In which we travel into interesting waters . . . (for a fairly long trip, so be prepared)
Dr. King's 1968 book, Where do we go from here: chaos or community?, is profound in that it criticizes anti-poverty programs for their piecemeal approach, as John Schlosberg of the Center for a Stateless Society [C4SS] observes:
Among economists, Libertarians especially might be surprised to learn, you can include in the tally of those who support a guaranteed income Frederick Hayek, Milton Friedman, Charles Murray, and Michael Munger.
Why would Libertarians support such an idea?
First Schlosberg:
So how does that play out in real life? Think about this: the very GOP-dominated State of Utah has reduced homelessness by 78% in the last eight years . . . by giving homes to homeless people:
Could something like this ever occur in Delaware? Given the current pro-corporatist state of our government, probably not. Remember how threatened a lot of people were by the camping out of the very small Occupy movement.
Yet one of the problems of poverty in Wilmington involves abandoned properties, as the city itself goes to great pains to tell you:
Dr. King's 1968 book, Where do we go from here: chaos or community?, is profound in that it criticizes anti-poverty programs for their piecemeal approach, as John Schlosberg of the Center for a Stateless Society [C4SS] observes:
King noted that the antipoverty programs of the time “proceeded from a premise that poverty is a consequence of multiple evils,” with separate programs each dedicated to individual issues such as education and housing. Though in his view “none of these remedies in itself is unsound,” they “all have a fatal disadvantage” of being “piecemeal,” with their implementation having “fluctuated at the whims of legislative bodies” or been “entangled in bureaucratic stalling.”
The result is that “fragmentary and spasmodic reforms have failed to reach down to the profoundest needs of the poor.” Such single-issue approaches also have “another common failing — they are indirect. Each seeks to solve poverty by first solving something else.” In contrast, King noted that “[w]e are likely to find that the problems of housing and education, instead of preceding the elimination of poverty, will themselves be affected if poverty is first abolished” and concluded that he is “now convinced that the simplest approach will prove to be the most effective — the solution to poverty is to abolish it directly by a … guaranteed income.”The guaranteed annual income, or Negative Income Tax, has a long history in American politics, having been first seriously proposed by Richard Nixon, and also championed by his 1972 opponent George McGovern.
Among economists, Libertarians especially might be surprised to learn, you can include in the tally of those who support a guaranteed income Frederick Hayek, Milton Friedman, Charles Murray, and Michael Munger.
Why would Libertarians support such an idea?
First Schlosberg:
Market anarchists can fully agree with King that “[t]he dignity of the individual will flourish when the decisions concerning his life are in his own hands, when he has the assurance that his income is stable and certain.” An antipoverty program that empowers ordinary people to run their own lives would be both more respectful and more effective than the top-down approach whose often-lauded, less-often-read bible “The Other America”referred unabashedly to the “Negro who must be patronized and taken care of like a child.” King approvingly quotes laissez-faire populist Henry George’s view that creative activity “is not the work of slaves, driven to their task either by the lash of a master or by animal necessities” and thus would be “enormously increased” in a post-poverty society.
A society-wide economic floor could, and should, be sustained by means consistent with free markets.And Munger:
I go so far as to argue that basic income is a LIBERTARIAN solution, because it would be (a) cheaper and (b) more consistent with individual autonomy and freedom than the current dog-vomit-after-eating-a-crayon-box mish-mash of programs, transfers, and subsidies. The core of my argument is that such a "guaranteed income" program is NOT consistent with the "destination libertarians" who want zero government. But it is quite consistent with the "directional libertarians" who will accept Pareto improvements, provided those moves ALSO improve liberty.It is also important to observe, as C4SS's Natasha Petrova does, that liberty and equality (even better distributed income equality) are deeply intertwined. In a response to a piece by John Stoessel, she writes:
Control of wealth and property allows a person to dictate the terms of existence to another. A person with little money is more likely to have to work for a boss, because they don’t have the resources to survive otherwise. Inequality is by definition a phenomena involving subordination. When people aren’t relatively equal – command and control ensues. Individual liberty and equality are thus intertwined.
State intervention in the “market” props up established wealthy economic players. A genuinely freed market would not involve people getting wealthy at the expense of others, but we don’t live in such a society. A genuinely freed market would likely have a more egalitarian distribution of wealth. Not a perfect equality, but a substantially better one. This is what we left-wing market anarchists aim for.Likewise, Left-libertarian/market capitalist Kevin Carson argues,
So any agenda of gradually scaling down government should take this context into account. The first things to go should be welfare for the rich and big business, and the last should be welfare for ordinary people. If we start by eliminating all the forms of artificial property, artificial scarcity, subsidies and entry barriers that concentrate wealth in a few hands, and let free competition destroy enormous concentrations of wealth and redistribute it downward, we might not even notice whether welfare, minimum wages or food stamps still exist because they would be used by so few people as to be a moot point.In other words, as a pragmatic libertarian, my approach to improving equality in the state is to start tearing down the bulwarks that defend the privilege of large corporations. I have said it before and I will say it continuously: we have a lot of money in the State budget, but not enough to waste it on welfare for the privileged.
So how does that play out in real life? Think about this: the very GOP-dominated State of Utah has reduced homelessness by 78% in the last eight years . . . by giving homes to homeless people:
Yet one of the problems of poverty in Wilmington involves abandoned properties, as the city itself goes to great pains to tell you:
The Vacant Property Registration Fee Program seeks to do something about an issue than no one can dispute...vacant properties are a detriment to people who live in proximity to the properties, to entire neighborhoods, and to the city's overall image as an attractive and inviting City in which to live, own property, work and be entertained.
The program holds the owners of vacant properties accountable for the physical condition of their properties and to the overall well being of the communities and neighborhoods in which the vacant properties are located.
It is intended to encourage owners of vacant properties to immediately rehabilitate the property or to sell the property to an individual or an agency that will make the property attractive for sale or rental.
The irony, of course, is that the list of vacant properties that is (on at least one level) intended to shame slumlords and absentee landlords reveals that (in its multiple guises) that the largest single owner of vacant and abandoned properties in Wilmington (over 110 of them) . . . is the City of Wilmington.
There are a lot of innovative, interesting things that could be done with all these properties, as Libertarians, anarchists, and Greens would tell you. Look here for some examples, but that's only the barest start. And take to heart what Libertarians would agree with Dr. King on, as Jonathan Carp argues:
Mutual aid isn’t just about helping one another, although helping one another is of course an important and fundamental aspect. Mutual aid is about showing our masters and each other that we don’t need them anymore, that we can get by just fine without begging for scraps from master’s table. When cities try to hamper efforts to feed the homeless, when the United States government steps in to keep health care costs high, when local governments act against locally grown food, when the American FDA steps in to stop people from buying and drinking raw, local milk, and when the Mexican Army and federal police strive to crush citizens’ self-defense forces, they aren’t merely mindlessly enforcing dumb, often antiquated laws. They are acting to keep us atomized and dependent. Mutual aid doesn’t just help our brothers and sisters. Mutual aid terrifies our masters.
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Regardless, your post gave me some things to consider. And yet I’m not sure that a guaranteed income would actually cause some to do something more creative or meaningful than similar seeming “get rich quick” schemes that most of your commenters seem to be attracted to … but then it’s probably safe to assume they haven’t been receiving a guaranteed income to test the theory of if they’d find something more “meaningful” (personally and to society) to do if they were.
Yet I can’t help but think that it’s too close to the disincentivizing and reduction of “meaningful” effort that occurs when anyone doesn’t have to try for anything.
And yet I can speak from experience that not everything is as it appears and I do many things that are helpful that others will never or rarely see because I choose to do them such that only my Judge and Father can see them, as He instructed, for His glory alone.
And yet if people are just humanistic, that doesn’t usually happen.
And yet trying would be satisfying at least for a time to see, because the current system and dynamics are continuing to concentrate resources with the few and keep unhealthy power and control tactics in place for those with the most resources. But I do think there’s a healthy power and control that helps strengthen others and seeks collaboration, but it’s not human nature/ the sinful nature to use it for that.
Also, I don’t know if Utah was just stupid (some would say as usual but they are a self-patting on the back state since they’re apparently majority intent on a non-Biblical, works-based religion that doesn’t truly allow for God’s or anyone else’s grace in practice) or if they were really so naive as to think they wouldn’t have to keep up the housing gift after a certain time, but I think they really thought that if they just gave everybody housing that they wouldn’t have to keep it going after a certain point because they seem to have given up and are fine with acting like every other major metropolitan area that hides the problem of homelessness or severe inequality with the tremendous “growth” in the area, such that “they” ignore it until it’s so overblown and trashy that they then go the opposite extreme of being so inhumane to just bulldoze tent cities or do more legal theft of “abandoned” vehicles that are being lived in on PUBLIC STREETS because then homelessness is solved again if we don’t see them so obviously, right?
And I tend to think a guaranteed minimum income would do the same that a minimum wage tends to do… just allow others to justify raising costs to meet what people can afford. The minimum income required to be accepted as a tenant in the area where I live is about $3000 per month for a basic studio apartment that’s $1000 per month. Where does all this extra tax money come from to pay people who already often get lots of tax negative benefit if they have any earned income that’s below the federal poverty level, especially if they have children. (i.e. the EITC) They just get it in one big chunk and it’s about $500 per month (estimate) for many but some get as little as a couple hundred dollars total (let’s say 50 per month) which is definitely not life-changing.
Just seems like, as with anything else, if you allow someone a minimum income then that requires someone else to have less freedom of what to do with their money, but maybe it’s still more equitable or “fair” than the current tax system and seemingly widespread corporate welfare for the wealthiest major corporations. And then they pull out of places like New London, CT, leaving their eyesore abandoned buildings behind, at least for a time.
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