Can UBI survive financialization?
Updated 09:44, 13-Jun-2019
Lena Lavinas
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Editor's note: Lena Lavinas is a professor of Welfare Economics at the Institute of Economics at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. This article reflects the author's views, not necessarily the views of CGTN. 

Universal basic income is hardly a new concept, but it has taken on a new life in recent years. Voices on both the left and the right now argue that a UBI could be the key to addressing major social and structural problems, including technological unemployment and underemployment, extreme poverty, welfare traps, and hidden disincentives to work. 

By freeing people from the shackles of low-quality jobs and endless bureaucracy, the logic goes, a UBI would enable them to reach their full potential. 

Gita Gopinath, chief economist with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) (SR), speaks at a World Economic Outlook news conference during the spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank, Washington, U.S., April 9, 2019. /VCG Photo

Gita Gopinath, chief economist with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) (SR), speaks at a World Economic Outlook news conference during the spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank, Washington, U.S., April 9, 2019. /VCG Photo

It is certainly an appealing argument, especially at a time of protracted wage stagnation, persistent poverty, rising inequality, and low economic growth. But, so far, the only versions of UBI that have been tested - in places like Canada, Finland, Kenya, and the Netherlands - are essentially just new modalities of unemployment and welfare benefits.

These experiments contradict the fundamental logic of a UBI. To be sure, incremental approaches to UBI can drive forward welfare reform.

In particular, by reducing or eliminating the need for means testing and other forms of conditionality, these so-called UBI-based schemes can alleviate bureaucratic burdens and the associated administrative costs, while delivering a new income stream to the poor.

The controls and conditionalities that have characterized the means-tested programs that have proliferated since the 1990s, especially in the Global South, are proving ineffective.

Making income transfers truly "duty free," as the Belgian philosopher and UBI proponent Philippe Van Parijs has stressed, would be a major victory.

However, this may come about less in the name of justice and equity, and more because it serves a new regime of accumulation that can guarantee that everyone has a regular no-strings-attached monetary income.

In turn, all citizens will be granted permanent access to financial markets, the advance of which has taken on staggering dimensions.

In 1990, global financial assets amounted to 50 percent of global GDP, or some 150 trillion dollors; in 2015, that figure exceeded 400 percent of global GDP, or 500 trillion dollars.

Kanetsugu Mike, president and chief executive officer of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. (MUFG) (C) leaves following a news conference at the Bank of Japan (BOJ) , Tokyo, Japan, May 15, 2019. /VCG Photo

Kanetsugu Mike, president and chief executive officer of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. (MUFG) (C) leaves following a news conference at the Bank of Japan (BOJ) , Tokyo, Japan, May 15, 2019. /VCG Photo

Under financialized capitalism, regular income streams facilitate market incorporation and financial inclusion.

They serve as collateral in a world where debt, acquired through various kinds of loans and consumer credit lines, is increasingly used to pay not just for durable goods, but also for services like health care and education, which previously constituted the bulk of public provision.

Financial innovations based on income-backed loans to individuals are one pillar of a securitization dynamic that enables the continuous renegotiation of debt, and thus the continuous expansion and consolidation of new financial instruments.

The transformation of social policy into collateral reflects the logic of financialized capitalism, which converts cash transfers, pensions, and other monetary schemes - that is, sources of regular income streams - into assets placed at the disposal of the financial sector.

When social policy is used primarily to service debt and secure new loans, it stops serving as a mechanism for de-commodification, as it was originally conceived.

 Instead, it becomes both a vector for increasing household income and a source of financial profits for the banking system and the insurance industry.

Following this pattern, by providing a stable income stream and thus a reliable form of collateral, paid by the state, UBI would strengthen and even create financial markets, particularly for consumer credit, mortgages, and pensions.

Australia Federal treasurer Josh Frydenberg delivers his budget address at National Press Club Canberra, Australia, April 03, 2019. He has focused on tax cuts for middle income earners. /VCG Photo

Australia Federal treasurer Josh Frydenberg delivers his budget address at National Press Club Canberra, Australia, April 03, 2019. He has focused on tax cuts for middle income earners. /VCG Photo

Far from serving as a revolutionary route to freedom from the whip of the market, UBI may end up yoking all citizens to rentier capital through indebtedness.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Certain conditions must be met to prevent UBI from being subordinated to the finance-dominated mindset.

That would mean, first and foremost, that UBI must be established not as a complement to welfare measures, but as a means of fully decommodifying access to basic needs, including food, clothing, and transportation. Current experiments offer too little cash.

Providing enough is the only way to diminish the chance that UBI will serve primarily and predominantly as collateral.

Second, governments would need to guarantee vital public services, such as free universal health care, education, and training.

Strong housing policies - including aggressive rent regulation, increased property taxation, and an expanded supply of affordable housing - would also be needed, not least to ensure that the rise in real incomes doesn’t fuel real-estate speculation.

Finally, financial-sector regulation would have to be strengthened considerably. High taxes on financial rents should also be introduced, in order to revitalize the real economy.

Finance chiefs of the Group of 20 major economies pose for photos after the conclusion of their two-day meeting, Fukuoka, southwestern Japan, June 9, 2019. /VCG Photo

Finance chiefs of the Group of 20 major economies pose for photos after the conclusion of their two-day meeting, Fukuoka, southwestern Japan, June 9, 2019. /VCG Photo

No doubt, this is a huge - and hugely complex - endeavor. But it must be undertaken if the ideal of a basic income is to remain intact and grounded in sound principles and decent values.

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