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Universal basic income is routinely misrepresented as a plan to replace work entirely—an imagined future where government checks supplant paychecks and social decay follows. That caricature makes it easy to declare UBI unrealistic or dangerous, then redirect attention to wage subsidies framed as the responsible solution.

It’s a familiar move. It’s also wrong.

Universal basic income is not a plan to end work. It is a plan to ensure that work is no longer the sole gatekeeper of survival in an economy that increasingly rewards ownership over labor—and now, with AI, accelerates that imbalance.

AI didn’t create today’s economic insecurity. It is intensifying it.

For decades, productivity has risen while wages stagnated. Job security eroded. The safety net became conditional, stigmatized, and full of holes. AI doesn’t change the direction of this story—it speeds it up. And yet Porter continues to argue against a version of UBI that serious advocates are not proposing.

The Straw Man That Won’t Die

Porter’s critique hinges on a fictional UBI: one where everyone receives a middle-class income and paid work disappears. He gestures at absurd price tags—“give everyone the median income”—and declares the policy unserious.

That’s like arguing public education is impossible by pricing out private boarding schools for every child.

Real-world UBI proposals are modest by design. A poverty-line UBI is a floor, not a replacement paycheck. All income is earned on top of it. The goal is not to eliminate work, but to eliminate destitution—and to give workers leverage in a labor market increasingly tilted against them.

AI Isn’t Ending Work. It Is Ending Stability.

There are two childish stories about AI and jobs: one says all jobs vanish; the other says nothing changes. Both are false.

The real threat is the wide middle: 10 to 25 percent of jobs disrupted, degraded, or hollowed out. Enough to shatter lives, destabilize politics, and crush bargaining power—without triggering a sci-fi apocalypse.

This isn’t speculation. The World Economic Forum expects 22 percent of jobs to be disrupted by 2030. McKinsey estimates nearly a third of work hours could be automated. Goldman Sachs projects that up to half of work in exposed jobs could be replaced.

That is not “the end of work.” It is the end of security for millions who still technically have jobs.

Demand Creates Jobs. Insecurity Destroys Them.

Porter frames employment as a matter of worker incentives. It isn’t. Jobs exist because demand exists. When people lose income, spending collapses, firms contract, and layoffs cascade.

A universal income floor is not just social policy—it’s macroeconomic infrastructure. It stabilizes demand during displacement shocks. It reduces the odds that productivity gains turn into recessionary spirals. Without it, AI-driven efficiency risks becoming AI-driven austerity.

The Cost Argument Is Arithmetic Theater

Critics love multiplying a universal check by the population and calling the result “the cost.” That’s not analysis; it’s propaganda.

The meaningful number is net cost—after taxes, offsets, and benefit consolidation. Recent work by economists Karl Widerquist and Jack Rossbach shows that a poverty-line UBI would cost roughly 2 percent of GDP on a net basis.

Here’s the historical irony Porter ignores: as a share of GDP, such a UBI has become cheaper over time. In 1970, it would have cost over 6 percent of GDP. Today, it’s closer to 2.

If anything, we waited too long.

Universality Is the Point

Porter treats universality as waste—money “given” to people who don’t need it. But universality is what makes a floor durable, automatic, and non-punitive.

Means-tested programs punish volatility, discourage work, and train people to fear the system meant to help them. Wage subsidies like the EITC tie survival even more tightly to employment, excluding caregivers, volunteers, and anyone whose labor isn’t formally waged.

UBI counts everyone. That is not a bug. It is the design.

UBI Is a Dividend, Not a Handout

Porter concedes that AI will funnel wealth upward and suggests taxing capital harder. Fine. But taxation alone frames the public as supplicants.

A universal basic income reframes us as shareholders.

AI rests on a vast collective inheritance: public research, public education, shared data, and generations of accumulated knowledge. As economist Gar Alperovitz argues, much of modern wealth is a “gift of the past.” A universal dividend is how a portion of that gift is returned by right, not by charity.

The Real Choice

This debate is not about whether people should work. It’s about whether survival should depend entirely on jobs that are becoming less stable, less fairly compensated, and increasingly automated.

Rejecting UBI doesn’t preserve work. It preserves desperation.

Universal basic income is not a plan for a world without jobs. It is a plan for a world where jobs alone can no longer be trusted to deliver security, dignity, or democracy—and where AI’s gains are shared broadly enough that the technology actually works for everyone.

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