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America is running out of jobs. It's time for a universal basic income.

http://theweek.com/article/index/267720/america-is-running-out-of-jobs-its-time-for-a-universal-basic-income
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<< The idea that work is a bedrock of society, that absolutely everyone who
is not too old, too young, or disabled must have a job, was not handed down
on tablets from Mount Sinai. It is the result of a historical development,
one which may not continue forever. On the contrary, based on current
trends, it is already breaking down.

The history of nearly universal labor participation is only about a century
and a half old. Back in the early days of capitalism, demand for labor was
so strong that all the ancient arrangements of society and family were
shredded to accommodate it. Marx's Capital famously described how women and
very young children were press-ganged into the textile mills and coal
mines, how the nighttime was colonized for additional shifts, and how
capitalists fought to extend the working day to the very limits of human
endurance (and often beyond).

The resulting misery, abuse, and wretchedness were so staggering, and the
resulting class conflicts so intense, that various hard-won reforms were
instituted: the eight-hour day, the weekend, the abolition of child labor,
and so forth.

But this process of drawing more people into the labor force peaked in the
late 1990s, when women finally finished joining the labor force (after
having been forced out to make room for returning veterans after World War
II). The valorization of work as the source of all that is good in life is
to a great degree the result of the need to legitimate capital's voracious
demand for labor.
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<< As someone with a nice, stimulating job, I agree that work can help
people flourish. But in an economy that is flatly failing to produce enough
jobs to satisfy the need, a universal basic income will start to seem more
plausible — even necessary.>>

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