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Of course there are productivity boosters. The dishwashers, vacuum cleaners, vehicles, computerized booking, and many other pieces of technology have replaced the need for many additional workers. The problem is that, as states, we are not translating these increased profits into increased quality of life for citizens. UBI is the most obvious way to start doing it. What we want is to in effect charge companies in relation to how much profit they're making off replacing workers (increasing productivity). When a company is able to replace 10 workers with technology, they should pay at least enough taxes for 5 workers to live off UBI. Repeat until everyone that wants to can live comfortably off UBI. While other people voluntarily work to make a lot more money than UBI. |
Are you sure about that? For example, air travel used to be a luxury only for the wealthy, and you wore your best clothes for a flight. Now airplanes are filled with people dressed in sweats and paying very cheap fares. Tourist destinations are buried in tourists the world over.
Buying a home computer used to cost $3,000. Now you can get one for a couple hundred, and that's in inflated dollars.
What you get when you buy a car is enormously better than what was available in the 1960s. I love old cars, but I'm well aware of the overall poor quality of them, lousy crash resistance, high maintenance, crummy handling, etc.
Clothes are historically cheap as dirt. My mom would sew layer after layer of patches on my jeans. Nobody does that anymore. My aunts would knit socks for me. Nobody does that anymore. (Still have the socks, they're treasures now.)
In general, things are so cheap it makes no sense to fix or maintain them. Just get another one.
Kids get a small mountain of toys for Christmas. Back in the 60's you got a handful of items, and did not feel deprived at all.
You can get a color TV for a couple hundred bucks, one that is far better than the $$$$ ones from the 1960s.
Think about all the entertainment you can get for free from the push of a button. You can get an MIT education for free in your home. You can get any question answered by typing into your computer.
Steak is much, much cheaper than when I was a boy. Then it was a luxury.
Fresh food from all over the world, 12 months a year, at your local grocery.
Our homes are much bigger than they used to be.
Car stereos used to be so expensive people stole them all the time. Today car stereos are so cheap they are worthless.
I built a home theater in my basement from equipment I got at the thrift store for $50. The HD projector was $600 new, and is probably even cheaper today. The screen was $50. The same setup would have cost $20,000 25 years ago, and wouldn't have been HD.
I remember when home stereos were expensive, like $thousands. Now you can buy excellent equipment at the thrift store for $20.
I remember buying stuff mail order from Sears with 3 to 6 weeks delivery time. Now I am spoiled rotten by getting it in 2 days.
Teenagers were expected to work starting at age 16, at least up through the 70s. Now a person's first job is often after college.
Nobody had a microwave or dishwasher when I grew up. Every meal meant time at the sink washing everything by hand. People rarely ate out. My how that has changed.
Seriously, we live in a golden age.