How to Fund the UBI without Blowing the Government Deficit or Increasing Taxes
Michael Haines | Tue Jun 14 2022

Imperative for a UBI
As the previous article explains, once it was the birthright of every person to live off the land.
With the advent of property rights, money and the system of paid work, this
is no longer possible in the developed world.
As Scott Santens has observed, humans are the only species that now require
money to survive!
Though we have the resources to meet the basic needs of every person in
Australia, 12-14% of the population (over 3.2 million people) still live in
poverty; a percentage that has hardly budged despite decades of growth.
Why?
The problem is that many people simply lack the money they require to give
expression to their basic needs in the market. This is bad for them and bad
for business, and ultimately bad for society.
Welfare has reached its limit for working-aged people as, if the benefits
are too high, it is rational for people to forgo a low-paid job in favour
of the benefit. This forces governments to keep benefits low - to force
people to take the available work. Which unfortunately also forces many who
cannot work into poverty: mostly women with young kids, aged and disabled,
their unpaid carers and those between jobs, all of whom lack savings and
family support.
No one should be denied the resources they need to live.
This is a system problem that requires a system solution.
If there is a choice between money for survival and money for other
spending, survival must come first.
A UBI satisfies this imperative.
Funding the UBI
We have designed it so there is no need to change our current tax or
welfare systems, or increase taxes or debt, or take money from other
programs, or incur excessive inflation... and it’s not magic.
Most other approaches focus on funding a UBI via taxes.
Our approach uses newly created money. It recognises that most new money is
injected into the economy via bank lending. The borrowers then spend the
money into the economy, driving new activity. Though this money is created
within the financial system governed by the Reserve Bank, we don’t regard
it as ‘government spending’. We rightly regard it as ‘private spending’.
If/when lending becomes excessive it can lead to inflation, requiring a
rise in interest rates to mitigate demand for loans, which reduces the
amount of new money flowing into the economy which limits demand pressure
and hence price rises.
This works 'reasonably well', but often causes periods of recession, even
though there has been no reduction in people's needs, or even in the
capacity to produce. It is simply a function of the reduction in borrowing
overshooting the level required.
We are proposing that new money also be injected via personal spending for
basic needs. Our target is $500/week/adult (around the current poverty
line).
As with new money generated via bank lending, the UBI should not be
regarded as ‘government spending’ just because the money is sourced from
the Reserve Bank. It is in fact, spending by the people. As such, it should
not form part of the government deficit.
We are suggesting that a new Authority is set up with its own charter whose
sole purpose is to manage the UBI to both get it to the poverty line, and
once there, to use it to keep the labour market in dynamic balance. The
Reserve Bank would issue the new money to each citizen and permanent
resident under the direction of the new Authority.
There is a problem of course. If we simply pay $500/week to 20 million adults in Australia, it will cost $520 billion pa. Plainly this would be unsustainable.
The next article explores how we can implement it with little risk.