Employment vs. Income Security

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported two days ago (May 8), that the U.S. lost 539,000 more jobs in April 2009. Unemployment now stands at 8.9 percent, twice the level of two years ago. This does not include “discouraged workers” who have stopped looking for work or part-time workers who want to work full-time.

Nor does the figure reflect the plight of those whose earnings are insufficient for the necessities of life, don’t allow for adequate health care, etc. The federal minimum wage of $6.55 an hour provides a person with annual income of $13,654, placing the person above the federal policy level of $10,830. But this assumes the person is paid for a full 2080 hours a year, can find an affordable room or apartment, has no unusual expenses, and probably drives an old used car. We all know that a person or family in such circumstances is barely surviving. Yet the number in the U.S. and around the world who are in such straits, or worse, is growing.

We are conditioned to think that the only way the growing number of people without sufficient job-related income can improve their lot is through more or better jobs or government relief programs, preferably temporary. The exceptions are the elderly on Social Security who may or may not have supplementary retirement income, or unique categories of people such as the permanently disabled, etc.

The issues are complex, but what should be examined is whether income policy should be based on the presumption that employment and income security are inextricably linked. In a technological society, worker productivity is constantly increasing. This means that employment is becoming more and more unreliable as a means of income generation.

The answer is to pay people a “productivity dividend.” Society as a whole should benefit from the impact of technology, not just those who own businesses, including the financiers who control the monetary system that allows business to function.

In my “Cook Plan” the productivity dividend becomes a $1,000 a month payment to any person who applies. This would serve as a basic income guarantee for everyone while supplementing earned income for those who do work. Those who do not work could enroll in job retraining, perform volunteer work, or retire earlier than is presently allowed.

Yes, in a sense we would be paying people not to work. But with an income they would still be consumers, so would support the rest of the population with jobs. It’s the way to channel the benefits of a modern economy for the benefit of all. If we can pay $6 trillion to bail out the financial system so they can put people deeper into debt we can afford to pay a basic income guarantee.


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Challenger Disaster

In January 1986 Cook became the first NASA official to testify publicly on the space agency's prior knowledge of flaws in the solid rocket booster O-ring joints that destroyed Challenger and took the lives of its seven astronauts. He told his story in the book Challenger Revealed, published in 2007. Publisher's Weekly wrote of the book: "Easily the most informative and important book on the disaster."

The Cook Plan

What I am calling the 'Cook Plan' is to pay each resident of the U.S. a dividend, by means of vouchers for the necessities of life, in the amount of $1,000 per month per capita starting immediately as our fair share of the resources of the earth and the productivity of the modern industrial economy. The money would then be deposited in a new network of community savings banks to capitalize lending for consumers, small businesses, and family farming.

Omna Last

The Lite in the Heart can be experienced when there is enough Love awareness and a strong enough energy field for consciousness to enter deep within the Heart to the place where the Atma lives, shining more brightly than a million Suns.