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Today's Stories

November 5 - 7, 2010

Vijay Prashad
Obama in India: a Tide of Turbans

November 4, 2010

Doug Peacock
Desert Solitaire, Revisited

Andrew Cockburn
Why Summers Goes and Geithner Stays

Iain Boal
Crisis at Pacifica: the Two-Percent Putsch

Paul Craig Roberts
The Impotence of Elections

Chase Madar
Guantánamo: Exception or Rule?

Dave Lindorff
Take That You Smug Bastards!

Russell Mokhiber
Bought and Paid For

Laura Flanders
Lessons From Elizabeth Warren

Website of the Day
Moyers: the Howard Zinn Lecture

November 3, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
America the Clueless

Franklin C. Spinney
Democratic Debacle

Chris Floyd Dissatisfied Mind: Flickers of Hope in a Deadly Political Cycle

William Blum
Jon Stewart and the Left

Sheldon Richman
Provoking Yemeni Terrorism

Stephen Soldz
Fleecing Members, Colluding in Torture

Mark Weisbrot
Dilma's Victory in Brazil

Stewart J. Lawrence
Court Sends Mixed Signals on Arizona Immigration Law

Manuel Garcia, Jr. Election Night in Oakland

Norman Solomon
Now What?

Website of the Day
Save Our Social Security

November 2, 2010

Vincent Navarro
What's Happening in Europe?

Ishmael Reed
Brown Shirts, Black Shirts, T-Shirts

Uri Avnery
The Occupation and Political Corruption in Israel

Mark Driscoll
When the Pentagon "Kill Machines" Came to an Okinawan Paradise

Mike Whitney
Midterm Day of Reckoning: "Let the Landslide Begin"

Linh Dinh
Prone Pioneers: Punishing the Desperate for Being Desperate

David Macaray
Bring Back the Fifties! America's Most Misunderstood Decade

Randall Amster Wikilessons: War is a Joke, But It Isn't Funny

Betsy Ross
How the Banks Trumped Keynes

Yves Engler
A Sad Spectacle: Canada and the Jewish National Fund

Website of the Day
Gulf Oil Toxic to Humans

 

November 1, 2010

Ted Honderich
The Farce of Fairness

Steven Higgs
Don't Act Don't Sell: Why Liberals Will Get What They Deserve on Election Day

John Ross
A Ding-Dong Year for Death in Mexico

Dean Baker
A Darkening Future: Why Growth Still Feels Like a Recession

Ralph Nader
When Corporations are the Government

Justin E. H. Smith
The People Without History

Marjorie Cohn
Hyping Fear

Scott Boehm
Juan Williams and Katrina

Brian Tierney
The Struggle of DC's Nurses

Trish Kahle
Jon Stewart, Are You Really That Sane?

Martha Rosenberg Bathrobe Erectus: Feting Hugh Hefner

Website of the Day
Scary New Wage Data

 

October 29 - 31, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Try (Just a Little Bit Harder)

Joe Bageant
Flatworm Economics

Peter Lee
China-Bashing Among the Elites

David Rosen
Class War in America

Mike Whitney
Bernanke Gets His Pink Slip

David Smith-Ferri Afghanistan: "Is This Normal?"

David Macaray Chamber of Horrors: Turbo-Lobbyists for the Ruling Class

Rannie Amiri
"Man Up," Juan Williams

Jonathan Cook
Protest Met With Rubber Bullets

Ramzy Baroud
Obama as a Salesman

Ellen Brown
Time for a New Theory of Money

Dr. Nina Pierpont
Wind Turbine Syndrome

Dave Lindorff
America's Happy News Media

Brian Horejsi
Mountain Biking in National Parks: a Sordid and Destructive Affair

Daniel Raventós Worldwide Concentration of Wealth: What the Figures Say

Richard Anderson-Connolly
Obama and the Politics of Misrule

David Thomson
Democracy is Effigy

Christopher Brauchli
It's the Muslims Fault!

Bob Fitrakis / Harvey Wasserman Charging Rove With Racketeering

Roberto Rodriguez Arizona Blues: a Time and Decade of Betrayal

Ron Jacobs
Vietnam's Revolution in the Revolution

Farzana Versey
Obama's Hawkish Policy in India

Michael Donnelly
Break Out the Clothespins: It's Voting Season

Gerald E. Scorse
Deficit Rises, Hypocrisy Rises Faster

John Grant
Xbox. vs. Wikileaks

Mickey Z.
When Criminals Vote ...

Charles R. Larson
Fear of Growing Up

Kim Nicolini
"Catfish": DIY Horror Film-making

Peter Stone Brown
The New Old Dylan

David Yearsley
Wagner v. the Machine

Poets' Basement
Davies, Ford and Clark

Website of the Weekend
CSPAN: Cockburn and St. Clair on Seattle WTO Protest and Beyond

 

October 28, 2010

Paul Craig Roberts
America's Job Losses are Permanent

Joseph Grosso
Wal-Mart and New York City

Kirkpatrick Sale
Getting Back to the Real Constitution?

Michael Winship
All They Ask For is an Unfair Advantage

Sherwood Ross
Gitmo's Indelible Stain: the Ordeal of Murat Kurnaz

Mark Weisbrot
Kirchner's Legacy: Rescuing Argentina; Uniting South America

Sam Smith Washington: Where Smart People Go to Do Stupid Things

Nicholas Arguimbau
Winning the War in Afghanistan at $50 Million per Kill

Sheldon Richman
Leaking the Truth

Franklin Lamb
Squeezing Hezbollah: Feltman's "Really Great Plan"

Website of the Day
The Anthropology of Garbage

October 27, 2010

Conn Hallinan
Money Wars

Michael Schwalbe
When Drones Come Home to Roost

Dave Lindorff
Obama's Black Site Prison: What are They Hiding at Bagram?

Gareth Porter
The Futile Surge

Dean Baker
An Economic Disaster

Clancy Sigal
The Sissy Left: Wimps Can't Win

Ram Etwareea
Why the Debt Crisis Hit Europe Harder Than the Emergent Countries of the South

Stewart J. Lawrence
Was Juan Williams "Lynched"?

Alan Farago
The Juan Williams Affair

Binoy Kampmark Offshoring Middle Earth: Prostituting the Hobbit

Website of the Day
Nature's Sting

 

October 26, 2010

Pam Martens
The Far Right's Secret Slush Fund to Keep Fear Alive

Joann Wypijewski
The Days of the Dead

Clarence Lusane Sold Brothers: the Bizarro World of Juan Williams and Clarence Thomas

Gareth Porter
The Futile Surge

Stephen Soldz
Iraq War Logs: Early Highlights

Lawrence Davidson
Ashcroft's Immunity and the Obama Administration

Alan Farago
The Florida Growth Machine

Dean Baker
The Abused Sibling

Jerica Arents
The Women's Harvest

Gerald E. Scorse Messing with Mankiw: Whining About Taxes and Work

Website of the Day
"A Project of Death and Destruction"

 

October 25, 2010

Nancy Scheper-Hughes
Body Parts and Bio-Piracy: Tissue, Skin and Organ Harvesting at Israel's National Forensic Institute

Patrick Cockburn
Echoes of El Salvador in US-Approved Death Squads

Kathy Kelly
"You're Not Alone"

Mike Whitney
Bernanke's Dilemma

Bill Quigley
The Class War at Home

Winslow T. Wheeler
How Many More Trillions for the Pentagon?

David Macaray
Sick Leave as National Policy

Stewart J. Lawrence
Latina "Mama Grizzly" Stalks Her Den

Ray McGovern
Honoring Julian Assange

Missy Beattie
Ginni and Clarence: Just Us at Home

Website of the Day
Please Vote for Washington Stakeout Today!

 

October 22 - 24, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Your Money, Our Life

Lee Ballinger
After the Coal Rush: Music v. King Coal

Franklin C. Spinney
Memo to Obama: Three Strikes and You're Out

Rannie Amiri
Palestine's Olive Harvest Horror

Ralph Nader
Ten Questions for Tea Partiers

Laura Carlsen
Ecuador's Failed Coup: the Latin American Backlash

Avi Shlaim
Dishonest Broker: the US, Israel and Palestine

Mike Whitney
Thank God for France

Josh Stieber
An Iraq Surge Vet on Wikileaks

Kathy Kelly
"War Does This to Your Mind"

Sasan Fayazmanesh
The Left and Iranian Exiles

Conn Hallinan
Rising Tensions in the China Seas

Linn Washington, Jr.
The Ignored Dark-Sides of Joblessness

Christopher Brauchli
The Arms Sale Economy

Mark Weisbrot
Why French Protestors Have It Right

Stan Cox
"Nuke Them!" When Juan Williams Said Something Worse

Ramzy Baroud
The Violence Debate

Dave Lindorff
Arise, Ye Homeowners of America, You Have Nothing to Lose But Your Mortgages!

Benjamin Dangl
Ecuador's Challenge

Peter Stone Brown
Bob Dylan and America

Julie Hilden
High School Rumors and the First Amendment

David Ker Thomson
Bunker U

Missy Beattie
Owning the Shares of Shame

Suzy Dean
Ignoring the Social Benefits of Drinking

Charles M. Young
Crackpot Curriculum

M. Shahid Alam
A Dialectical Approach to the Qu'ran

Charles R. Larson
How to Destroy Your Marriage

David Yearsley
Learning and Lust in Berlin's New Library

Poets' Basement
José M. Tirado

Website of the Weekend
Help Bring Yoga into Prisons

October 21, 2010

Diana Johnstone
French Fury in the EU Cage

Joanne Mariner
A Glimpse into the Silicon Heart of the CIA's Drone Program

Mike Whitney
Bernanke's Biggest Problem: China as Collateral Damage

Lawrence Davidson
Invisible Israel?

Bill Quigley /
Laura Raymond
Artist Resistance in Honduras

Alan Farago
The Next Idiot Might Be You

David Smith-Ferri
Building Bamiyan Peace Park

Tolu Olorunda Educational Heroes and Myths

Website of the Day
Don't Just Deplore Bullying--Fight It!

October 20, 2010

Philippe Marlière
France Erupts: Sarkozy Under Siege

Tariq Ali
Red Hot France; Tepid Britain

Anthony Pahnke / Mark N. Hoffman
Digging Deeper: the San Jose Mine Disaster in Context

David Smith-Ferri
Bamiyan (Afghanistan) Diaries: Day One

Patrick Madden
QE2 and Foreclosures: Bank of America's Wager

Ishmael Reed
Professor Joe, Oakland's Next Mayor?

Dean Baker
Mortgage Mayhem

Mike Roselle
I'm Not Going Down Without a Fight

Dave Marsh
The Great General Johnson

Pete Redington
Dork is the New Cool

Website of the Day
The Poster Boy of Foreclosures

October 19, 2010

Pam Martens
The Koch Empire and Americans for Prosperity

Uri Avnery
The State of Bla-Bla- Bla

Ralph Nader
The Media and the Far Right

Clarence Lusane
From the White House to Obama's House: Race and Political Transition

Sherwood Ross
Union-Busting in Iraq

Trudy Bond
The Despot of Oklahoma: Mr. Coburn Goes to Haiti

Sherry Wolf
Our Not-So-Great Depression

Yves Engler
Why the UN Rejected Canada's Bid for the Security Council

Camilla Fox /
Chris Genovali
Killing Carnivores for Cash

Erin McManus
Hanoi Jane: War, Sex and Fantasies of Betrayal

Website of Day
Solar Done Right

October 18, 2010

Mike Whitney
How to Kickstart the Economy

Jonathan Cook
Settler Takeover of Israeli Police

Martha Rosenberg
The Return of Mad Cow Disease?

Stewart J. Lawrence
Does Jerry Brown's Campaign Have a Death Wish?

P. Sainath
The Narcissism of the Neurotic

James Zogby
Texas Takes a Dangerous Step Backwards

Ken Cole, Ralph Maughan / Brian Ertz
Governmental Disdain for Wolves

Patrick Brennan
Matt Taibbi's Epiphany: Dumping on the Tea Party

Jack Heyman
Justice for Oscar Grant! Jail for Killer Cops!

John Grant
Don't Ask, Don't Tell, Don't Think

Website of the Day
Eating in Public

October 15 - 17, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Daughters of the Gipper

Slavoj Žižek
What is the Left to Do?

Paul Craig Roberts
The War on Terror: What's It All About?

Adrienne Pine /
David Vivar

Saving Honduras?

Peter Lee
The Detention of Xie Chaoping

Jonathan Cook
My Loyalty Oath

Bitta Mostofi
Admiring Ahmadinejad and Overlooking Activists

Franklin Lamb
On the Road with Ahmadinejad in Lebanon

Rannie Amiri
A Small Shove Back

Robert Alvarez
Nuclear Testing and the Rise of Thyroid Cancers

Joe Paff
Beyond Brown v. Whitman: the Late Great State of California

David Rosen
Sexy Sisters: the New Republican Women

David Correia
Greenwashing the Wal-Mart Way

Sam Hitchmough
Competing Americas: the Rise of the Tea Party

Ramzy Baroud
The Tide Has Changed

Dave Lindorff
Don't Act, Don't Lead: Obama Stiffs Gays in the Military Again

Graham Usher
Waiting on America

Gary Leupp
The Non-Jewish Immigration Loyalty Oath

David Macaray
In the Trenches of Union Politics

Ron Jacobs
Jimi Hendrix's "Machine Gun" and Obama's iPod

Peter Cervantes-Gautschi
Wall Street and the Criminalization of Immigrants

Lawrence Swaim
How Neo-Cons Became Honorary Christians

Linn Washington
Corporate Charter Schools Get the Cash

David Ker Thomson
Under Democracy

Norman Solomon
Progressive Canaries

Michael Dawson
Electric Evasions: the Green Car Con

John Stanton
Defense Contractors From Hell

Jayne Lyn Stahl
Leaving Las Vegas

Paul Buchheit
Stop the HURT

Ziad Abbas
Palestine: Without Water, There is No Life

Anthony Papa
Life for an $11 Robbery

Hardy Jones
New Threats to Dolphins: Toxins and Viruses

Missy Beattie
The Bedbug War: Nearly Helpless

Charles R. Larson
Fighting to End Africa's Worst Human Rights Crimes

Peter Stone Brown
Music Under the Radar

David Yearsley
Apollo's Fire

Poets' Basement
Moser & Rihn

Website of the Weekend
On This Earth

October 14, 2010

Mike Whitney
Bernanke Ponders the "Nuclear" Option

Jonathan Cook
The Transfer Scenario

Dean Baker
Globalizing Health Care

Marjorie Cohn
Israeli Raid on Gaza Flotilla: US Fails to Condemn, Despite UN Finding

Stewart J. Lawrence
Sex and the Orgasm Gap: Are Men Still Dominating Women in Bed?

Carl Finamore
San Francisco's Hotel Frank(enstein): a Horror Show for Employees

Dave Lindorff
9 Million Stolen Homes: Getting Tough on Banker Crime

Raúl Zibechi
Brazil's Elections: the Continuation of Lulismo

Willie L. Pelote
Shock Therapy for California?

Website of the Day
Can Mushrooms Rescue the Gulf?

October 13, 2010

Vijay Prashad
The Waning of Obama

Uri Avnery
His Father's Son: the Real Bibi

Dean Baker
The Counterfeit Recovery

Winslow T. Wheeler
Where is the Payoff for Huge Pentagon Budget Hikes?

Patrick Bond
"To Exist is to Resist:" From Apartheid South Africa to Palestine

Michael Winship
Cash You Can Believe In

Myles B. Hoenig
Are We Expendable? An Education Manifesto From the Trenches

Tom Turnipseed
Money Talks (and Swears)

Website of the Day
The Return of Ben Tripp, as Zombie Novelist

October 12, 2010

Ralph Nader
Tricks and Traps in the Fine Print

Franklin C. Spinney
Techno War: Money Talks, Counter-measures Walk

Mike Whitney
The Future is Ugly

Robert Alvarez
The Tritium Deficit

Deepak Tripathi
India's High Stakes Foreign Policy

Chris Genovali / Camilla Fox
Death Cults Among Us: the War on Wolves

Harvey Wasserman
Calvert Cliffs on the Brink

Robert Jensen
Soils and Souls: the Promise of the Land

Mark Weisbrot
How to Change the IMF

Charles R. Larson
America's Religious Veneer

Website of the Day
How You Can Help Fund Radical Grassroots Green Groups (and Double Your Money)

 

October 11, 2010

Michael Hudson
Why the U.S. Has Launched a New Financial World World War

Bill Quigley
A Million Haitians Slowly Dying

Linn Washington
American Justice on Trial

Paul Krassner
Eat, Pray, Be Disappointed: an Open Letter to Obama

Jonathan Cook
Israel's Other "Peace" Plan

Cal Winslow
Big Money, the Big Lie and Fear

Sherry Wolf
Why are Liberals Building the Right?

Peter Stone Brown
Brother Solomon Burke

David Michael Green
How Do You Take Your Tea?

Jayne Lyn Stahl
Disclose This

Website of the Day
"Seize the Jail! Tear It Down!!"

October 8 - 10, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
The Soros Syndrome

Paul Craig Roberts
America's Third World Economy

Alain Gresh
What Does a "One State Solution" Really Mean?

Patrick Cockburn
Is Pakistan Falling Apart?

Rannie Amiri
An Evaporating Palestine

Conn Hallinan
Ecuador: Coup or Riot?

Ramzy Baroud
Dying to Win

Saul Landau
Harboring Terrorists

Sam Smith
What's Missing in the Talk About Education Reform

Yvonne Ridley
On the Road to Damascus, Thinking of Monty Python

Ellen Brown
Foreclosuregate: a Massive Fraud

Santwana Dasgupta
A View From the Top of the World

David Macaray Labor Secretaries: Frances and Elaine

Gerald E. Scorse
Tax System Favors Wealth Over Work

Tony Newman
The Perils of Prohibition

David Ker Thomson
Soundtrack for a Beating

Christopher Brauchli
Authentic Dishonesty: Newt and Dinesh Save America!

Jon Mitchell
Oliver North, Ospreys and Agent Orange

Kevin Zeese
The Longest War

Steven Best
Rethinking Revolution

Missy Beattie
Invasion of the Blood-Sucking Bedbugs

Binoy Kampmark
England's Football Inc.

Charles R. Larson
Egypt's Camus?

Kim Nicolini
"Social Network:" Narcissism and Claustrophobia Among the Techno-Elites

Dave Marsh
"American Idiot:" Finally, a Musical That Rocks

David Yearsley
The Dark Side of Musical Enlightenment

Poets' Basement
Three by Peter Branson

Website of the Weekend
Help the Great Michael Fracasso Revolutionize the Music Industry

 

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Weekend Edition
November 5 - 7, 2010

The War Social and Working Rights

Basic Income in Times of Economic Crisis

By RUBÉN M. LO VUOLO, DANIEL RAVENTÓS
and PABLO YANES

The economic crisis has not ended, but the consequences for broad sectors of the population have been evident for months: more poverty, higher unemployment, inferior working conditions, salary cuts and reduction of social security benefits. The IMF and ILO report published in September specifies that 30 million people have joined the ranks of the unemployed worldwide since the start of the crisis, almost 10% of whom are from the Kingdom of Spain. This crisis is the result of a previous growth period driven by the financialisation of capital and a marked regression in the distribution of income and wealth. In the European Union of the 15, for example, the income from labour now represents 56% of national income when just a few years ago it accounted for nearly 70%. In Latin America, even after a slight improvement in the growth of some countries over the last decade, the figures for participation in the total wage bill are well below these estimates, and the Gini indexes still show this to be the most unequal region of the planet. This rapidly growing inequality consolidates a tendency described in 2006 by one of the richest men in the world, Warren Buffet, in strikingly graphic detail: “There’s class warfare, all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning.” With the crisis that exploded in 2008, some rich individuals lost some money, but formal workers and informal and precarious workers, so legion in Latin America and whose numbers are growing in southern Europe, have seen their living and working conditions deteriorate even further. The financial rescue operations started by many governments have yet again favoured the wealthiest and those who are most responsible for the crisis.

In Latin America, the crisis brought an end to a growth cycle spurred on by improvement in the terms of exchange and major macroeconomic adjustments after the frustrating experience of the policies of opening up and economic liberalisation of the nineties. The economic recovery shown by some countries in the region in recent months (such as Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay) along with that of the so-called “emerging” economies (such as China and India) recreates in some the illusion of a new stage of growth and job creation and of a positive re-alignment of the global economy. However, it would be a grave mistake to let this engender confusion about the diagnosis. Beyond the different particular situations we are faced with a global crisis which, spawned in the very core of the capitalist powers, shows the thoroughgoing contradictions and non-viability of a regime of accumulation based on devaluing the work force, job instability, massive concentration of wealth, and the commodification of nature and all social relations. This regime of accumulation has led, on the global scale, to the profound incongruity of a model of global production operating without global consumption, and the incompatibility between the growth model hitherto applied and preservation of the environment and reproduction of life itself.

This is the first global overproduction crisis and the spectre of deflation is looming, along with the tendency for long-term stagnation. In the best of cases, sporadic bursts of recovery of economic growth will not be sufficient to generate employment in the quantity and quality required to guarantee the wellbeing of the majority of the population. In other words, we may be trapped in a long-lasting economic cycle dominated by hard crises and soft recoveries.

Responsibility for the crisis is clearly attributable to the capital – especially financial capital – bosses, including owners, administrators and government officials in charge of control and regulation. Yet, these selfsame guilty parties are launching a new offensive against work and social rights. Thus, in the bosom of the European Union, so-called “austerity measures” are being launched, measures that mean, in practical terms, adjusting consumption and loss of social and labour benefits for workers and the broad-based sectors.

These adjustment recipes were frequently applied in Latin America in recent decades, and their consequences have been damaging to the wellbeing of the most vulnerable population and for the stability of economic, political and social systems. Yet they are now being adopted in many European countries with the main objective of rescuing banks and patching up financial speculation mechanisms in the hope of re-launching a new cycle of growth spearheaded by finance. To paraphrase the clear depiction of the situation offered on 10 May by a British banker on 10 May at the latest meeting of the ECOFIN, the ECB and the IMF, it is easier to sell the plan saying it will save Greece, Spain and Portugal, than to confess that first of all it must save and help the banks. The budgetary austerity plans set underway to ease public deficits are, in effect, a wholesale attack on the living and working conditions of the working classes and a broadside against the Welfare State regimes that emerged after World War II. Hence, the very crisis brought about by the irresponsibility of the administrators of capital, becomes an additional pretext to justify policies that impose heavy adjustments on workers’ remuneration, affecting both direct wages derived from employment and social protection systems. The excuse of the urgent need to recover competitiveness and stimulate economic growth (or, in the European Union, the much-vaunted pretext of “saving the euro zone”) is wielded in the project of degrading the living conditions of the most vulnerable groups.

Faced with this situation, some assert that this is a temporary crisis arising from the supposed “imperfections” in financial markets and that it will be overcome with a few corrective regulatory tweaks (which are yet to appear in the required dimension). On the contrary, it is evident that this is an emergency of structural problems in the form of organisation of contemporary societies, which have been apparent for quite some time and that will foreseeably continue for a long time yet, although with short periods of recovery and economic growth. What is in crisis is the myth of permanent economic growth and quality job creation as a way of guaranteeing the economic and social integration of citizens as a whole. The current situation raises serious doubts about the ability of the regime of capitalist accumulation to offer, in any reasonable way, a horizon in which it might be materially and politically viable to expect development based on a scheme of full employment for men and women and, in consequence, that employment, or wage labour, would constitute the key, or only path of access to social rights, social mobility and the wellbeing of people.

A clear manifestation of these structural problems is that the apparent solution to the crisis is leading to a widening of the “gaps” between established rights, which citizens should enjoy in keeping with what is enshrined in constitutions and laws, and the rights they actually have. These gaps encourage hypocrisy, fear and sectarian attitudes of all kinds and are conducive to degeneration into resignation and impotence, which are then manipulable by far right groups. The democratic sovereignty of peoples is close to being definitively mocked by the interests of private groups that operate through “the market”, putting pressure on the inability of the political leadership to apply government programmes in which the public interest prevails, thereby ensuring that the rights of their constituents are effective. In the apposite words of US president Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his State of the Union address in 1935, “[…] Americans must forswear that conception of the acquisition of wealth which, through excessive profits, creates undue private power over private affairs and, to our misfortune, over public affairs as well.”

These and other elements should be reason enough to seek new organisational principles for contemporary societies. In this evermore imperative re-design of our societies, it is of paramount importance that access to social rights should cease to operate on a differentiated status to become general rights of citizenship, rights deriving from the mere fact of existing, which is to say that they should cease to be mediated, segmented, conditioned and pared-back rights, which are diminished, inter alia, by the volatile, transitory and unequal position of each person in the increasingly precarious labour market.

For all these and other reasons, we are advocates of what is known as Basic Income. This proposal, which has been championed in different geographies in recent years, already has well-organised supporters in Europe, America, Asia, Africa and Oceania. Its postulates are simple: all citizens and all people of recognised residence are entitled to a universal, unconditional monetary income integrated into a progressive taxation system. We believe that BI could be a sound basis for a structural reorganisation of public policy and are convinced that this is a good proposal in situations of economic prosperity, but even more necessary in times of economic crisis and of attacks on the living and working conditions of great sectors of the population, such as we are now witnessing. Among others, the following reasons stand out:

1) Involuntary loss of employment causes a situation of great economic and living uncertainty. Losing one's job but having a BI would make dealing with the situation less stressful. This obvious characteristic of BI is a plus in any economic situation. In a crisis, where unemployment is much more widespread and prolonged, having a BI takes on greater social importance and still more so with the growing weakness or outright non-existence of any broad and long-lasting unemployment insurance. It is worth noting that if labour relations were dominated for many years by prolonged employment and cyclical or frictional unemployment, what is transitory and unstable today is employment itself (and especially quality employment).

2) If within a framework where undermining of the organisational instruments and representation of the working class is proceeding apace, we add the negative impact of unemployment, the precariousness of work and the adjustments being made in Welfare States, the result is that there are more and more workers being left without union representation. BI could play an important role in re-creating collective interest within the working class and in the struggles of those who are trying to resist, both those with organised representation and those who are left to struggle alone. This would enable consolidation of the worker’s identity in a period of growing labour fragmentation, making possible new forms of association and representation for the increasingly divided interests of the working class. In these times of crisis one can see perfectly well that BI is not an alternative substituting for salary and neither does it weaken the defence of working class interests, but rather it is an instrument that strengthens the position of the entire workforce, both on the job itself and in the search for employment. BI would allow for unification of the working class around a universal right that would benefit a considerable number of citizens, regardless of their specific occupation, while at the same time offering greater leeway for resistance against adjustments to working conditions or to the level of employment itself. In addition, BI would become, in the case of strikes, a kind of unconditional resistance fund whose effects in offering leverage for workers are easy to gauge. The availability of BI would allow them to face the labour-related conflict in a much less insecure manner since, today, depending on the length of the strike, salaries can be reduced to unsustainable levels if, as is the case for most of the working class, no other resources are available.

3) BI would also lessen the risk for people who have undertaken self-employment ventures. In this regard, BI would be more efficient than micro-credits for stimulating the creation of micro-businesses and cooperatives, as it would mean a permanent, stable income that would not generate debt (or abusive interest). In a situation of economic crisis such as the current one, BI would also be an instrument that could facilitate self-employment tasks and even cooperative organisation of its beneficiaries, while also representing a better guarantee of being able to face, if only partially, failure of small businesses.

4) One of the most notable consequences of BI would be a substantial abatement of poverty. It could even realistically raise the possibility of its complete eradication. Not only would it make it possible to remove millions of people from situations of impoverishment, but it would also constitute an additional support to avoid relapse. For the first time, this would represent an active policy against poverty with a preventive dimension, which would thus go beyond the impotence of the conditional focused monetary transfer policies that are currently being applied in Latin America and other developing countries. Some claim that these programmes are a first step in the direction of BI. Not so. While they have a positive impact of alleviating the precarious situation of want of many families in the region, these programmes (Bolsa Familia in Brazil, Oportunidades in Mexico, Familias en Acción in Colombia, Juntos in Peru, Familias solidarias in El Salvador, Asignación Universal por Hijo, in Argentina, et cetera) are opposed to the basic principles and operating rules of BI. Instead of being universal, unconditional and integrated into a progressive taxation system, they are focused and means-tested, demanding conditions in which lack of compliance is punished with loss of the benefit, and they also represent minimal outlay in a profoundly regressive fiscal system. Hence, they reinforce the strategy of conditional, focused assistance that, for decades, has characterised social policy in the region under the patronage of international proponents of structural adjustments that are today being imported to European countries.

Not every project of monetary transfers works along the same lines as BI, because BI is not just another income transfer programme. Focused and conditional assistance programmes have a positive circumstantial impact on the income of some poor families but are ineffective when it comes to removing them from poverty, while they also reinforce client-based policies that work against the development of people’s autonomy. Neither do such programmes ensure that people will not relapse into poverty and homelessness, or prevent the formation of new impoverished groups. They do not cover all those in need and, by the time some groups are selected as beneficiaries (if, indeed, they really are), the crisis will have already unleashed its violence on all this vulnerable population causing irreparable damage. So far, the economic crisis alone has given rise to five million new poor in Mexico, half of all the new poor in Latin America, while the Oportunidades programme proposes expanding its reach by only 800,000 families over a period of two years. To this is added the steady undermining of people’s dignity and autonomy when they are constantly being called on to prove their condition of poverty so that some bureaucrat of the day will deem them “worthy” of assistance.

The economic crisis has demonstrated in the clearest possible way the need to reformulate cash transfer policies along the lines of a universal, unconditional BI. The “conditional” programmes that are now being exported even to the more developed countries are not enough to respond in time and in form to the needs of the most vulnerable groups whose income is in permanent oscillation. Such programmes select the beneficiaries, which means nurturing an expensive bureaucracy that is tasked with classifying (discriminating among) potential beneficiaries who may or may not “deserve” their assistance, and part of the job is permanently scrutinising and assessing their level and conditions of living, to the point of intruding into their private lives. This programmes generate typical “poverty trap” situations because they do not seek to help people overcome the problem but rather only aspire to manage it, thereby keeping the needy population under political control. BI not only saves on unnecessary bureaucratic costs, but delivers benefits based on rights that pertain to citizens, avoiding the kinds of intermediation that turn the needy population into a political clientele. Even ECLAC has singled out the example of the pension scheme for senior citizens in Mexico City, which is universal, non-contributive and unconditional, as one of the innovative measures in Latin America for “guaranteeing a basic level of income in a sustainable manner from the fiscal point of view, and fair from an intergenerational point of view”. It is therefore of tremendous importance that promoting BI was included as one of the objectives in the programmatic document, “Carta de la Ciudad de México” (Mexico City Charter for the Right to the City).

5) A much-debated subject regarding the crisis is the need to maintain consumption by families. In fact, in the boom years, many families were sustaining levels of consumption that were well above their means thanks to the inflated prices of financial assets and credits, especially mortgages, but also consumer credits. This debt-financed consumption by families in general has worked against the poorest groups. It not only eats up any extra income but, now, a reduced labour income must be used in part to pay off the accumulated debt. BI is unquestionably a consumption stabiliser that could be fundamental in maintaining consumption during times of crisis, especially for the more vulnerable groups and, in this manner, avoiding the widening of inequality gaps. In a world like the one today, where the accumulation of vast wealth coexists with crushing poverty, the freedom of hundreds of millions of people is severely limited by the need to find some means of survival. BI would be an institutional mechanism that could guarantee to the citizenship as a whole (including accredited residents) material existence on a basic level at the very least. It is evermore evident that in complex modern societies, if they are to be democratic and fair, one’s daily bread and dignified existence should not be rights “earned with the sweat of one's brow” but rather guaranteed as rights of citizenship so that, rather than the creative and productive capabilities of people being thus impaired, they given some space to develop.

In November 2007, within the framework of the Universal Forum of the Cultures held in the city of Monterrey (Mexico), the “Universal Declaration of Emergent Human Rights” was approved. This Declaration was in fact the continuation of the one that had already been declared in Barcelona three years previously, in September 2004, also within the framework of the Universal Forum of the Cultures. Article 1.3 enshrines

The right to a basic income or universal citizen’s income that guarantees to every human being, independently of age, gender, sexual orientation, civil or employment status, the right to live in material conditions of dignity. To this end, a regular cash payment, financed by tax reforms and covered by the state budget, and sufficient to cover his or her basic needs, is recognised as a right of citizenship of every member-resident of the society, whatever his or her other sources of income may be.

In conclusion, if there are good reasons for upholding BI in situations of economic growth, falling unemployment and encouraging tendencies in the standard social indicators, there are even more cogent arguments in its favour in a situation of crisis and of attacks on social and labour rights. It might even be said, moreover, that the impact of this crisis will be exacerbated by the absence of a commitment to proposals such as BI in the times of economic prosperity. BI would not only be an important tool for combating poverty, closing the inequality gap and advancing towards providing the guarantee of a dignified life for all people, but it would also be a powerful instrument for social and political change that would permit a reordering of social relations in favour of freedom, autonomy, respect and recognition of men and women of all conditions. A society in which nobody lacks the basic necessities is good for everyone. It is the only society worth striving for.

Freeing men and women from the scourge of hunger and need, of fear on a daily basis, of lack of time, of insecurity over the present and uncertainty about the future, means building up citizenship, broadening the spaces for social and union organisation, strengthening the capacity for political struggle of the broad-based sectors, as well as creating better conditions for citizen participation and civil activism. BI is one of the badly-needed elements that should be taken into account as a driving force for a social transformation that guarantees the right to exist for all people and takes us closer to the longed-for objective of a freer, more equal and more fraternal society.

Rubén M. Lo Vuolo is President of the Red Argentina por el Ingreso Ciudadano (www.ingresociudadano.org), Daniel Raventós is President of Red Renta Básica (www.redrentabasica.org) and Pablo Yanes is President of Ingreso Ciudadano Universal de México (www.icu.org.mx).

Translated by Pablo Yanes Thomas

Original in Spanish: http://www.sinpermiso.info/textos/index.php?id=3550

 

 

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