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Does Welfare Have To Be The New Normal? (Demo)

As a nation, we are dangerously becoming dependent on the State. Anytime more people are being paid not to be productive, it imperils our liberty and democracy.

In recent years, the welfare state has expanded, propelled by the deterioration of the middle class and the fear that people experience on the edge of poverty and in poverty. This condition is creating a political movement to provide an all-encompassing security blanket to protect Americans from all vagaries of economic life. There’s now a welfare program for everything from losing a job to food and healthcare assistance to having money to pay the rent. While such need has become increasingly necessary with seemingly endless duration, it is transforming our nation from self-dependency to State dependency.

According to official data from the Census Bureau, 46.5 million Americans live in poverty with essentially 43 percent of all those on welfare officially considered poor. But the reach is far greater as over 150 million Americans receive monies from the State through Social Security, Medicare, veterans’ benefits, unemployment and other non-means and means-tested financial support funded through tax extraction and national debt.

Such dependency will not cease until our nation addresses the reality that tectonic shifts in the technologies of production destroy jobs and devalue the worth of labor, forcing people to resort to low-wage jobs and welfare support as their ONLY means of financial subsistence.

The reality is that increasingly EVERY human is having more and more interactions with machines and fewer with human beings. There is no escape from technological unemployment long-term as much more is to come.

The field of robotics is at the vanguard of this new wave of automation. The broad universal definition is a machine that can perform the job of a human. Robots can be mobile or stationary and hardware or software, but ALL are instruments of productive capital and ALL are the private property of corporations and businesses OWNED by individuals.

Business investment in machine and robotic super-automation hardware and software is more than it’s ever been. But what are not back are the jobs.

The percentage of Americans with jobs is at a 20-year low according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. A significant cause of this low rate is due to tectonic shifts in the technologies of production and job destruction resulting from off shoring production to global economies who pay workers far less. In every industry, we are witnessing fewer interactions with other human beings. While conventional economists, academia, and political leadership has called upon education as the solution, the changes are coming so quickly it will be difficult for workers to retrain themselves and effectively compete for far fewer jobs over time. They are disadvantaged to compete with super-computers, which can program themselves to improve their performance. Even if the entire American population was college educated, there still would not be the need in the private sector to create jobs in numbers that match the pool of people willing and able to work due to human work constantly being eroded by physical productive capital’s ever increasing role. Technology increasingly is demonstrating skills on a par with and even surprising human skills.

While entrepreneurs will continue to create new business opportunities, the reality is that they will not be hiring large numbers of people. Public companies such as Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Google, for example, represent in total about $1 trillion in market capitalization value. Yet together they employ fewer than 150,000 people––less than ALL the new entrants into the American workforce monthly in past months.

Annual investment by U.S. manufacturers in new technology has increased significantly since the “Great Recession” ended, and research institutions and robotics companies, funded by venture capital monies, are constantly searching for innovations to provide businesses solutions that lower the cost of production and operation and gain competitive efficiencies to maximize profits.

Technological invention and innovation is the ONLY means to effectively return manufacturing to the United States. But realistically, the global competition will be intense as other teams of engineers and scientists in other countries compete to create ever more sophisticated human-intelligent machines, super-automated processes, robotic workers, digital computerized operations etc. Thus, even if offshore manufacturing returns to the United States, well-paying jobs will be fewer than ever as most of the jobs will go to “robots.”

Sadly, unless addressed and the system reformed, State dependency is the prospect and the plight of a growing segment of the American population, solely dependent on low-pay hourly wage jobs and supplemental redistributive government welfare, which costs taxpayer billions of dollars, if not future trillions, and furthers our dependency on tax extraction and never-ending national debt and interest payments.

While our productive technological capability has been evolving for over a century during a period of labor demand, and initially made us better at our jobs, now it is becoming so sophisticated and prevalent that it is making many workers obsolete, even in the relatively labor-intensive service industries.

At the same time the situation is ripping our nation apart with one segment of the population declaring “laziness” and opposing minimum wage laws, Food Stamp benefits and Medicaid expansion, and another segment promoting job dependency, government-dictated wage laws (not free market), and socialistic welfare support. Both see ONLY a job as a source of income for the majority of Americans and fail to recognize that job creation is not a viable long-term solution, and that the non-human factor of production resulting from technological invention and innovation makes many forms of labor unnecessary. Both also fail to see that the majority of Americans are being systematically denied equal opportunity to acquire private sector individual wealth-creating, income-generating productive capital property ownership on the same terms that the wealthy ownership class now utilizes. Rich people are able to use their investment’s earnings to pay off the capital credit loans used to finance their investments, without having to use their own money or deny themselves consumption. The unfortunate result is that the rich get richer through their continued concentration of productive capital ownership and the vast majority of Americans struggle with progressively less well-paid job opportunities, the devaluing of their worth as laborers, and the prospects of falling into poverty and dependent on tax extraction from the productive sector. As a result, politicians have continued the incurrence of national debt to support supplemental welfare programs that increasingly more Americans require to make ends meet.

This should not be what America is about. Instead, our focus should be on OWNERSHIP CREATION in which employees of companies and other ordinary citizens OWN full-dividend-paying-and-voting stock in the corporations they work for and patronize, and build over time a diversified portfolio of wealth-creating, income-producing stock assets that will provide them a second income beyond their reliance on a job. We need to reform the system to provide equal opportunity for EVERY American to become an OWNER, just like the wealthy ownership class, and significantly improve their long-term financial security. The focus needs to be on FUTURE sustainable production and broadened individual ownership. This will put us on a path to prosperity, opportunity, and economic justice and in the short-term significantly grow our economy with “full-employment” opportunities as EVERY American benefits from two sources of income and as we build a FUTURE economy that can support general affluence for every man, woman, and child.

We are at the horizon of a new technological frontier and the capabilities of computerization and robotics are projected to exponentially expand. The work in this FUTURE economy will be largely done by “machines,” and support general affluence for EVERY citizen.

As we build this FUTURE affluent economy, consumer confidence will be strengthened and businesses will benefit from an expanding population of “customers with money.” This will drive the demand for products and services the economy will be capable of producing, while achieving environmental renewability and sustainable viability. At the same time United States credibility and leadership around the world will be restored as our economy booms and we successfully alter the choices people must make between choosing alternative, more costly “greener” choices that do not threaten the environment and their very livelihood.

While this is not a short-term “click-the-switch” solution, in the short-term we must not fail those who require supplemental support. But we need to adopt a long-term solution that will eliminate and drastically reduce dependency on tax extraction and national debt and build a FUTURE responsibly sustainable economy that can support general affluence for EVERY citizen and provide financial security into retirement.

For more on how to accomplish such structural reform, see “Financing Economic Growth With ‘FUTURE SAVINGS’: Solutions To Protect America From Economic Decline” at  http://www.foreconomicjustice.org/9206/financing-future…economic-decline

Support the Agenda of The Just Third Way Movement at http://foreconomicjustice.org/?p=5797 and support the Capital Homestead Act at http://www.cesj.org/homestead/index.htm and http://www.cesj.org/homestead/summary-cha.htm. See the full Act at http://cesj.org/homestead/strategies/national/cha-full.pdf.

Comments (1)

Cool, thanks. I’m all for ways of sustainable living and cooperative economics. I’ll take a look at some of your articles. How do I follow your blog?

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