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  • There’s a proposal around that’s got a lot of interest called universal basic income

  • where everybody is guaranteed at least a certain level of income in the society.

  • Some free market economists like Milton Friedman talked about a negative income tax which in

  • effect had the same features of guaranteeing a certain level of income for everybody as

  • a base.

  • I think from a human rights and decency standard there’s a lot of sense to the idea that

  • everybody in a society should be able to meet their basic needs.

  • There’s on the other hand this sense if you give someone a check whether theyre

  • trying, not trying, working, not working.

  • If there’s no effort, no conditionality involved at all maybe were going to get

  • a lot of people that are absolutely doing nothing on the backs of those who are really

  • working.

  • So the incentive issues are real even if the sensitivity and decency issues are also real.

  • I think that one way to handle this is a little bit more rounded rather than seeing a universal

  • basic income as a check and kind of an unconditional check that’s just handed out as income.

  • I like the idea of social democracy as it’s applied in real countries in Europe, the Netherlands

  • and Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Germany.

  • The idea is everybody has access to publicly financed healthcare.

  • Everybody has access to quality publicly financed education including college tuitions.

  • Not a trillion dollars of crushing student debt, but tuitions paid for.

  • Everybody has access to not only guaranteed vacation, but paid vacation.

  • Everybody has access to quality childcare so that moms can go to work knowing that their

  • kids are in a healthy, nurturing environment.

  • Everybody has access to maternity leave so that moms and also paternity leave, dads can

  • stay home with their kids for several months.

  • It’s kind of decent where you say we have all this wonderful technology, this wealth.

  • Why don’t we live decently, not miserably.

  • If people want a market income beyond that theyve got to go work for it.

  • If, of course, theyre disabled or for some reason can’t then there’s added social

  • support but it’s not cash in people’s pockets.

  • It’s decency.

  • It’s public service.

  • It’s basic needs met.

  • I see it as basically living decent lives in decent societies.

  • They have a very different spirit to them.

  • There aren’t a lot of super rich Wall Street hedge fund misanthropesand I’ll use

  • the term advisably because I find a lot of people on Wall Street don’t give a damn

  • about anybody else except they care about their money.

  • And I find that really weird.

  • But you don’t find that kind of idea in northern Europe because it’s really looked

  • down upon.

  • And people don’t like it when people are money grubbing.

  • Theyre kind of shunned.

  • So the social ethos is different.

  • I remember once I was running to the airport in Oslo and I fly business class and I’m

  • constantly moving around on trips relentlessly around the world.

  • And I ran up and said, “Where’s the business class line to board?”

  • And the guy looked at me like I was crazy and he said, “Excuse me, were boarding

  • the Scandinavian way.

  • Get back in line.”

  • And I just thought okay, that’s pretty cool actually, you know.

  • Everybody’s in line and let’s all get on the plane.

  • It’s a social spirit.

  • It’s the idea that we likewell by the way this is not people tearing their clothes

  • and living in hair shirts and not enjoying themselves.

  • They like their vacations.

  • They like their boats in the Stockholm archipelago.

  • They like six weeks on their island.

  • So they live beautifully.

  • But they don’t want gazillions.

  • They don’t want to do it at the expense of others.

  • They want to do it as a society.

  • God, if America could just get a little of that back rather than a president who believes

  • in killers and losers.

  • Sick, but that’s what we got and that is what’s degrading American society.

  • Not just the technical issues.

  • Not just the rising inequality but this spirit that youre a winner or youre a loser.

  • And if youre a loser get out of the way.

  • That’s Ayn Rand talking.

  • It’s ugly and weve had enough of it.

There’s a proposal around that’s got a lot of interest called universal basic income

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全民基本收入/社會民主能解決美國的不平等嗎?| 傑弗裡-薩克斯 (Can Universal Basic Income / Social Democracy Fix America’s Inequality? | Jeffrey Sachs)

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    王惟惟 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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