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  • Universal basic income is an idea that's older than America, where Thomas Paine was for it

  • at the founding of the country, he called it the citizen's dividend.

  • Decades later Martin Luther King, Jr. was for it.

  • He championed it before he was assassinated in 1968.

  • And Milton Friedman and 1,000 economists signed a study in the late '60s saying this would

  • be tremendous for both the economy and society.

  • It received so much support that it passed the House of Representatives twice under Richard

  • Nixon in 1971.

  • And the only reason it didn't become law was that Democrats in the Senate wanted an even

  • higher income threshold.

  • So a universal basic income has been with this country for a long time.

  • And it actually became law in one state in 1982 where now every person in Alaska gets

  • between $1,000 and $2,000 a year, no questions asked, from a petroleum dividend.

  • It's wildly popular, has created thousands of jobs, has improved children's health, has

  • decreased income inequality, and it was passed by a Republican governor, who made this argument

  • to the Alaskan people: Who would you rather get the oil money the government, who's just

  • going to mess it up, or you?

  • And the Alaskan people said 'us', and now it's so popular that a majority of Alaskans

  • which is a deeply conservative state generally the majority of Alaskans said they would accept

  • higher taxes to pay for this dividend moving forward.

  • My plan, the Freedom Dividend, would pay every American adult, starting at age 18, $1,000

  • a month or $12,000 a year.

  • This would push every American adult to just below the poverty line, which is $12,770 a

  • year right now.

  • But this money would get spent in Main Street businesses, on car repairs, food and tutoring

  • for your kids, the occasional night out, a hardware store.

  • It would go right back into our economy and would create 2 million new jobs, would grow

  • the consumer economy by 8% to 10%, would make our families and communities stronger, would

  • improved children's health and nutrition, would improve everyone's mental health and

  • productivity.

  • It would decrease domestic violence and hospital visits.

  • So universal basic income is a powerful policy that helps improve human welfare, and that's

  • why I'm proposing it as the centerpiece of my candidacy for president.

  • So the way I propose to pay for a universal basic income is based on a problem we have

  • right now in our country, which is that more and more work and value is getting sucked

  • up and soaked up by a handful of technology companies.

  • Amazon, for example, is doing another $20 billion in commerce every year, and it's now

  • pushing 30% of American malls and Main Street stores into closing.

  • And so for the average American, you're seeing your Main Street stores close, and unfortunately

  • being a retail worker is the most common job in the United States.

  • The average retail worker is a 39-year-old woman making between $11 and $12 an hour.

  • So the problem America is facing is that even as Amazon is soaking up more and more value,

  • they're not paying much in the way of taxes.

  • You probably saw the headline where last year Amazon enjoyed record profits and paid zero

  • in federal taxes.

  • And so the way we pay for a universal basic income is we put the American people in position

  • to benefit from all this innovation by passing a value added tax, which is something that's

  • already in effect in every other advanced economy.

  • With a value added tax, the American public would receive a sliver of every Amazon sale,

  • every Google search, every Facebook ad, every robot truck mile.

  • And because our economy is now so vast at $20 trillion, up $5 trillion in the last 12

  • years alone, a value added tax at even half the European level would generate $800 billion

  • in revenue which combined with current spending, economic growth, and putting this buying power

  • into Americans hands, cost savings on things like incarceration, homelessness services,

  • and emergency room health care, and then the value gains from having a stronger, more educated,

  • more productive, more entrepreneurial population.

  • There's one study that showed that if you were to reduce poverty in this country, you

  • would actually be increasing GDP by $700 billion just by making people stronger, healthier,

  • better educated, and mentally healthier.

  • And so we're going to be able to pay for this universal basic income if we put in a new

  • tax that harnesses the gains of all these new technological innovations and brings them

  • back to the American people.

Universal basic income is an idea that's older than America, where Thomas Paine was for it

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