>
>
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https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/13/opinion/stimulus-unemployment-republicans-poverty.html

I’m not going to pretend that I know how to interpret the jobs and
inflation data of the past few months. My view is that this is still an
economy warped by the pandemic, and that the dynamics are so strange and so
unstable that it will be some time before we know its true state. But the
reaction to the early numbers and anecdotes has revealed something deeper
and more constant in our politics.

The American economy runs on poverty, or at least the constant threat of
it. Americans like their goods cheap and their services plentiful and the
two of them, together, require a sprawling labor force willing to work
tough jobs at crummy wages. On the right, the barest glimmer of worker
power is treated as a policy emergency, and the whip of poverty, not the
lure of higher wages, is the appropriate response.

Reports that low-wage employers were having trouble filling open jobs sent
Republican policymakers into a tizzy and led at least 25 Republican
governors
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/05/business/economy/unemployment-benefits-cutoff.html>
—
and one Democratic governor
<https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicholasreimann/2021/06/10/louisianas-john-bel-edwards-becoming-first-democratic-governor-to-cut-300-a-week-federal-unemployment-benefits/?sh=7478dbcc5f9b>
—
to announce plans to cut off expanded unemployment benefits early. Chipotle
said that it would increase prices by about 4 percent to cover the cost of
higher wages, prompting the National Republican Congressional Committee to
issue a blistering response
<https://www.nrcc.org/2021/06/09/your-burrito-just-got-more-expensive/>:
“Democrats’ socialist stimulus bill caused a labor shortage, and now
burrito lovers everywhere are footing the bill.” The Trumpist outlet The
Federalist complained
<https://thefederalist.com/2021/06/10/my-chipotle-bowl-just-got-more-expensive-and-its-the-federal-governments-fault/>,
“Restaurants have had to bribe current and prospective workers with fatter
paychecks to lure them off their backsides and back to work.”

But it’s not just the right. The financial press, the cable news squawkers
and even many on the center-left greet news of labor shortages and price
increases with an alarm they rarely bring to the ongoing agonies of poverty
or low-wage toil.

As it happened, just as I was watching Republican governors try to
immiserate low-wage workers who weren’t yet jumping at the chance to return
to poorly ventilated kitchens for $9 an hour, I was sent “A Guaranteed
Income for the 21st Century,” a plan that seeks to make poverty a thing of
the past. The proposal, developed by Naomi Zewde, Kyle Strickland, Kelly
Capatosto, Ari Glogower and Darrick Hamilton for the New School’s Institute
on Race and Political Economy, would guarantee a $12,500 annual income for
every adult and a $4,500 allowance for every child. It’s what wonks call a
“negative income tax” plan — unlike a universal basic income, it phases out
as households rise into the middle class.

“With poverty, to address it, you just eliminate it,” Hamilton told me.
“You give people enough resources so they’re not poor.” Simple, but not
cheap. The team estimates that its proposal would cost $876 billion
annually. To give a sense of scale, total federal spending
<https://www.cbpp.org/research/federal-budget/where-do-our-federal-tax-dollars-go>in
2019 was about $4.4 trillion, with $1 trillion of that financing Social
Security payments and $1.1 trillion supporting Medicaid, Medicare, the
Affordable Care Act and the Children’s Health Insurance Program.

Beyond writing that the plan “would require new sources of revenue,
additional borrowing or trade-offs with other government funding
priorities,” Hamilton and his co-authors don’t say how they’d pay for it,
and in our conversation, Hamilton was cagey. “There are many ways in which
it can be paid for and deficit spending itself is not bad unless there are
certain conditions,” he said. I’m less blasé about financing a program that
would increase federal spending by almost 20 percent, but at the same time,
it’s clearly possible. Even if the entire thing was funded by taxes, it
would only bring America’s tax burden to roughly the average of our peer
nations.

I suspect the real political problem for a guaranteed income isn’t the
costs, but the benefits. A policy like this would give workers the power to
make real choices. They could say no to a job they didn’t want, or quit one
that exploited them. They could, and would, demand better wages, or take
time off to attend school or simply to rest. When we spoke, Hamilton tried
to sell it to me as a truer form of capitalism. “People can’t reap the
returns of their effort without some baseline level of resources,” he said.
“If you lack basic necessities with regards to economic well-being, you
have no agency. You’re dictated to by others or live in a miserable state.”

But those in the economy with the power to do the dictating profit from the
desperation of low-wage workers. One man’s misery is another man’s quick
and affordable at-home lunch delivery. “It is a fact that when we pay
workers less and don’t have social insurance programs that, say, cover Uber
and Lyft drivers, we are able to consume goods and services at lower
prices,” Hilary Hoynes, an economist at the University of California at
Berkeley, where she also co-directs the Opportunity Lab, told me.

This is the conversation about poverty that we don’t like to have: We
discuss the poor as a pity or a blight, but we rarely admit that America’s
high rate of poverty is a policy choice, and there are reasons we choose it
over and over again. We typically frame those reasons as questions of
fairness (“Why should I have to pay for someone else’s laziness?”) or
tough-minded paternalism (“Work is good for people, and if they can live on
the dole, they would”). But there’s more to it than that.

It is true, of course, that some might use a guaranteed income to play
video games or melt into Netflix. But why are they the center of this
conversation? We know full well that America is full of hardworking people
who are kept poor by very low wages and harsh circumstance. We know many
who want a job can’t find one, and many of the jobs people can find are
cruel in ways that would appall anyone sitting comfortably behind a desk.
We know the absence of child care and affordable housing and decent public
transit makes work, to say nothing of advancement, impossible for many. We
know people lose jobs they value because of mental illness or physical
disability or other factors beyond their control. We are not so naïve as to
believe near-poverty and joblessness to be a comfortable condition or an
attractive choice.

Most Americans don’t think of themselves as benefiting from the poverty of
others, and I don’t think objections to a guaranteed income would manifest
as arguments in favor of impoverishment. Instead, we would see much of what
we’re seeing now, only magnified: Fears of inflation, lectures about how
the government is subsidizing indolence, paeans to the character-building
qualities of low-wage labor, worries that the economy will be strangled by
taxes or deficits, anger that Uber and Lyft rides have gotten more
expensive, sympathy for the struggling employers who can’t fill open roles
rather than for the workers who had good reason not to take those jobs.
These would reflect not America’s love of poverty but opposition to the
inconveniences that would accompany its elimination.

Nor would these costs be merely imagined. Inflation would be a real risk,
as prices often rise when wages rise, and some small businesses would
shutter if they had to pay their workers more. There are services many of
us enjoy now that would become rarer or costlier if workers had more
bargaining power. We’d see more investments in automation and possibly in
outsourcing. The truth of our politics lies in the risks we refuse to
accept, and it is rising worker power, not continued poverty, that we treat
as intolerable. You can see it happening right now, driven by policies far
smaller and with effects far more modest than a guaranteed income.

Hamilton, to his credit, was honest about these trade-offs. “Progressives
don’t like to talk about this,” he told me. “They want this kumbaya moment.
They want to say equity is great for everyone when it’s not. We need to
shift our values. The capitalist class stands to lose from this policy,
that’s unambiguous. They will have better resourced workers they can’t
exploit through wages. Their consumer products and services would be more
expensive.”

For the most part, America finds the money to pay for the things it values.
In recent decades, and despite deep gridlock in Washington, we have spent
trillions of dollars on wars in the Middle East and tax cuts for the
wealthy. We have also spent trillions of dollars on health insurance
subsidies and coronavirus relief. It is in our power to wipe out poverty.
It simply isn’t among our priorities.

“Ultimately, it’s about us as a society saying these privileges and
luxuries and comforts that folks in the middle class — or however we
describe these economic classes — have, how much are they worth to us?”
Jamila Michener, co-director of the Cornell Center for Health Equity, told
me. “And are they worth certain levels of deprivation or suffering or even
just inequality among people who are living often very different lives from
us? That’s a question we often don’t even ask ourselves.”
But we should.


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