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From the issue dated January 16,
2004
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Lending a Lasting HandEconomists of many stripes argue
that poor people and the unemployed need more help from the
government
By DAVID GLENN
The
walls of the Department of Employment Services center in northeast
Washington, D.C., are inevitably festooned with glossy motivational
posters. "Career vs. Job ... a Matter of Choice or a Matter of
Chance," reads one sign. Visitors might be forgiven for thinking
that they're back in the assistant principal's
office.
Reginald McCoy, a 35-year-old telecommunications
technician, was laid off by WorldCom seven months ago. He is using
one of the center's computers to search for a new job. "If you go
from this" -- he flashes a W-2 form that reported annual
earnings of more than $58,000 -- "to making nothing, you have a
problem," he says. "I know guys who were laid off before me who are
at McDonald's, or working out at the airport. They've taken a
thirty- or forty-thousand-dollar pay cut."
Mr. McCoy is
anxious, but he sees hope for himself. Last week he had an interview
at Verizon. Across the room, photocopying a business proposal, is a
woman whose anxiety is more severe. Khaleedah Harris, a lifelong
resident of Washington, says that she and her husband have usually
had steady jobs, but some of their eight children have not. "When I
was in the District of Columbia public schools," she says, "we had
various vocational and trade, office, and clerical classes. We had
barbering. We had all kinds of things that you could do if you were
not going to be collegebound. Well, when my kids came through school
-- all of them -- those programs were gone."
This
employment center offers a mélange of the pragmatic, small-scale
programs favored in the Clinton era. If you want to learn how to
perform during a job interview, the center's counselors will teach
you. If you want to learn how to apply for the earned-income tax
credit, which benefits low-income workers with dependent children,
they'll show you. In 2004, seven years after federal welfare reform
took effect, this is the rough consensus of policy makers: Give a
small helping hand to people who want to help themselves. Anything
more ambitious is only likely to do damage -- to the economy,
or to poor people themselves.
Not everyone is satisfied with
that consensus. An ideologically diverse group of scholars is
putting forward sweeping proposals that, they say, would transform
the low-wage labor market for the benefit of poor people and society
at large. One plan would guarantee all citizens a small basic
income; another would revive the New Deal model of a
government-created job for anyone who wants one; still another would
provide huge public subsidies to private employers in order to raise
the wages of low-skilled workers.
The proponents of these
schemes, as you can readily imagine, do not always agree with one
another. But their proposals have a few common denominators: The
plans are all designed as universal benefits and are intended to
avoid the perverse incentives (against work, against marriage) that
have afflicted the U.S. welfare system. And all of the proposals
-- yes, even the guaranteed-job scheme -- are touted by
their designers as minimizing government bureaucracy and
micromanagement of the economy. These plans are thoroughly
postsocialist, these scholars say. We can provide much more to
people at the bottom of the ladder and still allow the free market
to do its thing.
Back to Basics
The most
controversial of the plans is the universal basic income, whose
best-known contemporary proponent is Philippe van Parijs, a
professor of economic and moral philosophy at the Catholic
University of Louvain, in Belgium. In his 1995 book Real Freedom
for All: What (if Anything) Can Justify Capitalism? (Oxford
University Press), Mr. van Parijs argues that the liberal value of
freedom presumes that humans have an array of realistic choices. And
having such choices, he says, depends in turn on having at least a
certain level of resources. Therefore society should guarantee
everyone a basic income, which would be financed through progressive
taxation. The basic income, Mr. van Parijs says, should be as large
as the economy can efficiently sustain.
The most common
objection to Mr. van Parijs's model is that it would represent an
unjust transfer of resources from people who do productive work to
people who choose not to. (Scholars like to refer to this as the
"Malibu-surfer problem.") Mr. van Parijs replies that the liberal
principle of neutrality among conceptions of the good life, as
articulated by such philosophers as Ronald Dworkin and the late John
Rawls, demands that the state not favor the industrious (the
"crazy," as Mr. van Parijs facetiously calls them) over the
lazy.
Mr. van Parijs also makes a more subtle point: He says
that a universal basic income might actually draw certain unemployed
people into the labor market. "Part of what motivated this
plan," he says, "was an awareness that the existing benefit schemes
tend to create dependency traps." In means-tested benefit programs
like the U.S. welfare system, you can often immediately lose all of
your benefits if you take a job. "But if you have this floor of
income that you're entitled to no matter what," he says, "that's a
way of getting you out of that trap." (The same insight lay behind
the conservative economist Milton Friedman's early-1970s proposal
for a negative income tax, which would be structurally similar to
Mr. van Parijs's universal basic income.)
Would Mr. van
Parijs's proposal wreck the economy by shrinking the pool of workers
willing to work for low pay? "I don't think the decrease in labor
supply would be as severe as some commentators believe," says
Michael A. Lewis, an assistant professor of social welfare at the
State University of New York at Stony Brook and a proponent of the
basic income. "Employers would tend to increase the wages they
offer, and that would draw people back in."
Mr. van Parijs
does not believe that low-wage jobs would disappear, but he believes
that a certain kind of low-wage job would vanish. "Jobs with
low immediate productivity, but that offer serious training or
opportunities for advancement through social networks, would be able
to find people to fill them," he says. "On the other hand, if you
have really lousy jobs that don't offer any training, that are done
under bosses that treat workers badly, these sorts of dead-end jobs
will be more difficult to fill than before."
Mr. van Parijs
would not mourn the loss of such jobs. "Just as there is nothing
particularly good about slavery, there is nothing particularly good
about a system in which lousy jobs can easily be filled," he
says.
Removing Incentives?
A final objection to
the basic income is that it would weigh down the economy by reducing
people's incentive to learn new skills. "Basic income grants and the
earned-income tax credit have a negative impact on human capital
formation -- both theoretically and according to empirical
evidence," says Robert A. Moffitt, a professor of economics at the
Johns Hopkins University, who is generally skeptical of Mr. van
Parijs's plan.
Mr. van Parijs replies that such concerns are
based on "petty accounting." The basic income, he says, might
actually help people to go to school or learn a new trade because
they would have more flexibility to reduce their hours (or leave the
work force entirely). "Basic income is part of a package that's far
better adjusted to both the economic needs and to the social needs
that result from the new technological and market complex in which
we live."
Maybe so, but the basic-income scheme has no
immediate political prospects in the United States. A small band of
economists and political scientists will gather in Washington next
month for the third annual meeting of the U.S. Basic Income
Guarantee Network, but they have no illusions about the terrain. The
one serious moment of possibility, several of them say, came during
the Nixon administration, when Mr. Friedman pitched his negative
income tax.
"You get this paternalistic, cumbersome welfare
system, and we almost had the opportunity to replace that with a
negative income tax," says Karl Widerquist, the network's
coordinator. Mr. Widerquist is an economist who is earning a
doctorate in political science at the University of Oxford. "It just
didn't happen," he says ruefully.
Mr. van Parijs says that
some European countries are slowly creeping toward something that
looks a great deal like a basic income. Belgium, Britain, France,
and the Netherlands have all recently introduced refundable tax
credits for low-wage workers. And almost all West European countries
already offer a basic income to people who do not
work.
The basic-income idea has also generated active
political movements in two unlikely countries: Brazil and South
Africa. In December, the Brazilian Congress approved a bill that
will create a basic income beginning in 2005, though the plan will
initially focus on Brazil's poorest citizens. Meanwhile, in South
Africa, there is a growing popular movement for a universal basic
income.
Granting Guarantees
A very different
set of reforms is offered by the economists L. Randall Wray and
Mathew Forstater, both professors at the University of Missouri at
Kansas City. They would like to bring back the New Deal model of
government-guaranteed jobs for anyone willing and able to work. They
argue for their scheme primarily on the grounds of efficiency, not
ethics. A modern capitalist economy, they maintain, will never
generate a strong, steady, sufficient demand for labor. Even during
the boom years of the late 1990s, many people unsuccessfully sought
work. In order for the economy to reach its true productive
potential, Mr. Wray and Mr. Forstater say, the government must step
in and provide jobs.
The Missouri economists' job program
would look like this: The federal government would give large grants
to states and localities, which would set up nonpartisan commissions
to administer the program. Nonprofit groups and government agencies
would submit bids explaining how they would make use of federally
subsidized workers. All of the subsidized jobs would pay only the
minimum wage -- the idea is that workers should be indifferent
about whether they worked in a federally subsidized job or in the
lowest-paid job in the standard private sector, so that workers
would readily switch back into private jobs during upswings of the
business cycle. But the federal government would be responsible for
offering a minimum-wage job to each and every able, willing person
in the country. "Of course, people can be fired if they don't
perform up to standard," says Mr. Wray. "We might design the system
to give them a second or third chance, but not more than
that."
Mr. Wray insists that only such a job-creation program
can solve the modern problem of structural unemployment. He says
that the training-and-education programs currently favored by policy
makers are based on a fallacy. "If you bury nine bones and send 10
dogs out to get them," he says, "only nine of them are going to come
back with bones. Now, you can take that one dog and teach him the
latest, most up-to-date bone-finding techniques, and he might come
back with a bone the next time. But you know that some dog is
always going to come back empty."
Mr. Wray says that the
scheme would have only gentle effects on the labor market, because,
again, the subsidized jobs would intentionally be no better than the
least attractive private-sector job. Many more-orthodox economists,
however, argue that a situation of full employment would lead to an
inflationary spiral. At the height of the boom in 1999, Alan
Greenspan told Congress that he worried that the "pool of available
workers" was shrinking, and that "significant increases in wages, in
excess of productivity growth, will inevitably emerge" unless the
Federal Reserve took steps to slow the economy.
But some
observers believe that Mr. Greenspan's model has little to do with
the current environment. "We're so far away from any kind of wage
inflation that it seems foolish to talk about these things," says
Heather Boushey, an economist at the liberal Center for Economic and
Policy Research. "Workers have been able to capture very little of
the gains in corporate profitability." Ms. Boushey speculates that a
full-employment plan like Mr. Wray's might actually reduce
workers' bargaining power in the private sector, because employers
would find it easier to find and hire well-trained workers if their
current crop started to get restive.
Slim Political
Chances
Like the universal basic income, the Missouri
economists' employer-of-last-resort scheme has no particular
political traction in the United States. Among other barriers, there
is widespread skepticism that it is feasible. The public-jobs
programs of the Carter administration are widely regarded as a
failure. "I would say that the overwhelming view of most labor
economists is that it just didn't work," says Mr. Moffitt. "State
and local governments were not capable of the kind of flexibility in
hiring and creating jobs that were necessary to make them work. All
indications are that productivity was extremely low."
But
this plan, too, has found adherents in unlikely places. Mr. Wray
recently flew to Turkey to discuss a jobs-creation plan with
government officials. And after its 2002 economic crisis, Argentina
enacted a program guaranteeing jobs to low-income households with
children. The World Bank estimates that 1.7 million people are
participating.
What does Mr. Wray think of Mr. van Parijs's
model? "I'm not opposed to a basic-income guarantee at all," he
says. "We should provide a basic standard of living to all human
beings. But a basic income does nothing to resolve the unemployment
problem. Handouts will never be viewed the same way as jobs. I don't
believe that handouts lead to the same sense of responsibility and
control over one's life that a job can offer."
Subsidizing
the Unskilled
A third call for radical reform comes from
someone well-respected within the realm of orthodox economics.
Edmund S. Phelps, a professor emeritus at Columbia, has for more
than a decade campaigned for a system of public subsidies to
increase the wages of low-skilled workers. The fullest elaboration
of his model appears in his 1997 book Rewarding Work: How to
Restore Participation and Self-Support to Free Enterprise
(Harvard University Press). If Wal-Mart is willing to pay a cashier
the minimum $5.15 an hour, for example, the government would provide
a $3 subsidy to raise the wage to $8.15. The subsidy would phase out
gradually at higher levels. A worker earning $11.50 an hour would
get a small subsidy; a worker earning $12 or more would receive no
subsidy at all.
Mr. Phelps argues that his plan
-- which, in his view, should entirely replace the welfare and
food-stamp programs -- would draw hundreds of thousands of
discouraged workers into the labor market. In turn, he says, that
would reduce the cycle of self-destruction that afflicts many poor
neighborhoods. He predicts that violent crime and prison costs would
substantially decline.
William P. Quigley, a professor of law
at Loyola University New Orleans and the author of the recent
Ending Poverty As We Know It: Guaranteeing a Right to a Job at a
Living Wage (Temple University Press), believes that Mr.
Phelps's plan is worth trying. "Every one of us in this country is
already subsidizing Wal-Mart for its employees," he says. "Family
members, churches, and nonprofits provide housing and medical
assistance to help low-wage workers get by. It would be a lot better
to do it formally."
Private wage subsidies are vastly
preferable to government-created jobs, Mr. Phelps says, because an
employer-of-last-resort system would reduce workers' attachment to
jobs in the private sector. He writes in his book that employment
policies' goal should always be "to permit the broadest possible
integration of disadvantaged workers into the business of society,
which is the activity of the private sector."
The most common
objection to Mr. Phelps's plan is that employers would somehow play
the system and reduce the wages they would otherwise offer to their
employees. Jared Bernstein, a senior economist at the Economic
Policy Institute, a liberal think tank, says that it is a mistake to
assume, as Mr. Phelps does, that wages always clearly reflect a
worker's value to the firm. "That's certainly right some of the
time," he says. "But it's not right all of the time. It also depends
on things like workers' bargaining power. So there is a real danger
that this system would wind up subsidizing low-wage employers.
That's very worrisome."
Mr. Phelps replies, "It makes no
sense to imagine that employers can just hang on to whatever they
want to hang on to," he says. "Competition will pull up wage rates
to the level dictated by the employee's productivity."
This
proposal, too, is not likely to be enacted by Congress any time
soon. France and the Netherlands have, however, recently enacted
policies that echo features of Mr. Phelps's plan.
Show Me
the Money
In the view of many economists, all three
proposals are deeply misguided. "If we go through the history of the
United States," says Walter E. Williams, a professor of economics at
George Mason University, "it is a history of poor people coming to
the United States without a pot to piss in or a window to throw it
out of, and still they've made it into the mainstream of American
society. In the 1840s, when Irish people fleeing the potato famine
landed in New York or Boston, there was no welfare
program.
"The other question," Mr. Williams continues, "is
where in the world is the subsidy going to come from? It's not the
Tooth Fairy or Santa Claus that's going to provide the subsidy.
Taxes are going to have to increase, or there will have to be
spending cuts somewhere else."
But the plans' proponents
insist not only that their proposals would reap savings in prison
and other social costs, but that structural reform is overdue. "Say
that we have this problem of chronic unemployment," says Mr. Wray.
"It would be one thing if that burden were equally shared across
society. But it's just beyond dispute that the burden is not being
equally shared. People of color suffer more, the less educated
suffer more. And if you're out of the labor force over the long
term, you just basically have no chance."
http://chronicle.com Section: Research & Publishing Volume
50, Issue 19, Page A14
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Copyright © 2004 by The
Chronicle of Higher Education
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