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1st May 2017: “Work is so much more than a job”

On the First of May – traditionally the festival of Spring, new life, and hope – Unconditional Basic Income Europe (UBIE) joins the world celebrating International Workers Day, established originally to mark working people’s fight to win back control over their own time.

Brussels, 1st May 2017. With pressure mounting on traditional paid work through neoliberal policies and automation, we see Unconditional Basic Income as the idea that will deliver new hope for people suffering from stressful working conditions, insufficient wages or meaningless jobs.

Today, many are working far too hard just for survival, often needing two or three jobs to get by, often loaded down by debt. Others are cut out of the labour market altogether and exist on debt, charity and/or welfare. Many waste their talents in meaningless ‘bullshit jobs’. This is damaging to everyone’s family and community life, physical and mental health.

“With basic income, every worker will have more options to say ‘No’ to work seen as senseless while being better able to do work seen as needed. We will have more ‘good work’ that is authentic,” says Ulrich Schachtschneider, sociologist from Oldenburg, Germany and board member of Unconditional Basic Income Europe.

Back in 1930, John Maynard Keynes predicted that his grandchildren would be working 15 hour weeks for their livelihoods. Today, when technology could make this a reality, most developed economies are heading towards longer working times and lower wages. Often workers’ organisations end up supporting these developments out of fear of being left without any income at all.

Despite the European Union’s 2020 goals, poverty is now on the rise again, and wealth inequality is now at its worst since the industrial revolution began. There are more jobs, but income growth has only been seen by the top 5% of wage-earners.

Basic income is therefore a necessary solution to start closing the inequality gap, to unlink survival from paid work. This would give working people control over their time, whether spent in paid jobs, in other socially useful work or in leisure activities.

On May Day, Unconditional Basic Income Europe calls on everyone to stand with all who struggle for shorter hours, better working conditions, higher pay and more meaningful work. Equally we stand with all who care unpaid for family and friends, our communities and our environment, all who work for a better society.

 

PRESS RELEASE
1st May 2017: “Work is so much more than a job”
Unconditional Basic Income Europe
www.basicincome-europe.org
@basicincomeEU
On facebook

Design the International “United UBI Flag of the People of Earth”

Submissions are open to all people of all ages everywhere! Phone pictures are accepted! All submissions will be reviewed by an international committee TBD.

This Flag design submission form will remain open until December 31st 2017.

A selection process will help select the design and a final design will be presented on May 1st 2018 to celebrate International Basic Income Day 2018.

The idea for this collaborative effort was inspired by the thousands of submissions in the process of creating the new South African flag.

News updates about this worldwide project will be released on BasicIncomeDay.com /.org or UBImovement.com

Send in your flag design RIGHT HERE!

http://basicincomeday.com/#text_208

2017 is the 125th anniversary of the first Wolverhampton May Day

This year is the 125th anniversary of the first Wolverhampton May Day in 1892

doors open 6-45pm bouncy castle, mehndi hand-painting, bar and stalls + later free food

Headline Act: – The Bricklin Delta Blues Band
plus Tim Martin, Black Country protest singer songwriter
+ Reckless bboy crew
One Love International reggae sound system

speakers:

  • Beryl Jones RMT – Save the Guard
  • Graham Stevenson, WMidlands Combined Authority Mayor candidate Communist Party of Britain
  • Friends of the Women Chainmakers
  • Indian Workers Association (GB)

With basic income, tomorrow we celebrate Machine Labour Day

cartoon-robot-labor-dayWhat would you do with a monthly salary, separate and in addition to any other salary, but earned as a right of citizenship and sufficient for you to meet your most basic needs for life? That’s basic income, and that’s what Basic Income Day is about in recognition of the 21st century.

Popularly known as May Day or Labour Day, May 1st has long been a day to internationally recognize the contributions of the global labor movement and its many struggles and achievements over the years. However, where unions once empowered labor and gave us the 40-hour week and the 8-hour day, globalization and advances in technology have severely eroded the ability of unions to effect change.

As automation of the workplace continues to the tune of potentially eliminating half of all current jobs by 2033, and in addition eroding any sense of financial security or consumer buying power through the growth of part-time jobs, low-paid work, temp labor, gig labor, freelancing, and zero-hour contracts, unconditional basic incomerepresents the ability to empower all labor on an individual basis. A newly gained ability to say “No” to any and all employers would have an undeniable effect on individual bargaining power. That means greater sharing of profits and higher wages, better hours and workplace conditions, more benefits, etc.

The achievement of basic income would be the achievement of a new voluntary contract on more equal footing between employer and employee, including the empowerment of the employee to become their own employer by UBI’s functioning as venture capital for the people. It would mean a new age of greater equality, innovation,productivity, and entrepreneurship, where all are finally free to pursue the goals they wish to pursue, and all work could be recognized for its societal value, instead of only paid work as it stands now. Isn’t it time we started recognizing all the important labor going unpaid?

Even Andy Stern, former President of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) in a forthcoming book explains how basic income is the future of the labor movement, and the policy we must all together now strive for in the 21st century. It’s an idea whose time has come.

This is the century of technological emancipation from labor itself. We made it. We’re here. We need only actually embrace it. Unemployment is not something to fear. It is something to welcome.

Without basic income, on the 1st of May we celebrate Human Labour Day.

With basic income, tomorrow we celebrate Machine Labour Day.

So what can you do?

There are many ways to support the idea and to help grow the movement for Basic Income. For one, take part in Basic Income Day by supporting Thunderclap and by changing your profile photos and sharing basic income content across all social media networks on May 1st. Last year we reached 700,000 people. This year, let’s reach over 1 million!

What else can you do any day of the year?

Join the growing global movement to create an income floor for everyone.

Opinion’s about Basic Income Day on May 1st.

For all who don’t like the idea of basic income day on may  day or want to have an other day for basic income day,  some positive comments. Do you want your positive comment published, please dont hesitate to send us your piece of writing.

Basic Income Day is a Great Idea, and Especially on May Day!

ScottSantensIn a recent opinion piece published here on May 2nd, Jurgen De Wispelaere made a case for the need to change Basic Income Day to a date other than May 1st. As the organizer of the Reddit Basic Income community’s involvement in promoting Basic Income Day for the past two years, I’ve been invited to respond to his criticism. This is my response and I will start with a question.

Why does the labor movement exist?

Think about that question for a moment. What is the ultimate goal and purpose of the entire labor movement? From whence did it arise? Where is it now? Where will it be in 50 years? And how do we best respect the history of the movement as time goes on?

In a recent piece titled “Ours to Master”, Peter Frase writing for Jacobin magazine makes the case for what he refers to as “enlightened Luddism,” where there should no longer exist in the logic of labor a short-sighted push against innovative new technologies. Advancing technology should be embraced for all it is capable of achieving. If a machine can do someone’s work, better and cheaper, it should. The problem is not technology’s elimination of jobs. The problem is in not properly distributing the resulting gains. So how should labor best go about doing that? Well, according to Frase…

“Winning a share of the fruits of automation for the rest of us requires victory at the level of the state rather than the individual workplace. This could be done through a universal basic income, a minimum payment guaranteed to all citizens completely independent of work. If pushed by progressive forces, the UBI would be a non-reformist reform that would also quicken automation by making machines more competitive against workers better positioned to reject low wages. It would also facilitate labor organization by acting as a kind of strike fund and cushion against the threat of joblessness. A universal basic income could defend workers and realize the potential of a highly developed, post-scarcity economy; it could break the false choice between well-paid workers or labor-saving machines, strong unions or technological advancement.”

A few very important ideas need to be understood here. In the 21st century, the labor movement will require winning basic income as a key victory, so as to not only win the gains of technology away from only continuing to fall into the hands of owners of capital, but to actually further empower the labor movement itself through enabling a massive general strike potential the likes of which has never before existed in all of history. Additionally, by achieving the ability for all workers to say “No” to unsatisfactory wages and conditions, the bargaining power of every single worker will be increased.

In other words, basic income is not the enemy of the labor movement. It’s its best friend.

It’s for this reasoning that a day such as Labour Day in the years ahead should galvanize labor around the idea of making technology work for workers – all workers – including those involved in all forms of unpaid labor involving care work like parenting (you know, that kind of work that makes new workers). And it should do so through a 21stcentury fight for universal basic income.

Basic Income Day is not antagonistic to Labour Day. It is synergistic. Its purpose is not to step on the accomplishments of labor in previous centuries, but to honor them and to propel the movement into a future of even greater accomplishments. Yes, people have died for the labor movement. People died on May 1st, 1929 fighting for the rights of workers too. And they were there for the same reason a group of coal miners went on strike on May 1st, 1926. They were there for the same reason the 1st International Workers Day was organized on May 1st, 1889. They were there for the same reason workers in the US called for a general strike for an 8-hour workday on May 1st, 1886, days prior to the bombing in Chicago on May 4th. And they were essentially there for the same reason the American Equal Rights Association was formed on May 1st, 1866.

What is that reason? The ultimate reason is the answer to the question I posed at the beginning: “Why does the labor movement exist?”

The labor movement exists because it is its right to exist, because humans have a right to exist. The labor movement exists because work should not only benefit the individual worker, but all workers in solidarity and even all of humanity in ultimate solidarity, not just the owners of capital. And the labor movement will cease to exist, if it does not rally around the idea of a basic income guarantee for all. The owners of technology will see to that, and so the labor movement must come to see it as well. This is a matter of equal economic rights, and these rights must be fought for and won.

Without fighting for and winning a basic income for all, unions will continue losing power through a continuing shift in the way we all work from what was once secure full-time jobs in manufacturing that complemented a labor movement, to what is increasingly insecure part-time jobs and globalized freelance labor involving zero-hour contracts and continually varying schedules. What work is shifting to makes it extremely difficult to gain leverage over capital.

The labor movement needs basic income if it is to not only survive but flourish. Workers need the ability to choose to work for themselves and to decline working for others, and that is only possible through basic income. Workers also should be able to benefit from technological gains, through either increased incomes or decreased work hours or greater benefits or even ownership. Working for others should be a choice, and that choice needs to be won by workers for all workers, whether traditionally seen as work or not.

That is universal solidarity and that is Basic Income Day.

I also personally see Basic Income Day as far more respectful to all that workers have fought for over the years – and some even died for – than to watch the modern labor movement continue fighting to work instead of for the freedom from work, or to let the labor movement fade away entirely as human labor gets replaced by machine labor.

What is the purpose of a labor union, anyway? I mean, when we get down to the core aim. Well, what is the purpose of a car company? The CEO who believes a car company’s purpose is to make cars is actually both incorrect and short-sighted. The real purpose of a car company is to enable the transportation of its customers in a way that always improves. Getting stuck on an existing means of providing transport, such as a car, is an obstacle to progress. A company should always seek ways to improve quality for its consumers. Cars are not the endpoint of the how to get a consumer from point A to point B problem, and the company that fails to see this will fail as a company because another company will innovate a new and better way.

It’s for the same reasoning that unions should stop to consider their own purpose. Is the purpose of labor unions to perpetuate themselves in current form? Is their purpose to increase wages and decrease hours through greater bargaining power for only those who are members? What will happen to labor unions in a world that no longer requires human labor? Is there a desire to celebrate May 1st, 2050 looking back at how people used to be able to live good lives, back when labor unions still existed?

The labor movement needs to recognize what year it is, just as all the rest of us do. Technology and globalization exist and we must recognize the effects these are already having on all of us. Basic income is the real “fight of the century”, and labor must not only join the fight, but lead it. If a truly universal basic income is to be won, in a way that grows over time to be more than basic, it must come from the left. The right, although also supportive of basic income, seems more likely to support a version that favors capital over labor. To be won in progressive form as a growing share of continually increasing national productivity will be a fight for the left to win.

Winning this fight for a universal basic income will begin at step one and that is realizing basic income is what the labor movement has actually been fighting for all along, without even knowing it – the right of a human being to the fruits of one’s own labor and to life itself.

We all have the right to greater bargaining power. We all have the right to never again need to worry about our next meal or about a roof over our heads. We all have the right for our labor to be replaced by machines and to benefit from this replacement. And so we all have the right to a basic income.

That’s the message of Basic Income Day, and it’s a message for all workers, past and present, to convey every Labour Day, and International Workers’ Day, and May Day from now until the day we come together to remember how we all once were compelled to labor for others in order to live.

 

This article was first published on basicincome.org http://www.basicincome.org/news/2015/05/opinion-basic-income-day-is-a-great-idea-and-especially-on-may-day/

About Scott Santens

has written 8 articles on basicincome.org

Writer living in New Orleans, Louisiana. Moderator of the /r/BasicIncome community on Reddit, and Founder of The BIG Patreon Creator Pledge for the online crowdsourcing of basic incomes.

 

May first was never a fight for labour but always for income!

FOTO-FELIX-COELN-IMG_0277-BLOG

If unions were our allies, they allready would support an Uncondidional Bais Income. They do not! In Germany we have smaler sections of the Union for the public sector fighting for it – but they don’t get a chance to overcome the resistance within their own folks. So that’s about it.

I would love to wellcome all the unions. But if I cannot, because they reject even considering this progressive idea of a BIG – well … – I will not stop just to make it comfortable for them ….

In history redesigning a holiday have happened always and replaced a feast by something else – see Easter (Spring-Celebration), Christmas (Winter-Solstice) and so on.

Also I don’t consider the BIG only “combating poverty, social exclusion and economic inequality” – I consider BIG a HUMAN RIGHT. I demand human dignity and the realisation of real freedom and real democracy. To get rid of poverty is just a wellcome sideeffect.

We need to understand:
there was never a fight for labour – or “work” – it always was a fight for income!

[as we wrongly use that word as it is the “biggest stupidity of the 21st century” (Guy Standing)].

And no – it is not the saying part, it is the listening part. I can clearly state that I always communicate the need of rethinking “work” (now used as in averything that can be done by any human being) – and also that unions will not be obsolete once we have a BIG, because we still will need organized forces to propose good working conditions.

But – as always with human beings – those who are active in unions have their own strategy in mind – like minimum wages. Minimum wages are great as long as we don’t have a BIG implemented – after that it not only will be useless, but also hindering.

Fact is – and we need to face this reality – we are interfering with union’s strategies (at least as long as both groups don’t find a way to build up solidarity – which is not a one-way road).

Rushing-ahead-obedience is not a strategy that will help anyone – if unions are the natural allies – well, then, let them come; I am waiting for a long time and urgendtly expecting those who “happily support” us
– but I will not crawl before some “potential” ally.

This article was first published on basicincome.org http://www.basicincome.org/news/2015/05/basic-income-day-is-a-great-idea-but-not-on-may-day/#comment-16091

About Felix Coeln

Felix Coeln is for around 30 years civically engaged, for example, in the emancipation work, namesake of Schulz (Sch-wulen u nd L-Esben Z Entrum, Cologne 1985 – 2003). Since 2005 Basic Income activist. Since 2010 board member of the Cologne Initiative basic income e. V., in Europe with presentations, among others for BGE go.