Universal Basic Income and the Welfare State

Richard M. McGahey
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Welfare states are struggling with slow economic and job growth, fiscal pressures from rising benefit costs, demographic changes, and fears of structural economic transformation and job losses caused by information technology and computerization. This combination of factors has led some analysts to explore new ways to deliver welfare state benefits, or reconfigure them. But others speculate that existing welfare state policies have run their course, and cannot be easily repaired to cope with these multiple challenges, especially in the face of slower and less labor-intensive economic growth. Some advocates are calling for introducing a universal basic income (UBI), either as a floor to provide a basic level of subsistence, as a complement to existing welfare state policies, or in some cases as a replacement for the welfare state. Much of the current interest in UBI stems from a belief that technology is rapidly eliminating jobs faster than new ones can be created, and future job growth will be much lower. But the evidence on technological displacement seems too uncertain to justify major disruptions in the welfare state. Rather, the UBI debate might better focus on the over thirty-year strengthening of business’ economic power relations over labor.
全民基本收入和福利国家
福利国家正在努力应对经济和就业增长缓慢、福利成本上升带来的财政压力、人口结构变化以及对信息技术和计算机化造成的结构性经济转型和失业的担忧。这些因素的结合促使一些分析人士探索提供福利国家福利的新途径,或对其进行重新配置。但也有人推测,现有的福利国家政策已经走到了尽头,无法轻易修复,以应对这些多重挑战,尤其是在经济增长放缓、劳动密集型程度降低的情况下。一些倡导者呼吁引入全民基本收入(UBI),要么作为提供基本生活水平的底线,作为现有福利国家政策的补充,要么在某些情况下作为福利国家的替代品。目前对全民基本收入的兴趣很大程度上源于一种信念,即技术正在以比创造新工作更快的速度迅速消灭工作,未来的就业增长将会低得多。但技术取代的证据似乎太不确定,不足以证明福利国家的重大破坏是合理的。相反,关于UBI的争论可能更应该集中在30多年来企业对劳工的经济权力关系的加强上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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