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In today’s newsletter:
Should we introduce Universal Basic Income?
Why is this infantilising Government is turning us all into wards of the state?
The super-rich want a wealth tax
“Britain’s investment minister [Jason Stockwood] has revealed there are talks within government about introducing a universal basic income (UBI)”, the Financial Times [ [link removed] ] reported this week. Stockwood and his allies believe that the adoption of Artificial Intelligence is going to lead to mass unemployment, and that UBI is the best way to cushion that blow.
Both of these claims can be challenged.
First of all, it is worth restating the reason why technological progress does not generally lead to unemployment.
“Technology X leads to massive job losses in sector Y” sounds bad. “Technology X leads to massive efficiency improvements in sector Y” sounds great. But both statements describe the same thing.
As long as Y is a reasonably competitive industry, efficiency improvements will, in due course, be passed on to consumers in the form of lower prices. This means that consumers are now richer. They will now demand goods and services in some other sector, Z, that they could not previously afford (or only sporadically). Somebody has to provide these goods and services, and in this way, the same process that destroys jobs in sector Y also leads to the creation of new ones in sector Z. Employment shifts from Y to Z, but its overall level remains broadly the same, and everyone is richer.
This pattern is hard to spot in the short term, because it is rarely dramatic. But it is crystal clear in long-term time series. For example, YouGov recently published their Dining Out Report 2025 UK, which is part of a publication series in which they look at how dining habits differ between generations, as well as between Britain and other countries. Three generations ago, such a report would have made no sense whatsoever. In the 1950s, the ONS’s Family Expenditure Survey did not even have a category called ‘dining out’ yet – not because nobody was dining out, but because, as a proportion of the average household’s budget, it was not big enough to deserve a category of its own. Britain was simply not rich enough to sustain a hospitality industry big enough to attract the attention of statisticians. People still had to reserve the bulk of their budgets for necessities, with not enough left for nice-to-have things. You could say the same about the entire leisure and entertainment industry, broadly defined.
Some argue that this time is different, and that the AI revolution is not simply a repetition of the widespread adoption of computers in the 1980s, or of the internet in the 1990s. Maybe so, and that’s a good enough reason to do something, but not to introduce a policy with potentially much bigger downsides.
Which leads us to the second part of Stockwood’s argument: UBI.
The most common argument in favour of UBI, particularly on the Left, is that people do not need economic incentives to work. It is part of our nature that we want to accomplish things.
This is true. But it also misses the point. The UBI-critical argument is not that if we had a UBI, everyone would sit around doing nothing. Of course people would do something. But what a UBI would do is sever the link between our activities and market demand. We would see a huge increase in the number of people who would want to be novelists, musicians, artists, actors, or full-time political activists. People would write Substacks on wine, and things like that. (OK, bad example [ [link removed] ]...)
That’s not ‘doing nothing’, but it would mean flooding sectors that are already saturated even now.
UBI is a ‘Left-coded’ idea, in the sense that most of its supporters are found on the political Left. But it is not an inherently left-wing idea. There are classical liberals who are sympathetic to it, and there are Marxists who are against it (for reasons I don’t have the wordcount to get into today).
Liberal sympathisers argue that if we had UBI, we could get rid of all the welfare bureaucracy, and especially, of means-testing, with all its anti-work incentives.
They have a point. I prefer a targeted, conditional safety net to a UBI, but I accept that that involves some bureaucracy and adverse incentives. Income transfers do not just target themselves: someone needs to do the targeting. A targeted system needs welfare bureaucrats, whose job it is to establish who is entitled to transfer payments, and to how much. Those bureaucrats need to collect and verify information about people’s income, assets, and family status. That’s not great, and I’m not exactly in love with that system.
However: we could also save administrative expenditure if we just gave every police department in the country identical budgets, regardless of differences in crime rates, types of crime, local wage levels etc. But that would surely make policing less efficient overall, even if it led to some administrative savings.
Similarly, a welfare system in which James Dyson, the Duke of Westminster, Alan Sugar, J.K. Rowling and Rishi Sunak are entitled to benefits does not strike me as ‘efficient’, even if it is unbureaucratic.
UBI is a dead end. We are better off trying to simplify the welfare system we have, and improve work incentives within it. The introduction of Universal Credit was already a step in that direction, and this agenda can be built upon.
Kristian Niemietz
Editorial Director
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IEA Podcast: Head of Media Reem Ibrahim is joined by Director General David Frost and Editorial Director Kristian Niemietz to discuss whether there is reason for optimism and Universal Basic Income —IEA YouTube [ [link removed] ]
This infantilising Government is turning us all into wards of the state
by David Frost
If this Government and the Labour Party [ [link removed] ] stand for any political philosophy at all – and that is pretty hard to discern at the moment – it is the belief that “the Government knows best”, that state authorities have better insight than you into how you should spend your money and live your own life.
This world view drives the relentless growth of government spending and state power which we see every day. All through British society, power is shifting from the individual to the collective, from the political to the bureaucratic, from the local to the distant. Police forces are to be regrouped [ [link removed] ]. Local government is being reorganised to replace one two-tier system with another, more remote form. And everywhere people face constant tinkering and disempowering change that makes life more complicated for no good reason.
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Callum Price, director of communications at the Institute of Economic Affairs said: “All government bodies, the Bank of England included, should only be concerned with doing the job that they have been created to do to the best of their ability. This means keeping costs down as much as possible and resisting mission creep.
“Tying unnecessary baubles onto the requirements for procured contracts that do not affect the primary role of the contract will only drive up costs, increase inefficiency, and reduce competition.”
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Watch a clip on X here [ [link removed] ]!
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