

If we put another whole 1% of GDP into education it would go into the same things that the other 7.3% of spending is going into.  In other words we'd be throwing good money after bad.  The start of fixing education in the US starts with reforming the system so money is spent properly.  

on Dec 06, 2013

I see

I've read lots of stories on cnbc in recent years, about extremely costly college educations where professors earn millions so that people were not able to study anymore, and that poorer people just didn't have a chance. That must've been just more of that sensasionalist journalistic bullshit then. Thanks for clearing that up.

on Dec 06, 2013

In the USA.

Not gonna happen but......

1. Raise Minimum wage.

2. Drastically reduce imports.

3. Pro- corporate politicians must be voted out.

on Dec 06, 2013

GeomanNL

I see

I've read lots of stories on cnbc in recent years, about extremely costly college educations where professors earn millions so that people were not able to study anymore, and that poorer people just didn't have a chance. That must've been just more of that sensasionalist journalistic bullshit then. Thanks for clearing that up.

It's a topic that is easily sensationalized and is very complicated (like any of these topics) to solve because people see the root causes as different things.  It's what makes these issues enjoyable to discuss, even if we'll never change one another's minds.  

 

on Dec 06, 2013

Kantok
It's not in the interest of large corporations whether or not Indonesian people are wealthy. It is in the interest of corporations to turn a profit and do right by their shareholders, while obeying the law. Given that, if Indonesia, as your example, has a solid government and a desire to attract corporations they can do so. By doing so they bring money into their country via salaries, tax revenue and supporting local infrastructure required for those large corporations. That money stays local and, over time, creates a middle class. It's exactly what happened in China. It's happening throughout Southeast Asia now.

It is a slow and imperfect process. No one denies that. But it is the best we have.

But we could have something much better.. I have much hope in this crisis, that it will bring a new form of capitalism that breaks up with this money is everything type of thinking. There is so much suffer in this world, I do not think this current form of capitalism is to be supported.

Kantok
Of course you don't. Half of Africa, by your example look at Somalia, doesn't have functioning stable governments. Why on earth would a business invest money in a country with no rule of law?

But how will these countries ever be a developed country in the future?

Kantok
50 years from now parts of Africa will be what Southeast Asia is today.

This is a risky prediction.. Currently not too many African states show much hope.. Talking about the non arabic countries of course. And noone knows if this globalisation will continue or another type of capitalism (or other ism) comes in the next decade..

Kantok
You're argument is basically that since we can't improve the lives of everyone everywhere simultaneously, we should throw it all away. That's ludicrous.

I never said throw it all away, my view of this is that we should IMPROVE things, or try to install something better. And yes, I think everyone deserves a better life, is it so bad? If we (developed world) could do anything to help them immediately and not wait for capitalism to do something (and it is not even sure it will change much in Africa), then why not? Capitalism is NOT A SELF AWARE THING, states and international organizations should do much more, but unfortunately egalitarianism and solidarism are not properties of capitalism. I don't say these are so good I want to devote my life on them, but the current lack of both is a bit.. worrying.

Kantok
This is a feature, not a bug although not in the way you might think.

I know, and I don't think it's a good thing..

Kantok
The reason the gap between the rich and the poor nations has increased so much (in QoL terms or raw GPD terms) isn't some nefarious plot by corporations to keep the poor people down. It's because technology, as a driver for Total Factor Productivity, compounds. The work of one person in the US or EU accomplishes drastically more than the work of a similar person in Kenya. Computers, modern equipment, medicine, better health allowing for harder/longer working... all of those things compound from capitalist economic growth. That's the beauty of the system. As wealthier nations need somewhere to invest (to continue to see returns) they have to look for new opportunities. That's what started the economic growth of China 45 years ago to begin with.

True, but this technological advantage will not cease to exist.

Only if you have an ancient culture, with unique religious habits (China, Japan, Korea), where people are willing to work like ants and willing to bear a somewhat militaristic type of production in the factories. Africa lacks these..

Kantok
This, ultimately, is a fundamental difference between conservatives and progressives. Progressives believe that if you get enough smart people, or get people smart enough, you can hit some Utopian cascade event where all of the problems of humanity go away. Conservatives believe that the problem isn't smarts, but humanity. Or more precisely human nature or free will. If you want the freedom to make choices you have to have the freedom to make bad choices. Design a system that puts incentives on good choices and get out of the way. This has been adjusted some over the last forty or fifty years to admit the need for a low level safety net.

I am more likely to believe free will and freedom of doing anything is not that good. Though I do not really want to get into an argument about this because my view has not yet reached a cemented form.

Kantok
You want the perfect solution. I think humans are imperfect, flawed beings and that no perfect solution exists. Nothing created by humans will ever be perfect, because we aren't. I prefer to set up a system that acknowledges that imperfection and includes it in the system's design. That system will do the best, long term, despite having messy imperfection crop up in very obvious ways. Capitalism does that, in theory (I say in theory because modern Corporatism ruins some of this) by aligning individual self-interest with what makes the entire system grow (that growth evidenced by increasing wealth and QoL)

Better phrase would be BEST solution. I know humans are imperfect, and many of them have evilness in them.

Why acknowledging the imperfections of the current system if we know what are those? Why not improving them?

Capitalism is always good in theories, in real life it shows nothing is good.. Crisi will always come, no matter what you do.. And the society will always be polarized unless you change somethings about capitalism.

People always forget that not wealth is the most important thing in the world.. It is an important thing to have enough money to be able to buy things, but sacrificing your whole life worshipping money.. consumption societies are something similar.. Many other things like traditions, social interaction etc. Capitalism is not showint much interest in those, as these are not that profitable..

Kantok
The evidence says that the best we have is capitalism run on top of some form of democracy.

It's true, I admit it, we need some kind of capitalism and some kind of democracy, but the corrent setup is anything but good. I hope the thing that comes after the crisis will be better..

 

on Dec 06, 2013

Turchany

But we could have something much better.. 
 

What's the better system?  Tell me? You're offering nothing but complaints and no solutions or suggestions. 

 

on Dec 06, 2013

wbino49

In the USA.

Not gonna happen but......

1. Raise Minimum wage.

2. Drastically reduce imports.

3. Pro- corporate politicians must be voted out.

  1. Does nothing positive outside of the short term, because the raised wages will be inflated away.  In the short term it helps some people and costs others their jobs.  Raising the minimum wages just causes inflation to kill any short term gain in purchasing power. This happens every single time the minimum wage is raised. 
  2. Protectionism, huh?  That good old thing that practically caused the Great Depression.  Any residual gain left from change #1 is destroyed by this one as it drives up the cost of low end goods hugely. This disproportionately hurts the poor.  
  3. Sure, I agree.  Wanna bet you and I disagree on who the "pro-corporate" politicians are?  Here's a question:  Is Barack Obama pro-corporate?  (Not looking to get into politics, but it's an example to illustrate my point).  
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