Over
the past several weeks, the COVID-19 pandemic has wiped out tens
of millions
of U.S. jobs, creating unemployment numbers not seen since the Great
Depression. Now Universal Basic Income, once regarded as a fringe
concept, is gaining traction as a solution to the crisis.
Given
the lack of guidance or leadership from the White House on dealing
with the pandemic, state governors have formed regional consortia
to coordinate their response.
The
federal government is also not going to lead the way on addressing
the economic pain caused by the shutdowns needed to slow the spread
of the virus. The president has lavished trillions in tax breaks on
the wealthy and corporations, and the Senate leadership would rather
see states
go bankrupt
than offer coronavirus aid. The one-time, $1,200-per-adult payment
provided by the CARES
Act
is wholly inadequate because it is a Band-Aid for a bullet hole, and
it excludes
some of the most
vulnerable
in our society.
A
single payment will cover some expenses for one month, but will not
help the millions of people who will remain on lockdown, jobless and
penniless for months on end - possibly for a year or more if there is
no coronavirus vaccine or treatment in sight, and if death rates
accelerate as some states prematurely reopen.
But
states have the power to do something about it now. While governors
are already banding together to procure supplies, provide mutual aid,
and plan the reopening of businesses, UBI must be part of their
response. And while the governors of California, New York, and New
Jersey may say they don’t have the money to provide UBI, these
states are resource rich with large corporations available for
taxation.
The
pandemic has laid bare the systemic flaws of American capitalism:
perverse and systemic inequality, and an economic system lacking
resilience or a robust social safety net. The top
1 percent
of Americans hold 40 percent of the wealth, and the poorest 90
percent have less than one-quarter. We’ve had decades of
near-zero wage growth, and of declining labor unions and worker
bargaining power.
Even
before the pandemic, 40
percent of Americans lacked $400
to cover an emergency expense, while one-quarter had to forego
medical care because they could not afford it, and 17 percent were
unable to pay monthly bills. The U.S. economy is killing
people
through compromised physical and mental health, suicides, and
overdoses.
A
Universal Basic Income would serve as a means of downward wealth
redistribution
to correct these inequalities,
which will only be worsened by the pandemic.
The
moral case for UBI is strong. Before his death in 1968, Martin
Luther King Jr.
called for a guaranteed
income
as the “simplest approach” and most effective solution to
abolish poverty directly, noting that “widespread economic
security” would bring about psychological benefits. “We
must create full employment or we must create incomes. People must be
made consumers by one method or the other,” King said, speaking
of the need to increase the social good and ensure that “the
potential of the individual is not wasted.” More recently, Pope
Francis
suggested it is time for countries to consider a universal basic wage
to address the economic dislocation brought about by the coronavirus.
And
the rest of the world has been embracing it - Finland,
Kenya,
and Ontario,
Canada,
have had basic income experiments in recent years. Over a dozen
nations are providing their citizens with a monthly
income
for the duration of the emergency, with the Netherlands, Denmark, and
even the Tory-led United Kingdom paying most of workers’ wages,
Germany offering payments, and Spain
planning to make such a measure permanent.
The
idea of UBI was also picking up steam in the U.S. before the
pandemic. Former presidential candidate Andrew Yang proposed a $1,000
per month UBI funded with a 10
percent value-added tax
(VAT), a consumption
or sales tax
levied at every point of sale where value has been added to a good or
service. California Assembly member Evan Low introduced UBI
legislation based on Yang’s proposal. Stockton,
California,
is testing a UBI program with $500 per month for 130 people for 18
months, while Newark
and Milwaukee
have planned their own pilot programs and task forces.
Governors
may point to dramatic budget shortfalls caused by the pandemic as a
reason they can’t implement UBI, but the governors of New
Jersey,
California,
and New
York
are multimillionaires, and their states are also wealthy.
California’s GDP of $3.1
trillion
would make it the world’s fifth largest economy, smaller than
Germany
and larger than the UK.
Its Western state consortium with Oregon
($252 billion) and Washington
($600 billion) claims a combined GDP of $4 trillion. Similarly, New
York
and New
Jersey
have a GDP of $1.7 trillion and $645 billion, respectively, while
their Northeast consortium with Pennsylvania,
Rhode
Island,
Connecticut,
Massachusetts,
and Delaware
is also $4 trillion.
States
can help fund UBI by taxing corporations. For example, a VAT
targeting companies with gross
receipts of $200,000
or higher would rely on medium or large businesses and exempt small
businesses. A corporate tax could bring about wealth redistribution
by taxing certain industries who are thriving amid a second Gilded
Age of vast economic inequality. The billionaire-led tech sector -
including Silicon Valley companies such as Facebook and Google, and
Washington-based Amazon and Microsoft - is a prime candidate for a
levy in California and Washington. In New York, Wall Street banks
that have profited from bailouts and consumer exploitation are ripe
for a financial
services tax on stock trades
to spread the wealth and bring about economic justice. And in New
Jersey, the lucrative pharmaceutical
sector
is large and growing. The Alaska
Permanent Fund Dividend,
the closest thing to a state UBI, has provided $23 billion in oil and
gas revenue since 1982.
A
2 percent financial wealth
tax
is another potential revenue source for UBI. Elizabeth
Warren and Bernie Sanders
proposed a Switzerland-style progressive wealth tax to pay for such
items as universal child care and health care, free public college,
and affordable housing.
A
Universal Basic Income would bring many potential benefits to the
states that implement it, as states rely on economic activity to
raise revenue and thrive. A UBI would result in economic growth by
eliminating poverty and boosting the security of low-income workers -
who are more likely to spend in the near term, as opposed to the
rich, who are hoarding their mounting piles of money, hence the
inequality. Such a policy shift would also bring permanent relief to
gig workers with precarious income, those whose jobs are displaced by
automation and globalization, and the massive ranks of the
unemployed. Further, a UBI would empower people to choose jobs that
they enjoy, allow them to spend more time with family, and make
decisions that benefit themselves.
In
a nation where COVID-19 and economic devastation join forces and
Washington is missing in action, a UBI would allow states to fortify
their economic future and provide stability to their citizens during
the pandemic and beyond.
|