Kim Stanley Robinson's work has been discussed on silk multiple times
before. This piece is an interesting one, approaching the UBI issue from an
unusual angle.

Thoughts?

Udhay

https://www.bloomberg.com/amp/news/articles/2020-06-05/the-climate-case-for-a-jobs-guarantee-kim-stanley-robinson

The Climate Case for a Jobs Guarantee

Is there enough work for everyone? Kim Stanley Robinson on the future of
planetary employment.
By Kim Stanley Robinson
June 5, 2020, 5:30 AM EDT

Say it’s the very near future, and you’re a worker put out of work in the
declining oil industry. You’re highly educated, and you’ve been
well-compensated, but as it becomes clear that burning more oil will wreck
Earth and civilization, the stuff you make gets properly priced to reflect
that reality, and quickly your industry ceases to exist. Good for the
planet, but you’re out of a job! What to do?

You go to the local job center, which tells you the U.S. Department of
Energy is sponsoring a public-private company to build direct-air-capture
factories. Now instead of pumping a source of carbon dioxide out of the
ground, you get to suck CO2 out of the atmosphere and inject it back
underground. You already know how to work with pumps and pipes from your
old job, and though CO2 removal is a new industry, it’s scaling up fast.
And you have a real right to work, as stated in the United Nations
Universal Declaration of Human Rights—and, ever since passage of the Great
Pandemic Recovery Act, as stated in federal law, too. A good job is a good
job.

You go to work and soon move to a company that’s rendering captured CO2
into building materials that can replace concrete and steel. You end up
making a good living by doing work necessary for saving the planet from a
catastrophic overheating. All good! Your experience is similar to millions
of others, all performing different new jobs in different new
situations—some moving from jobs lost to the Covid-19 depression and its
rearrangements, others to technological improvements, others still to
climate pressures—all together adding up to a huge jobs shakeup and
reorganization. But on a warming, carbon-clogged planet there is always
more work to be done than people to do it. And because there is, in this
possible future, also a federally mandated job guarantee, you and millions
of others are finding your way to the new jobs popping up everywhere. The
coordination and sometimes the pay are provided by government, while the
specific job requests come from any local projects that need labor.

Never make the mistake of thinking “efficient” is synonymous with “good”

The scenario outlined above is compiled from signs coming from all over,
not least of which are the weekly U.S. unemployment numbers that have been
reaching seven digits. There’s a major-party presidential candidate out
there right now calling for a public jobs corps consisting of 100,000
health workers. And there’s also an economic case for a full-employment
vision expressed by modern monetary theory. This economics discipline is
usually understood to be a new kind of Keynesianism that might replace
austerity policies of the neoliberal era. It advocates creating new money
to pay for necessary work and argues that government debt can always be
dealt with by later government actions, so creating this new money for good
purposes need not be regarded as wrong or dangerous. Some conventional
economists have attacked what they see as MMT’s cavalier treatment of
money, and critics sometimes call the discipline “magic money tree.”
Inflation might result from such money creation—or deflation. Opinions
differ, but all agree destabilization would be disastrous.

It’s been pointed out that Americans haven’t much stopped deficit spending
since World War II, and yet we haven’t experienced the predicted
catastrophes. The quantitative easing of 2008-2015 didn’t cause any
catastrophes either. “Not yet!” the austerity advocates warn. And because
austerity tries to “starve the beast,” it always has virtue for those who
dislike government on principle. A pretense of fiscal caution always looks
virtuous.

But now, given the 2020 coronavirus pandemic’s instantaneous and worldwide
quantitative easing, we’re truly in economic theory free fall. Screenwriter
William Goldman was right: Nobody knows anything, including what will
happen next to money.

The theorists behind MMT want to replace our current certainty of millions
without work with a much different certainty. Governments can create full
employment by legislating a job guarantee, becoming the “employer of last
resort,” hiring every person who comes to them asking for a job. That’s the
case made by Bard College economics professor Pavlina Tcherneva and the
trio of authors who wrote Macroeconomics, the textbook of the discipline.
In that 604-page tome, the phrase always appears with capitalization: “Job
Guarantee.”

It would mean that governments would set a higher minimum wage than ever
before, and if that minimum were a true living wage, private enterprise
would have to match it to attract workers. And then, suddenly, everyone
would be both employed and making a decent living. Private enterprises
would therefore have more prosperous customers, and all would then rise in
a virtuous cycle. Given the immense stresses that climate change is sure to
bring, finding useful work for people would not be a problem. There will be
a lot to do. Recall that 5% unemployment is often said to be the “natural”
level, such that markets get nervous when the jobless rate goes lower than
that. Unemployment at 5% is said to create “wage pressure,” which it
definitely does, because millions of people are thereby living in fear and
will take any job they can get, even ones that don’t pay enough for a
secure life. The phrase “wage pressure” is yet another indication of how
markets exert power to keep power. In this context, a Job Guarantee would
erase wage pressure (meaning fear and misery), and the less fearful and
more productive populace that resulted might thrive in a feeling of
security.

But is there enough work for everybody? Yes, there is. Automation is a
false problem here. Most jobs require a flexibility and creativity that
only humans can bring to the task. And even if some of the jobs offered by
government were make-work, such as the Works Progress Administration when
it was building hiking trails and post offices in the 1930s, so what? Those
trails and post offices are still useful and beautiful, and people got paid
for doing good things when they otherwise would have been destitute.
Arguments in favor of the unguaranteed labor market of today sometimes
revolves around the word “efficiency.” But efficiency isn’t a physical
constant; it’s a rubric for measuring how well a desired goal is getting
done. Never make the mistake of thinking “efficient” is synonymous with
“good.” All kinds of bad things can be achieved efficiently. Efficiency
just means the most results with the least waste, so whether it’s good or
not depends entirely on the desired goal. If the goal is prosperous people
living in balance with a healthy biosphere, then a Job Guarantee, targeted
at rapid decarbonization, habitat restoration, regenerative agriculture,
and similarly necessary work, might be the most efficient course. If anyone
doubts this, one has to ask first, are they doubting the method’s
efficiency or the primacy of the goal itself? And if they think the goal is
other than prosperous people living in balance with a healthy biosphere,
they need to make that case—or think again. If they think there are better
methods to reach that goal, more efficient methods, then they need to
propose them. At least MMT is trying.

Kim Stanley Robinson writes science fiction in Davis, Calif. His next
novel, The Ministry for the Future, will be published in October.



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((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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