The RICH Economy
from The Illuminati Papers by Robert Anton Wilson
If there is one proposition which currently wins the assent of nearly
everybody, it is that we need more jobs. "A cure for unemployment" is
promised, or earnestly sought, by every Heavy Thinker from Jimmy Carter
to the Communist Party USA, from Ronald Reagan to the head of the economics
department at the local university, from the Birchers to the New Left.
I would
like to challenge that idea. I don't think there is, or ever again can
be, a cure for unemployment. I propose that unemployment is not a disease,
but the natural, healthy functioning of an advanced technological society.
The inevitable
direction of any technology, and of any rational species such as Homo
sap., is toward what Buckminster Fuller calls ephemeralization, or doing-more-with-less.
For instance, a modern computer does more (handles more bits of information)
with less hardware than the proto-computers of the late '40's and '50's.
One worker with a modern teletype machine does more in an hour than
a thousand medieval monks painstakingly copying scrolls for a century.
Atomic fission does more with a cubic centimeter of matter than all
the engineers of the 19th Century could do with a million tons, and
fusion does even more.
Unemployment
is not a disease; so it has no "cure."
This tendency
toward ephemeralization or doing more-with-less is based on two principal
factors, viz:
- The
increment-of-association, a term coined by engineer C.H. Douglas,
meaning simply that when we combine our efforts we can do more than
the sum of what each of us could do seperately. Five people acting
synergetically together can lift a small modern car, but if
each of the five tries separately, the car will not budge. As
society evolved from tiny bands, to larger tribes, to federations
of tribes, to city-states, to nations, to multinational alliances,
the increment-of-association increased exponentially. A stone-age
hunting band could not build the Parthenon; a Renaissance city-state
could not put Neil Armstrong on the Moon. When the increment-of-association
increases, through larger social units, doing-more-with-less
becomes increasingly possible.
- Knowledge
itself is inherently self-augmenting. Every discovery "suggests" further
discoveries; every innovation provokes further innovations. This can
be seen concretely, in the records of the U.S. Patent Office, where
you will find more patents granted every year than were granted the
year before, in a rising curve that seems to be headed toward infinity.
If Inventor A can make a Whatsit out of 20 moving parts, Inventor
B will come along and build a Whatsit out of 10 moving parts. If the
technology of 1900 can get 100 ergs out of a Whatchamacallum, the
technology of 1950 can get 1,000 ergs. Again, the tendency is always
toward doing-more-with-less.
Unemployment
is directly caused by this technological capacity to do more-with-less.
Thousands of monks were technologically unemployed by Gutenberg. Thousands
of blacksmiths were technologically unemployed by Ford's Model T. Each
device that does-more-with-less makes human labor that much less necessary.
Aristotle
said that slavery could only be abolished when machines were built that
could operate themselves. Working for wages, the modern equivalent of
slavery -- very accurately called "wage slavery" by social critics --
is in the process of being abolished by just such self-programming machines.
In fact, Norbert Wiener, one of the creators of cybernetics, foresaw
this as early as 1947 and warned that we would have massive unemployment
once the computer revolution really got moving.
It is
arguable, and I for one would argue, that the only reason Wiener's prediction
has not totally been realized yet -- although we do have ever-increasing
unemployment -- is that big unions, the corporations, and government
have all tacitly agreed to slow down the pace of cybernation, to drag
their feet and run the economy with the brakes on. This is because they
all, still, regard unemployment as a "disease" and cannot imagine a
"cure" for the nearly total unemployment that full cybernation will
create.
Suppose,
for a moment, we challenge this Calvinistic mind-set. Let us regard
wage-work -- as most people do, in fact, regard it -- as a curse, a
drag, a nuisance, a barrier that stands between us and what we really
want to do. In that case, your job is the disease, and unemployment
is the cure.
"But without
working for wages we'll all starve to death!?! Won't we?"
Not at
all. Many farseeing social thinkers have suggested intelligent and plausible
plans for adapting to a society of rising unemployment. Here are some
examples.
- The
National Dividend. This was invented by engineer C. H. Douglas and
has been revived with some modifications by poet Ezra Pound and designer
Buckminster Fuller. The basic idea (although Douglas, Pound, and Fuller
differ on the details) is that every citizen should be declared a
shareholder in the nation, and should receive dividends on the Gross
National Product for the year. Estimates differ as to how much this
would be for each citizen, but at the current level of the GNP it
is conservative to say that a share would be worth several times as
much, per year, as a welfare recipient receives -- at least five times
more. Critics complain that this would be inflationary. Supporters
of the National Dividend reply that it would only be inflationary
if the dividends distributed were more than the GNP; and they are
proposing only to issue dividends equal to the GNP.
- The
Guaranteed Annual Income. This has been urged by economist Robert
Theobald and others. The government would simply establish an income
level above the poverty line and guarantee that no citizen would receive
less; if your wages fall below that level, or you have no wages, the
government makes up the difference. This plan would definitely cost
the government less than the present welfare system, with all its
bureaucratic red tape and redundancy: a point worth considering for
those conservatives who are always complaining about the high cost
of welfare. It would also spare the recipients the humiliation, degradation
and dehumanization built into the present welfare system: a point
for liberals to consider. A system that is less expensive than welfare
and also less debasing to the poor, it seems to me, should not be
objectionable to anybody but hardcore sadists.
- The
Negative Income Tax. This was first devised by Nobel economist Milton
Friedman and is a less radical variation on the above ideas. The Negative
Income Tax would establish a minimum income for every citizen; anyone
whose income fell below that level would receive the amount necessary
to bring them up to that standard. Friedman, who is sometimes called
a conservative but prefers to title himself a libertarian, points
out that this would cost "the government" (i.e. the taxpayers) less
than the present welfare system, like Theobald's Guaranteed Annual
Income. It would also dispense with the last tinge of humiliation
associated with government "charity," since when you cashed a check
from IRS nobody (not even your banker) would know if it was supplementary
income due to poverty or a refund due to overpayment of last year's
taxes.
- The
RICH Economy. This was devised by inventor L. Wayne Benner (co-author
with Timothy Leary of Terra II) in collaboration with the present
author. It's a four-stage program to retool society for the cybernetic
and space-age future we are rapidly entering. RICH means Rising Income
through Cybernetic Homeostasis.
- Stage I
- is to recognize that cybernation and massive unemployment are
inevitable and to encourage them. This can be done by offering
a $100,000 reward to any worker who can design a machine that
will replace him or her, and all others doing the same work. In
other words, instead of being dragged into the cybernetic age
kicking and screaming, we should charge ahead bravely, regarding
the Toilless Society as the Utopian goal humanity has always sought.
- Stage II
- is to establish either the Negative Income Tax or the Guaranteed
Annual Income, so that the massive unemployment caused by Stage
I will not throw hordes of people into the degradation of the
present welfare system.
- Stage III
- is to gradually, experimentally, raise the Guaranteed Annual Income
to the level of the National Dividend suggested by Douglas, Bucky
Fuller, and Ezra Pound, which would give every citizen the approximate
living standard of the comfortable middle class. The reason for
doing this gradually is to pacify those conservative economists
who claim that the National Dividend is "inflationary" or would
be practically wrecking the banking business by lowering the interest
rate to near-zero. It is our claim that this would not happen
as long as the total dividends distributed to the populace equaled
the Gross National Product. but since this is a revolutionary
and controversial idea, it would be prudent, we allow, to approach
it in slow steps, raising the minimum income perhaps 5 per cent
per year for the first ten years. And, after the massive cybernation
caused by Stage I has produced a glut of consumer goods, experimentally
raise it further and faster toward the level of a true National
Dividend.
- Stage IV
- is a massive investment in adult education, for two reasons.
- People
can spend only so much time fucking, smoking dope, and watching
TV; after a while they get bored. This is the main psychological
objection to the workless society, and the answer to it is
to educate people for functions more cerebral than fucking,
smoking dope, watching TV, or the idiot jobs most are currently
toiling at.
- There
are vast challenges and opportunities confronting us in the
next three or four decades, of which the most notable are
those highlighted in Tim Leary's SMI2LE slogan -- Space Migration,
Intelligence Increase, Life Extension. Humanity is about to
enter an entirely new evolutionary relationship to space,
time, and consciousness. We will no longer be limited to one
planet, to a brief, less-than-a-century lifespan, and to the
stereotyped and robotic mental processes by which most people
currently govern their lives. Everybody deserves the chance,
if they want it, to participate in the evolutionary leap to
what Leary calls "more space, more time, and more intelligence
to enjoy space and time."
What I
am proposing, in brief, is that the Work Ethic (find a Master to employ
you for wages, or live in squalid poverty) is obsolete. A Work Esthetic
will have to arise to replace this old Stone Age syndrome of the slave,
the peasant, the serf, the prole, the wage-worker -- the human labor-machine
who is not fully a person but, as Marx said, " a tool, an automaton."
Delivered from the role of things and robots, people will learn to become
fully developed persons, in the sense of the Human Potential movement.
They will not seek work out of economic necessity, but out of psychological
necessity -- as an outlet for their creative potential.
("Creative
potential" is not a panchreston. It refers to the inborn drive to play,
to tinker, to explore, and to experiment, shown by every child before
his or her mental processes are stunted by authoritarian education and
operant-conditioned wage-robotry.)
As Bucky Fuller says, the first thought of people, once they are delivered
from wage slavery, will be, "What was it that I was so interested in as a
youth, before I was told I had to earn a living?" The answer to that question,
coming from millions and then billions of persons liberated from mechanical
toil, will make the Renaissance look like a high school science fair or a
Greenwich Village art show.
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