Libertarian Welfare Schemes or 'Was Thomas Paine a Red?'

in #libertarian8 years ago (edited)

 Libertarians sure are a contentious group. We love to quarrel! For example, did  you know that Murray Rothbard wrote a one-act play satirizing Ayn Rand  called “Mozart Was A Red”? And then Robert Anton Wilson wrote an entire book satirizing Murray Rothbard's natural rights approach entitled, “Natural Law: Or Don't Put a Rubber On Your Willy”. Getting all of us to agree on anything has been likened to herding cats but that's ok by me. I sort of like the various factions and schisms since I am a Discordian Libertarian.  I suppose it is a part of most every libertarian's DNA to want to  challenge the status quo. Heck I relish the act of blasphemy so much  that not only am I an anarchist that advocates voting, but in this article I am going to actually present an argument for a libertarian welfare scheme, the “Mincome“. 

Now you may think libertarians can't support welfare schemes but I am in pretty good company. After all, pirate and revolutionary Thomas Paine pushed for what he called the Citizen's Dividend(CD), and more recently Libertarian 5th Column badass Ed Snowden advocated a Basic Income Guarantee (BIG). Even libertarian stalwarts (and Nobel laureates) F. A. Hayek and  Milton Friedman both supported the notion in different forms; Hayek  liked the BIG while Friedman has his own version he dubbed the Negative Income Tax (NIT). More recently, libertarian academic Matt Zwolinski has argued for the Basic Income and stirred up a hornet's nest of debate within the libertarian community about Welfare. 

Mincome comes  in various flavors and while they may slightly vary in their details, they  are ultimately methods by which some libertarians are trying to solve the problem of poverty that troubles our society. For the sake of clarity and brevity, here are some terms that are useful for furthering our discussion of libertarian  welfare schemes:  

  • Negative Income Tax (NIT)
  • Guaranteed Minimum Income (GMI)
  • Basic Income Guarantee (BIG)
  • Citizen's Dividend (CD)

Milton Friedman's NIT concept gives various amounts to tax filers that earn below  a certain threshold. It is akin to our current “positive” progressive  income tax except that it has a “negative” component that would give (in lieu of taking) based upon stated income (or lack thereof). It could work within the existing progressive income tax system and persuasive arguments have been made that the current Earned Income Tax Credit is basically a bastardized version of the NIT. Personally, this is my least favorite scheme. 

Next up are the Guaranteed Minimum Income and Basic Income Guarantee  concepts. There is a subtle, but big difference between a GMI scheme and  a BIG; a GMI is a function of employment and eligibility whereas a BIG  is paid regardless of employment to everyone, equally. So in this regard  the NIT is actually a GMI system (not a BIG system) since the NIT  requires means testing. This also means that the Fair Tax notion of a “Prebate” would be a form of GMI as well. 

Thomas Paine's Citizen Dividend concept, on the other hand, is a type  of BIG. If you think of every citizen as an equal shareholder of the  state, then the CD is merely a dividend payment. Currently the state of  Alaska has a form of CD called the Permanent Fund Dividend which has paid out as little as $331.29 (in 1984) and as much as $2,069 (in 2008) to every eligible Alaskan resident (including children). 

All this theorizing is of course is a moot point since this current incarnation of the American experiment seems to be fast coming to an end. As an anarchist, such talk seems rather masturbatory as the whole shithouse is about to go up in flames of debt as we fiddle around on social media. So, after the impending  debt default and collapse of the United States as we know it, how can  those tasked with rebuilding “America” fund a scheme to help the less  fortunate without violating the libertarian non-aggression principle (NAP)? 

but Is It “Libertarian”? Was Thomas Paine a Red!? 

In other words, is it only possible to fund welfare schemes by  redistributing income? As one of my biggest libertarian heroes Thomas Szasz said: 

“The battle for the world is the battle for definitions.” 

Perhaps Zwolinski can reconcile his libertarianism with the idea of Mincome because he isn't a fan of the NAP. However, while not everyone defines their libertarianism in terms of the NAP (e.g., some proceed instead from the notion of self-ownershipnatural rightsconsequentialism,  etc.), I would argue that most probably do. As such, the problem of coercion that seems inherent in most income redistribution schemes is a problem worthy of consideration, especially for us libertarians that pride  themselves on their empathy for other human beings. 

As I see it, many disagreements between libertarians are due in large part to different definitions of what “is” and “is not” property in their respective minds. The meanings of words are evolving and ever shifting, and so too the definition of property will likely never be settled. So unless your theory of property is somewhat congruent with the property systems of geolibertarianismThomas Paine, and other left libertarians you may not be able to reconcile libertarianism and welfare beyond that provided by mutual aid societies.

I can see how Hayek and Friedman liked the Mincome concepts but to be fair, there are common criticisms to Mincome. Zwolinski identified them as:  

  1. Disincentive to work – Zwolinski points to studies that show that a NIT does seem to create a disincentive to work but I was surprised that he didn't point to the Canadian Mincome experiment as a counter-point.
  2. Effects on Migration – Zwolinski points out that a Basic  Income would create an incentive for the poor to immigrate here and as  such would likely result in tighter immigration laws. This is a risk but  this doesn't seem to be a huge problem for the CD scheme in Alaska  mentioned above (although their geography may be a barrier entry for  most immigrants)
  3. Effects on Economic Growth – As Zwolinski says, “Even a  modest slowdown of economic growth can have a dramatic effect when  compounded over a period of decades. And so even if whatever marginal  disincentives a Basic Income Guarantee would produce wouldn't do much to  hurt currently existing people, it might do a lot to hurt people who will be born at some point in the future.” I don't know if this really warrants much concern as currently existing people need food and shelter now and I can't really speak with any accuracy about the welfare of future people. Besides, one of the likely biggest “problems” of the future may be technological unemployment and as Robert Anton Wilson points out, a Mincome scheme is likely a solution for the future, not a problem.
  4. Rent Seeking – I agree that this seems to be the most damning criticism.  There is a very real risk that any Mincome scheme implemented will not  be a replacement but a supplementary program, meaning more government.  Fortunately, as the American Debt-to-GDP-Ratio recently  hit 100% we can rest assured that the American Welfare State will  disappear along with the rest of the American state soon. So perhaps  when the rebuilding comes, a libertarian welfare scheme of some sort  will be the choice du jour.

Personally, I think that both blockchain and automation technology will eventually create a situation where a geolibertarian welfare scheme is ultimately unnecessary (this is what I've called “The Age of Slack”) when effectively the cost of production of basic human necessities are so close to zero that free-riders are not only more numerous, but  even more tolerated. Until then, perhaps we should consider a  libertarian welfare scheme like Alaska's Citizen Dividend? 

Further reading: 

The Economic Case for a Universal Basic Income by Ed Dolan 

Libertarianism and the Basic Income by John Danaher 

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Before jobs, what do you think they called "free riders"?

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