Texarkana Gazette

AS ROBOTS TAKE JOBS, EUROPEANS MULL FREE MONEY FOR ALL,

- By John Leicester

PARIS—I am, therefore I’m paid.

The radical notion that government­s should hand out free money to everyone—rich and poor, those who work and those who don’t—is slowly but surely gaining ground in Europe. Yes, you read that right: a guaranteed monthly living allowance, no strings attached.

In France, two of the seven candidates vying to represent the ruling Socialist Party in this year’s presidenti­al election are promising modest but regular stipends to all French adults. A limited test is already underway in Finland, with other experiment­s planned elsewhere, including in the United States.

Called “universal income” by some, “universal basic income” or just “basic income” by others, the idea has been floated in various guises since at least the mid19th century. After decades on the fringes of intellectu­al debate, it became more mainstream in 2016, with Switzerlan­d holding a referendum—and overwhelmi­ngly rejecting—a proposed basic income of around $2,500 per month.

“An incredible year,” says Philippe Van Parijs, a founder of the Basic Income Earth Network that lobbies for such payments. “There has been more written and said on basic income than in the whole history of mankind.”

But before you write a resignatio­n letter to your boss in anticipati­on of never needing to work again, be warned: there are multiple questions, including how to finance such schemes. Here is a look at the issues:

WHY THE MOUNTING INTEREST?

In a word, robots. With automated systems and machines increasing­ly replacing human workers, France could lose 3 million jobs by 2025, says Benoit Hamon, a former education minister campaignin­g for the French presidency on a promise of gradually introducin­g no-strings-attached payments for all. As work becomes scarcer, a modest but regular guaranteed income would stop people from fearing the future and free up their time for family, the needy and themselves, he argues.

It could also encourage people to take risks, start businesses and try new activities without the risk of losing welfare benefits.

The other pro-basic income candidate for the Socialist Party presidenti­al ticket is outsider Jean-Luc Bennahmias. Like Hamon, the former European Parliament lawmaker argues that it is pointless to expect the return of economic boom times, with jobs for all.

“Growth at two, three, four or five percent in western countries: it’s finished,” he said in a televised debate last week. “We have to speak the truth.”

Outside research backs up their arguments. An Oxford University study in 2015 estimated nearly half of the American workforce is at risk of automation.

PUT TO THE TEST

Finland’s small-scale, two-year trial that started Jan. 1 aims to answer a frequent question from basic income opponents: With a guaranteed 560 euros ($600) a month, will the 2,000 human guinea pigs—drawn randomly from Finland’s unemployed— just laze around?

Budget constraint­s and opposition from multiple quarters stymied ambitions for a broader test, says Olli Kangas from the Finnish government agency KELA, which is responsibl­e for the country’s social benefits.

“It’s a pretty watered down version,” he said in a telephone interview. “We had to make a huge number of compromise­s.”

Still, he argues that such studies are essential in helping societies prepare for changed labor markets of the future.

“I’m not saying that basic income is the solution,” he said. “I’m just saying that it’s a solution that we have to think about.”

In the Netherland­s, the city of Utrecht this year plans to trial no-strings welfare payments that will also allow test groups to work on the side if they choose— again, in part, to study the effect on their motivation to find work.

To prepare for “a world where technology replaces existing jobs and basic income becomes necessary,” Silicon Valley startup financier Y Combinator says it plans a pilot study in Oakland, California, paying recipients an unconditio­nal income because “we want to see how people experience that freedom.”

THE COST

Obviously, expensive. Hamon proposes the gradual introducti­on of basic income schemes in France, starting with 600 euros ($640) per month for the nation’s poor and 18-25-year-olds before scaling up payments to 750 euros ($800) for all adults—for a total estimated annual cost of 400 billion euros ($425 billion).

Part of the cost could be financed by taxing goods and services produced by automated systems and machines, he says. Opponents argue that doing so would simply prompt companies to move robots elsewhere, out of reach of French tax collectors.

Doing away with housing, family, poverty and unemployme­nt benefits could free up more than 100 billion euros ($106 billion) to fold into a replacemen­t basic income scheme.

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