Lodi News-Sentinel

Universal basic income would pay everyone to improve qualify of life

- By Marisa Kendall

SAN JOSE — With an impending robot revolution expected to leave a trail of unemployme­nt, some Silicon Valley tech leaders think they have a remedy to a future with fewer jobs: free money for all.

It’s called universal basic income, a radical concept that would provide all Americans with a minimum level of economic security. The idea is expensive and controvers­ial — it guarantees cash for everyone, regardless of income level or employment status. But prominent tech leaders including Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Sam Altman, president of startup accelerato­r Y Combinator, support it.

“We should make it so no one is worried about how they’re going to pay for a place to live, no one has to worry about how they’re going to have enough to eat,” Altman said in a recent speech in San Francisco. “Just give people enough money to have a reasonable quality of life.”

Altman is funding a basic income experiment in Oakland as the concept gains momentum in the Bay Area. Policy experts, economists, tech leaders and others convened in San Francisco last month for a workshop on the topic organized by the Economic Security Project, of which Altman is a founding signatory. The project is investing $10 million in basic income projects over the next two years.

Stanford University has created a Basic Income Lab to study the idea, and the San Francisco city treasurer’s office has said it’s designing tests — though the department said it has no updates on the status of that project.

Proponents say the utopian approach could offer relief to workers in Silicon Valley and beyond who may soon find their jobs threatened by robots as they get smarter. Even before the robots take over, some economists say, basic income should be used as a tool to fight poverty. In the Bay Area — where the rapid expansion of high-paying tech companies has made the region too expensive for many to afford — it could help lift those the boom has left behind.

Unlike traditiona­l aid programs, recipients of a universal basic income wouldn’t need to prove anything — not their income level, employment status, disability or family obligation­s — before collecting their cash payments.

“It’s a right of citizenshi­p,” said Karl Widerquist, a basic income expert and associate professor at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service in Qatar, “so we’re not judging people and we’re not putting them in this other category or (saying) ‘you’re the poor.’ And I think this is exciting people right now because the other model hasn’t worked.”

That means a mother living at the poverty line would get the same amount of free cash as Mark Zuckerberg, Widerquist said. But Zuckerberg’s taxes would go up, canceling out his basic income payment.

The problem is that giving all Americans a $10,000 annual income would cost upwards of $3 trillion a year — more than three-fourths of the federal budget, said Bob Greenstein, president of the Washington-based Center for Budget and Policy Priorities. Some proponents advocate paying for it by cutting programs such as food stamps and Medicaid. But that approach would take money set aside for low-income families and redistribu­te it upward, exacerbati­ng poverty and inequality, Greenstein said.

Still, some researcher­s are testing the idea with small basic income experiment­s targeting certain neighborho­ods and socio-economic groups.

Y Combinator — the accelerato­r known for launching Airbnb and Instacart — is giving 100 randomly selected Oakland families unconditio­nal cash payments of about $1,500 a month. Altman, who is footing most of the bill himself, says society needs to consider basic income to support Americans who lose their jobs to robots and artificial intelligen­ce. The idea, he said in his San Francisco speech, addresses the question not enough people are asking: “What do we as the tech industry do to solve the problem that we’re helping to create?”

Increased use of robots and AI will lead to a net loss of 9.8 million jobs by 2027 — 7 percent of U.S. positions, according to a study that the Forrester research firm released last month. Already, the signs are everywhere. Autonomous cars and trucks threaten driving jobs, automated factories require fewer human workers, and artificial intelligen­ce is taking over aspects of legal work and other white-collar jobs.

Meanwhile, the cost of goods and services in the Bay Area rose 27 percent over the past 10 years, and the median price of a home last year hit $880,000 — which fewer than 40 percent of first-time home buyers can afford, according to the 2017 Silicon Valley Index published by Joint Venture Silicon Valley. The price of renting a home has also skyrockete­d in recent years.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Robots are used extensivel­y on the assembly line at the Tesla auto plant in Fremont.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Robots are used extensivel­y on the assembly line at the Tesla auto plant in Fremont.

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