By Robert Reich
In 1928, famed British economist John Maynard Keynes predicted that technology would advance so far in a hundred years – by 2028 – that it will replace all work, and no one will need to worry about making money.
“For the first time since his creation man will be faced with
his real, his permanent problem – how to use his freedom from pressing economic
cares, how to occupy the leisure, which science and compound interest will have
won for him, to live wisely and agreeably and well.”
We still have thirteen years to go before we reach Keynes’
prophetic year, but we’re not exactly on the way to it. Americans are working
harder than ever.
Keynes may be proven right about technological progress. We’re
on the verge of 3-D printing, driverless cars, delivery drones, and robots that
can serve us coffee in the morning and make our beds.
But he overlooked one big question: How to redistribute the
profits from these marvelous labor-saving inventions, so we’ll have the
money to buy the free time they provide?
Without such a mechanism, most of us are condemned to work ever
harder in order to compensate for lost earnings due to the labor-replacing
technologies.
Such technologies are even replacing knowledge workers – a big
reason why college degrees no longer deliver steadily higher wages and larger
shares of the economic pie.
The economic model that predominated through most of the
twentieth century was mass production by many, for mass consumption by many.
But the model we’re rushing toward is unlimited production
by a handful, for consumption by the few able to afford it.
The ratio of employees to customers is already dropping to
mind-boggling lows.
When Facebook purchased the messaging company WhatsApp for $19
billion last year, WhatsApp had fifty-five employees serving 450 million customers.
When more and more can be done by fewer and fewer people,
profits go to an ever-smaller circle of executives and owner-investors.
WhatsApp’s young co-founder and CEO, Jan Koum, got $6.8 billion in the deal.
This in turn will leave the rest of us with fewer well-paying
jobs and less money to buy what can be produced, as we’re pushed into the
low-paying personal service sector of the economy.
Which will also mean fewer profits for the handful of
billionaire executives and owner-investors, because potential consumers won’t
be able to afford what they’re selling.
What to do? We might try to levy a gigantic tax on the incomes
of the billionaire winners and redistribute their winnings to everyone else.
But even if politically feasible, the winners will be tempted to store their
winnings abroad – or expatriate.
Suppose we look instead at the patents and trademarks by which
government protects all these new inventions.
Such government protections determine what these inventions are
worth. If patents lasted only three years instead of the current twenty, for
example, What’sApp would be worth a small fraction of $19 billion – because
after three years anybody could reproduce its messaging technology for free.
Instead of shortening the patent period, how about giving every
citizen a share of the profits from all patents and trademarks government
protects? It would be a condition for receiving such protection.
Say, for example, 20 percent of all such profits were split
equally among all citizens, starting the month they turn eighteen.
In effect, this would be a basic minimum income for everyone.
The sum would be enough to ensure everyone a minimally decent
standard of living – including money to buy the technologies that would free
them up from the necessity of working.
Anyone wishing to supplement their basic minimum could of course
choose to work – even though, as noted, most jobs will pay modestly.
This outcome would also be good for the handful of billionaire
executives and owner-investors, because it would ensure they have customers
with enough money to buy their labor-saving gadgets.
Such a basic minimum would allow people to pursue whatever arts
or avocations provide them with meaning, thereby enabling society to enjoy the
fruits of such artistry or voluntary efforts.
We would thereby create the kind of society John Maynard Keynes
predicted we’d achieve by 2028 – an age of technological abundance in
which no one will need to work.
Happy Labor Day.
ROBERT B. REICH, Chancellor’s Professor of
Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at
the Blum Center for Developing Economies, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton
administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet
secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written fourteen books, including
the best sellers “Aftershock, “The Work of Nations," and"Beyond
Outrage." He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine
and chairman of Common Cause. His film, INEQUALITY FOR ALL is available on
Netflix, iTunes, Amazon. His new book, "SAVING CAPITALISM: For the Many,
Not the Few" is out 9/29.