by Citizens' Income Trust | Oct 12, 2012 | Research
The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has published a new report, Does the tax and benefit system create a ‘couple penalty’? ‘The use of the MIS [Minimum Income Standard] scale, which uses research into minimum living costs to show greater economies of living in a couple than the official equivalence scales, suggests that separation penalties are larger and couple penalties smaller than those scales would suggest. Indeed, it shows no case of significant couple penalty other than in the scenario where the absent parent is able to live cheaply in social housing. Moreover, even the official scale used by the Government (the OECD scale) does not show a clear-cut economic advantage for families on low earnings to split up. In the single earner cases shown here, it shows a couple penalty in one scenario, a separation penalty in three scenarios and no difference in the other three. On the other hand, for a couple with two earners, it shows a substantial couple penalty in all but one of the five scenarios looked at here. So an in-work couple penalty can be identified for a particular group of couples on a particular set of assumptions.’ (p.29).
www.jrf.org.uk/publications/tax-and-benefit-couple-penalty
by Citizens' Income Trust | Oct 11, 2012 | Research
The Institute for Fiscal Studies has published a report, Reforming Council Tax Benefit, which reviews the Government’s plan to localise Council Tax Benefit: ‘Universal Credit is intended to simplify the benefit system by reducing the number of different benefits that claimants and administrators must contend with. Keeping council tax support (the means-tested benefit with the largest number of recipients) separate – and indeed allowing it to vary across the country – severely undermines this simplification. Universal Credit is also intended to rationalise work incentives by replacing a jumble of overlapping means tests with a single one, ensuring that overall effective tax rates cannot rise too high. Again, separate means tests for council tax support could undermine this, with the potential to reintroduce some of the extremely weak work incentives that Universal Credit was supposed to eliminate. It is difficult to think of reasons why the government’s original plan to integrate CTB into Universal Credit was inferior to what is now being proposed’ (pp.8-9). ‘Achieving coherence between council tax rebates and Universal Credit is complex. The need to make the new rebates fit with Universal Credit makes local authorities’ task of designing schemes, already a difficult challenge given the tight timescale, into a truly formidable one. There is nothing in the Universal Credit system that will make it straightforward to identify those who should be passported onto a full council tax rebate. That could make running a council tax rebate scheme based closely on the current system extremely challenging for local authorities … the advantages of localisation seem to be strongly outweighed by the disadvantages, particularly in the context of the welcome introduction of Universal Credit’. (p.107)
www.ifs.org.uk/publications/6183
by Citizens' Income Trust | Oct 8, 2012 | Opinion
The ‘sensible’ view of Citizen’s Income (CI) is that it would pool income tax allowances and welfare benefits, as far as possible, into a single uniform payment, varying only with age paid to every citizen, without conditions, funded in the main by income tax. This model has been studied extensively, and can be discussed with policy makers and advisors who understand the mechanisms and procedures involved. But politically this is a complete non-starter: In his latest book Future Money[1], James Robertson comments “The conventional assumption has been that there is no way of funding a Citizen’s Income except by taxing people’s other incomes highly, and it might have to be at a rate as high as 70%. For many years that has been seen as ruling out a Citizen’s Income. Like many objections to otherwise desirable proposals, the assumption is due to inability or unwillingness to think outside a narrow box.” (p135)
But over the years I have encountered another radically different view about the funding of Basic/Citizen’s Income. There is, it is claimed, a huge pool of money which has been hi-jacked by the banks: they have used their power to create nearly all the money in circulation and have thereby greatly enriched themselves. Most people are under the delusion that it is governments not banks that create new money, but in fact only 3% of all the money (M4) in circulation is official Bank of England notes or coins. The remaining 97% has been created within the banking system and it is they who reap the benefit. These ‘mavericks’ at our meetings of BIRG (Basic Income Research Group) and then later Citizen’s Income have always argued that this ‘seigniorage[2]’ – the benefit from creating new money – rightfully belongs to the people, and could/should be used to provide a Basic Income. In addition, Robertson reminds us that there is also a vast amount of ‘economic rent’ which flows from the ownership of natural assets like land and airspace. This should be charged for, and together with the proceeds of seigniorage would provide more than enough to pay for an adequate Citizen’s Income.
This ‘free lunch’ basis for CI might in the past be dismissed as either Mad or Bad. It did not help that advocates of money reform who spoke at meetings of BIRG did not always put forward their ideas with much tact either! I say that the idea that BI/CI could be funded by seigniorage might be seen as madness, because no mainstream, conventional economist could be found who would subscribe to it.
But an even more telling criticism is that the holders of this alternative view are Bad people. In a vitriolic attack, Derek Wall, who was once the co-leader of the UK Green Party, lays into ‘Social Credit’[3]. It was Major Douglas who inspired the Social Credit movement in the 1930s, which could be described as an earlier manifestation of Basic Income funded by seigniorage. In the hands of others, Wall claims, this degenerated into an evil anti-Jewish banking sentiment. Even today’s advocates, he claims, are similarly tainted. It is noticeable that the Green Party does not support money-reform, and the NEF are somewhat ambivalent about it as well, perhaps as a reaction to this whiff of ‘dangerous madness’.
Is it any wonder then that Basic Income funded by the common-wealth of seigniorage and resource-charges is seen as too hot to handle, too dangerous to be involved with, the deranged delusions from a lunatic fringe or worse? It comes as a shock therefore to find that James Robertson, the utterly reasonable, and tireless campaigner for fresh thinking about society and the environment, is entirely in favour of seigniorage reform and land- and resource-based taxation. Using the proceeds of these two revenue streams would, he tells us would be more than sufficient to fund Citizen’s Income and more besides.
In this, Robertson’s latest book, he follows up on earlier inspiring works such as The Sane Alternative (1983), Future Work (1985), Future Wealth (1990). Robertson ran Turning Point conferences (which was where, in the early 1980’s I first encountered Basic Income). He was a founder of TOES, the ‘anti’-G8 economic summit forum, and of course he is a leading light at NEF (New Economics Foundation). Later his output has explored the transformation of tax away from penalising earned incomes towards resource-based taxes, especially land-value taxes. Sharing Our Common Heritage: Resource Taxes and Green Dividends (1998) explains how it could be done.
Then, hesitantly at first (as I read it) but later as in this book currently under review, Robertson has experienced an epiphany. It was indeed true that the money-system had been hi-jacked by the banks, and that huge wealth was being diverted to the top 1% thereby; that the control over the issue of new money should be returned to a public authority and used for the public good. Together with Joesph Huber, Robertson became converted to the idea that our money system should be prised away from the clutches of the bankers in Creating New Money: A Monetary Reform for the Information Age. This appeared in 2000, long before the 2008 financial crash. Since then Robertson has continued with the monetary reform theme, something which became much more pressing following the banking crash when vast sums were needed to rescue the financial system. So Future Money is a synthesis which knits together his earlier ideas, with the all-important reclamation of the money system. The aim, as always with Robertson’s books is to show how a credible “sane” alternative could give everyone a better life, while at the same time creating an ecologically sustainable world.
Robertson has a wealth of experience in the ways of government and governing, including spells at the UK Treasury and commercial banks, but his background is in Arts, not economics “In retrospect, I am glad not to have had a formal education in economics and money and to have learned about them in practice later within a wider context of ideas.” (p13)
Since Robertson has long been a supporter of the idea of CI, it comes as no surprise when he says that these revenues should be used in to fund a “Citizen’s Income payable to all citizens as a right. [..] It will recognise that responsible Citizen’s in a democratic society have a right to share a significant part of the public revenue from the value of common resources. It will enable people to become less dependent for welfare and work on big government, big business, big finance and foreign trade. Because all of those incur environmentally wasteful overhead costs, it will also have a conserving effect.” (p130)
There are a small number of ‘heterodox’ economists who would agree with Robertson about the existence of seigniorage, that it has been captured by the private banking system but that it could be re-directed for the benefit of the citizenry. Perhaps the most high-profile (although not referred to by Robertson) is Steve Keen. His book Debunking Economics (2011 2ed, Zed Books) is about the whole range of failures of the dominant neo-classical economics, especially their inability to recognise and incorporate money into their models. Few establishment figures will engage with Keen, and even open-minded economists like Paul Krugman still do not agree that money is ‘endogenous’[4]. However compelling evidence that the banking system benefits from a huge public subsidy can be found in a recent Bank of England paper[5] where the ‘free lunch’ of the banking system is estimated to be of the order of £120 bn. p.a., enough to fund a £40 per week Citizen’s Income for every man, woman and child in the U.K.
I would encourage readers of CI News to closely study this book. There is much more detail about the environmental and humanitarian reasons for reforming the way currency is produced and how resources should be taxed. You will have to decide for yourself if you think reclaiming seigniorage is a realistic method of funding CI, or is crazy dangerous nonsense. The safe alternative is to continue studying the present job-system and see how an added-on CI funded by punitive rates of income tax might work, however futile and politically infeasible that might be.
[1] Future Money: Breakdown or Breakthrough Green Books, Totnes, Devon 2012
[2] Robertson avoids the use of the obscure term ‘seigniorage’; I use it because it precisely defines the feature of in the money system which could be the main source of funding for BI.
[3] Derek Wall (2003) Social Credit: The Ecosocialism of Fools in Capitalism Nature Socialism, September 2003
[4] see Paul Krugman’s blog article deriding ‘endogenous money’: 2 Apr 2012 https://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/04/02/oh-my-steve-keen-edition/
[5] Noss, Joseph & Sowerbutts, Rhianon (May 2012) The Implicit Subsidy of Banks: Financial Stability Paper No 15 Bank of England.
by BIEN Ireland | Sep 19, 2012 | Research
This new book by Danny Dorling (University of Sheffield) includes a 8 pages discussion of basic income in the British context. Dorling seems to be very supportive of the idea, including at EU-level: “Imagine how much money would be saved”, he writes, “if a basic income one day replaced all the numerous different benefit and taxation systems existing accross the whole of the European Union. How else could Europe ever have a unified system of social security to go with its free movement of labor?” (p.160).
Full references: DORLING, Danny (2012), The no-nonsense guide to equality, Oxford: New Internationalist.
For further information on the book, see:
https://www.dannydorling.org/books/equality/Homepage.html
by Karl Widerquist | Sep 8, 2012 | Research
In an opinion piece on its Reuters blog, British columnist and economist Anatole Kaletsky effectively endorses a one-time basic income as a fair and more effective version of central banks “quantitative easing” programmes.
Kaletsky shows how the United States created $2 trillion and the United Kingdom created £375 billion pounds out of thin air to buy bonds in two rounds of “quantitative easing.” It spent that money in bond markets, buying back government debt from bond traders in an effort to stimulate the economy. Kaletsky claims that, for the same amount of money, the U.S. government could distribute a dividend of “$6,500 for every man, woman and child, or $26,000 for a family of four.” Britain’s could be worth £6,000.
According to Kaletsky, “Giving away free money may sound too good to be true or wildly irresponsible, but it is exactly what the Fed and the Bank of Englad have been doing for bond traders and bankers since 2009. Directing QE to the general public would not only be much fairer but also more effective. . . . Even if only half the new money created were distributed in this way, these sums would be easily large enough to transform economic conditions, whether the people receiving these windfalls decided to spend them on extra consumption or save them and reduce debts.”
The full text of the article is online at:
https://blogs.reuters.com/anatole-kaletsky/2012/08/01/how-about-quantitative-easing-for-the-people/