LET’S KILL WELFARE

It is unfortunate that the word ‘welfare’, which used to mean well-being, now implies that recipients are unfortunate people who need to be propped up by the rest of society, much to the anger of an increasing majority who resent the sense of entitlement that many welfare beneficiaries seem to have adopted.

It’s time to remove it from our vocabulary and from our economic and social system, replacing it with a NATIONAL DIVIDEND that is paid to every Australian citizen every year.

This is not just another political idea, it is an unavoidable change that will be forced upon us when robots and their artificial intelligence take over the productivity of the nation leaving millions of us without employment while the Federal Treasury absorbs the revenue of a technology driven Australia.

So, it will be smart if we plan for it now instead of having it forced upon us in panic mode.

Around a decade from now, robots will be our prime source of productivity and we will lose control of them as robots will produce more robots without human input, while more and more of us become unemployed, surplus to national need.

Already, robots are performing surgery in our hospitals and are replacing the entire cleaning profession. In time, they will replace all Taxi and Uber drivers plus everyone working on any assembly line for any manufactured goods. They will certainly replace all farm workers and fishermen.

This means that millions of Australians will be unemployed and unemployable, but will need money to live as well as interests to occupy their minds, fill their time and give them a reason for being.

This will call for the provision of highly innovative and mind absorbing recreation programs as well as educational and cultural opportunities and health initiatives, most of which will be run by robots.

So, as an absolute basic, our Treasury will have no option but to pay every Australian citizen an annual national dividend to cover the basic needs of living. It will not be taxable and people will get it without having to apply for it as it will be an automatic right. It will be at least the size that the age pension is now and will grow in value as robots make the world more prosperous. Interestingly, the simplicity of its advent will cause about 20000 public servants to find new occupation as they will not be needed in their current jobs.

Those voters who do have a job or own a business and who do not want the National Dividend will be able to elect for it to be paid to a National Foundation which will finance improvements to the quality of life nationally. (Indeed, it could be that many of us will get to own a few highly productive robots).

The overall social benefit of this will be that no one in Australia will be on welfare, absolutely no one.

Stigma will disappear. Few will ask whether or not you have a job. If we are wise, we will do our utmost to get a job or at least become an investor. Either way, you will then pay taxes along with the robots and/or their owners. Indeed, our biggest personal challenge will be to get involved in recreation and education and culture as an absolute basic.

Our most significant problem is that Australia has an awful track record of planning for the future.

The most appalling example of this has been our failure to plan for the rapid ageing of the population and its huge impact on society in every way.

Additionally, we have been irresponsibly negligent about climate change and we have disgracefully failed to drought proof the driest continent on the planet.

Above all, the idea of paying a National Dividend to every Australian will scare the hell out of our political establishment. They simply won’t be able to cope with it as nothing in their silly little right and left wing ideological dogmas provides for anything like it.

This means that we have to do something about who is running this country.

The LNP, ALP, Greens, Hanson, etc are useless in their current irresponsible form. We need a horde of intelligent independents in our Parliament and we must totally change our highly political and very unprofessional public service that grinds Australia to a halt.

Actually, all of this presents us with a highly exciting future. Our world will totally change, our minds have the capacity to expand with it and the scope of human achievement can reach beyond our current imagination.

The key issue is that no matter what is the otherwise infinite capacity of robots, they will never ever be able to have or exercise a conscience. This remains our greatest asset in the quest for relevance in the years ahead.

Yours at large

Everald

There are two books that you may wish to enjoy.

One is my book on the life of John Flynn called The Man on the Twenty Dollar Notes.

The second is a book called Goondeen in which I join with Henry Palaszczuk and Albert Holt in reviewing the history of Australia in our lifetime.

Send me an email at compton@everaldatlarge.com and I will send signed copies of them to you with a bill for 30 dollars plus postage.

If you would like to receive an email advising you whenever I make a new Post, please indicate opposite or on my website everaldcompton.com

6 thoughts on “LET’S KILL WELFARE

  1. Hugh Videion

    Dear Mr Compton,

    I have been receiving your very informative and thought-provoking posts for many years and enjoyed reading them.

    However, your latest post titled “Let’s Kill Welfare” leaves me speechless, particularly when you write that robots will effectively rule the world and make human effort largely redundant.

    I’m a qualified professional engineer and I think I know a little about robots. I believe what you are suggesting as the future with these machines is utterly preposterous. Remember, a human being with a brain must ‘code’ these machines before they can do anything.

    I can only hope you had your tongue firmly in your cheek when you wrote this post.

    If not, and you are serious, kindly take my name off your mailing list.

    Thanks and best regards,

    Hugh Videion

    Chartered Engineer (retired)

  2. Tim Bullen

    everald charles mollison’s draft constitution for australia has a political/government structure model that COULD produce the parliament you want…since that requires constitutional change/reform i’d say the chances are somewhere between buckleys and none you say dividend i say guaranteed income…many wealthy social welfare democracies are talking about this…in fiat currency systems it’s possible…just print up money and hand it out…for individuals though the problem is larger than that…it’s existential…what am i doing here?…sitting on my keester doing nothing looks like…maybe homo sapiens was created to be born, do nothing then die..i can see problems…idle hands are devils workmate cheers tim bullen

  3. Richard Hield

    Everald,
    I enjoy reading your creative thinking.I only our politicians did a little of planning for the future instead of planning the balance of handouts needed to win the next election.
    You are right about robots and the growing massive unemployment,bringing great social violence.
    A social dividend is not something that occurred to me.
    Long may you produce productive ideas!
    Richard Hield

  4. Terry Bowring

    Hi Everald you seem to have obtained some preliminary info on how we can inculcate intelligent creative robots without a conscience to come up with a proven concept to eg drought proof the country that is economic and creates wealth . Who this benefits here and overseas will be interesting as such a project would require many options many of which would need pre-testing as scale up proceeds

    terry

  5. Charles Mollison

    Dear Everald
    There is so much wisdom in your latest post but too few the definitive answers that are encapsulated in the Draft Constitution of which you have a copy.
    Firstly, replacing the outdated political party system with parliaments of true representatives of communities is explained in detail. (Pages 69 – 74 and 79 – 86)
    Secondly, a national dividend based on the universal ownership of Australia’s natural resources is spelled out. (Page 177)
    Thirdly, a gradual transition to less and less work should start now by abandoning the idea of week-ends. Enterprises of all sorts should operate 7 days per week with at least two people in each job with one working three days per week and the other four days per week.
    And of course all the totally ineffecient taxes we currently endure should be discontinued in favour of an Automatic Debit Tax in which .1% is deducted from all withdrawals by our banks and passed directly to our Treasury.

    Regards

    Charles Mollison
    0421 126 395
    cobbscrossing@bigpond.com

  6. Col Clifford

    Hello Everald,

    Are you available at 9.45 on Wednesday morning to talk to Graham about your latest offering?

    Col Clifford
    Producer

    Southern Cross Austereo
    T 07-4637-5111
    E Col.Clifford@sca.com.au
    A Level 4, Easternwell Building, 10 Russell Street, Toowoomba, QLD, 4350

    [http://externalimages.sca.com.au/sca-banner.gif]

    [http://externalimages.sca.com.au/emaillogos/4ad3bf13-5873-4023-bb5c-047012f094b9.jpg]
    [http://externalimages.sca.com.au/marketing/9596ac34-1593-4172-87df-da12997c8499.gif]

    Notice: This email message is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient of this email, you must not review, use, disclose or distribute, the information contained in it. Please notify the sender by reply email and delete all copies of the original message if you have received it in error. We do not guarantee this email is error or virus free.

    If you do not wish to receive any further emails from SCA please contact the sender by reply email. This email was sent in accordance with the principles of the Spam Act by Southern Cross Austereo Pty Ltd (SCA) of 257 Clarendon Street, South Melbourne VIC 3205, Australia.

Comments are closed.