1 00:00:01,607 --> 00:00:05,189 I'd like to start with a simple question. 2 00:00:06,000 --> 00:00:10,125 Why do the poor make so many poor decisions? 3 00:00:11,852 --> 00:00:13,551 I know it's a harsh question, 4 00:00:13,551 --> 00:00:15,244 but take a look at the data. 5 00:00:15,416 --> 00:00:17,374 The poor borrow more, save less, 6 00:00:17,374 --> 00:00:20,153 smoke more, exercise less, drink more 7 00:00:20,153 --> 00:00:21,982 and eat less healthfully. 8 00:00:22,483 --> 00:00:23,644 Why? 9 00:00:24,651 --> 00:00:26,202 Well, the standard explanation 10 00:00:26,202 --> 00:00:29,440 was once summed up by the British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher. 11 00:00:29,440 --> 00:00:32,824 And she called poverty "a personality defect." 12 00:00:33,196 --> 00:00:34,198 (Laughter) 13 00:00:34,713 --> 00:00:36,935 A lack of character, basically. 14 00:00:37,617 --> 00:00:41,901 Now, I'm sure not many of you would be so blunt. 15 00:00:42,647 --> 00:00:46,521 But the idea that there's something wrong with the poor themselves 16 00:00:46,521 --> 00:00:49,038 is not restricted to Mrs. Thatcher. 17 00:00:49,435 --> 00:00:52,662 Some of you may believe that the poor should be held responsible 18 00:00:52,662 --> 00:00:54,555 for their own mistakes. 19 00:00:54,555 --> 00:00:58,641 And others may argue that we should help them to make better decisions. 20 00:00:59,004 --> 00:01:02,800 But the underlying assumption is the same: 21 00:01:02,800 --> 00:01:05,680 there's something wrong with them. 22 00:01:06,100 --> 00:01:08,089 If we could just change them, 23 00:01:08,089 --> 00:01:10,521 if we could just teach them how to live their lives, 24 00:01:10,521 --> 00:01:12,406 if they would only listen. 25 00:01:13,258 --> 00:01:14,979 And to be honest, 26 00:01:14,979 --> 00:01:18,688 this was what I thought for a long time. 27 00:01:19,103 --> 00:01:21,241 It was only a few years ago that I discovered 28 00:01:21,241 --> 00:01:25,251 that everything I thought I knew about poverty was wrong. 29 00:01:26,415 --> 00:01:29,061 It all started when I accidentally stumbled upon a paper 30 00:01:29,061 --> 00:01:30,793 by a few American psychologists. 31 00:01:30,793 --> 00:01:32,233 They had traveled 8,000 miles, 32 00:01:32,233 --> 00:01:33,370 all the way to India, 33 00:01:33,370 --> 00:01:35,223 for a fascinating study. 34 00:01:35,223 --> 00:01:38,452 And it was an experiment with sugar cane farmers. 35 00:01:38,848 --> 00:01:42,410 You should know that these farmers collect about 60 percent 36 00:01:42,410 --> 00:01:44,567 of their annual income all at once -- 37 00:01:44,567 --> 00:01:46,299 right after the harvest. 38 00:01:46,299 --> 00:01:49,863 This means that they're relatively poor one part of the year 39 00:01:49,863 --> 00:01:51,844 and rich the other. 40 00:01:52,763 --> 00:01:57,070 The researchers asked them to do an IQ test before and after the harvest. 41 00:01:58,102 --> 00:02:02,777 What they subsequently discovered completely blew my mind. 42 00:02:03,359 --> 00:02:07,967 The farmers scored much worse on the test before the harvest. 43 00:02:08,455 --> 00:02:10,024 The effects of living in poverty, 44 00:02:10,024 --> 00:02:11,018 it turns out, 45 00:02:11,018 --> 00:02:14,373 correspond to losing 40 points of IQ. 46 00:02:14,373 --> 00:02:16,266 Now, to give you an idea, 47 00:02:16,266 --> 00:02:18,791 that's comparable to losing a night's sleep, 48 00:02:18,791 --> 00:02:21,573 or the effects of alcoholism. 49 00:02:22,735 --> 00:02:23,847 A few months later, 50 00:02:23,847 --> 00:02:25,286 I heard that Eldar Shafir, 51 00:02:25,286 --> 00:02:28,725 a professor at Princeton University and one of the authors of this study, 52 00:02:28,725 --> 00:02:30,066 was coming over to Holland, 53 00:02:30,066 --> 00:02:31,220 where I live. 54 00:02:31,220 --> 00:02:32,508 So we met up in Amersterdam 55 00:02:32,508 --> 00:02:36,411 to talk about his revolutionary new theory of poverty. 56 00:02:36,590 --> 00:02:39,624 And I can sum it up in just two words: 57 00:02:39,624 --> 00:02:41,977 scarcity mentality. 58 00:02:42,644 --> 00:02:45,025 It turns out that people behave differently 59 00:02:45,025 --> 00:02:47,217 when they perceive a thing to be scarce. 60 00:02:47,535 --> 00:02:49,774 And what that thing is doesn't much matter -- 61 00:02:49,774 --> 00:02:52,787 whether it's not enough time, money or food. 62 00:02:53,280 --> 00:02:55,041 You all know this feeling 63 00:02:55,041 --> 00:02:57,079 when you've got too much to do, 64 00:02:57,079 --> 00:03:00,648 or when you've put off breaking for lunch and your blood sugar takes a dive. 65 00:03:00,648 --> 00:03:03,528 This narrows your focus to your immediate lack -- 66 00:03:03,528 --> 00:03:05,562 to the sandwich you've got to have now, 67 00:03:05,562 --> 00:03:07,848 the meeting that's starting in five minutes, 68 00:03:07,848 --> 00:03:10,978 or the bills that have to be paid tomorrow. 69 00:03:11,122 --> 00:03:14,949 So the long-term perspective goes out the window. 70 00:03:15,905 --> 00:03:20,753 You could compare it to a new computer that's running 10 heavy programs at once. 71 00:03:21,271 --> 00:03:23,182 It gets slower and slower, 72 00:03:23,182 --> 00:03:24,198 making errors. 73 00:03:24,198 --> 00:03:26,044 Eventually it freezes 74 00:03:26,044 --> 00:03:28,174 not because it's a bad computer, 75 00:03:28,174 --> 00:03:31,073 but because it has too much to do at once. 76 00:03:31,522 --> 00:03:35,035 The poor have the same problem. 77 00:03:35,035 --> 00:03:37,848 They're not making dumb decisions because they are dumb, 78 00:03:37,848 --> 00:03:42,260 but because they're living in a context in which anyone would make dumb decisions. 79 00:03:42,594 --> 00:03:45,714 So suddenly I understood 80 00:03:45,714 --> 00:03:49,805 why so many of our anti-poverty programs don't work. 81 00:03:50,748 --> 00:03:52,943 Investments in education for example 82 00:03:52,943 --> 00:03:55,476 are often completely ineffective. 83 00:03:55,476 --> 00:03:58,432 Poverty is not a lack of knowledge. 84 00:03:58,886 --> 00:04:01,539 A recent analysis of 201 studies 85 00:04:01,539 --> 00:04:03,875 on the effectiveness of money management training 86 00:04:03,875 --> 00:04:07,648 came to the conclusion that is has almost know effect at all. 87 00:04:07,648 --> 00:04:09,117 Don't get me wrong. 88 00:04:09,117 --> 00:04:11,736 This is not to say that the poor don't learn anything -- 89 00:04:11,736 --> 00:04:14,355 they can come out wiser for sure, 90 00:04:14,355 --> 00:04:15,874 but it's not enough. 91 00:04:15,874 --> 00:04:18,900 Or as Professor Shafir told me, 92 00:04:18,900 --> 00:04:21,028 "It's like teaching someone to swim 93 00:04:21,028 --> 00:04:24,315 and then throwing them in a stormy sea." 94 00:04:24,888 --> 00:04:27,403 I still remember sitting there, 95 00:04:27,403 --> 00:04:29,098 perplexed. 96 00:04:29,298 --> 00:04:32,598 And it struck me that we could have figured this all out decades ago. 97 00:04:32,598 --> 00:04:36,058 I mean these psychologists didn't need any complicated brain scans; 98 00:04:36,058 --> 00:04:38,014 they only had to measure the farmers' IQ, 99 00:04:38,014 --> 00:04:41,118 and IQ tests were invented more that 100 years ago. 100 00:04:41,349 --> 00:04:45,398 Actually, I realized I had read about the psychology of poverty before. 101 00:04:45,658 --> 00:04:47,239 George Orwell, 102 00:04:47,239 --> 00:04:49,522 one of the greatest writers who ever lived, 103 00:04:49,522 --> 00:04:52,425 experienced poverty firsthand in the 1920s. 104 00:04:52,922 --> 00:04:54,293 "The essence of poverty," 105 00:04:54,293 --> 00:04:55,305 he wrote back then, 106 00:04:55,305 --> 00:04:58,810 is that it "annihilates the future." 107 00:04:59,347 --> 00:05:02,126 And he marveled at quote, 108 00:05:02,126 --> 00:05:03,610 "How people take it for granted 109 00:05:03,610 --> 00:05:05,329 they have the right to preach at you 110 00:05:05,329 --> 00:05:06,328 and pray over you 111 00:05:06,328 --> 00:05:08,831 as soon as your income falls below a certain level." 112 00:05:08,831 --> 00:05:13,151 Now, those words are every bit as resonant today. 113 00:05:15,225 --> 00:05:17,251 The big question is of course, 114 00:05:17,251 --> 00:05:18,714 what can be done? 115 00:05:18,714 --> 00:05:21,533 Modern economists have a few solutions up their sleeves. 116 00:05:21,533 --> 00:05:23,616 We could help the poor with their paperwork, 117 00:05:23,616 --> 00:05:26,549 or send them a text message to remind them to pay their bills. 118 00:05:26,549 --> 00:05:30,711 This type of solution is hugely popular with modern politicians. 119 00:05:31,353 --> 00:05:33,080 Mostly because, 120 00:05:33,080 --> 00:05:34,078 well, 121 00:05:34,078 --> 00:05:35,790 they cost next to nothing. 122 00:05:36,264 --> 00:05:37,716 These solutions are, 123 00:05:37,716 --> 00:05:38,746 I think, 124 00:05:38,746 --> 00:05:40,439 a symbol of this era 125 00:05:40,439 --> 00:05:42,639 in which we so often treat the symptoms, 126 00:05:42,639 --> 00:05:44,931 but ignore the underlying cause. 127 00:05:45,651 --> 00:05:48,082 So I wonder, 128 00:05:48,082 --> 00:05:51,847 why don't we just change the context in which the poor live? 129 00:05:51,847 --> 00:05:54,162 Or, going back to our computer analogy, 130 00:05:54,162 --> 00:05:56,288 why keep tinkering around with the software 131 00:05:56,288 --> 00:06:00,116 when we can easily solve the problem by installing some extra memory instead? 132 00:06:00,376 --> 00:06:01,381 At that point, 133 00:06:01,381 --> 00:06:04,110 Professor Shafir responded with a blank look. 134 00:06:04,409 --> 00:06:05,596 And after a few seconds, 135 00:06:05,596 --> 00:06:07,122 he said, 136 00:06:07,122 --> 00:06:09,969 "Oh, I get it, 137 00:06:09,969 --> 00:06:14,400 you mean you want to just hand out more money to the poor 138 00:06:14,400 --> 00:06:16,274 to eradicate poverty. 139 00:06:16,274 --> 00:06:19,992 Uh, sure, that'd be great ... 140 00:06:19,992 --> 00:06:22,406 but I'm afraid that brand of left-wing politics 141 00:06:22,406 --> 00:06:24,307 you've got in Amsterdam ... 142 00:06:24,307 --> 00:06:26,454 it doesn't exist in the States." 143 00:06:26,707 --> 00:06:31,074 But is this really an old-fashioned, leftist idea? 144 00:06:31,406 --> 00:06:33,223 I remembered reading about old plan -- 145 00:06:33,223 --> 00:06:36,749 something that has been proposed by some of history's leading thinkers. 146 00:06:37,113 --> 00:06:40,953 The philosopher Thomas More first hinted at it in his book, "Utopia," 147 00:06:40,953 --> 00:06:43,033 more than 500 years ago. 148 00:06:43,405 --> 00:06:46,979 And its proponents have spanned the spectrum from the left to the right, 149 00:06:46,979 --> 00:06:49,773 from the civil rights campaigner Martin Luther King, 150 00:06:49,773 --> 00:06:52,750 to the economist Milton Friedman. 151 00:06:53,473 --> 00:06:56,462 And it's an incredibly simple idea. 152 00:06:57,229 --> 00:07:00,564 Basic income guarantee. 153 00:07:01,427 --> 00:07:02,863 What it is? 154 00:07:03,102 --> 00:07:04,527 Well, that's easy. 155 00:07:04,839 --> 00:07:05,870 It's a monthly grant, 156 00:07:05,870 --> 00:07:07,547 enough to pay for your basic needs: 157 00:07:07,547 --> 00:07:09,429 food, shelter, education. 158 00:07:09,781 --> 00:07:11,728 It's completely unconditional, 159 00:07:11,728 --> 00:07:14,403 so no one's going to tell you what you have to do for it, 160 00:07:14,403 --> 00:07:17,166 and no one's going to tell you what you have to do with it. 161 00:07:17,166 --> 00:07:18,770 The basic income is not a favor, 162 00:07:18,770 --> 00:07:19,799 but a right. 163 00:07:19,799 --> 00:07:21,932 There's absolutely no stigma attached. 164 00:07:22,437 --> 00:07:25,226 So as I learned about the true nature of poverty, 165 00:07:25,226 --> 00:07:27,306 I couldn't stop wondering ... 166 00:07:27,306 --> 00:07:30,430 is this the idea we've all been waiting for? 167 00:07:30,779 --> 00:07:33,458 Could it really be that simple? 168 00:07:34,350 --> 00:07:36,125 And in the three years that followed, 169 00:07:36,125 --> 00:07:38,788 I read everything I could find about basic income. 170 00:07:38,788 --> 00:07:40,664 I researched the dozens of experiments 171 00:07:40,664 --> 00:07:42,735 that have been conducted all over the globe, 172 00:07:42,735 --> 00:07:43,855 and it didn't take long 173 00:07:43,855 --> 00:07:46,685 before I stumbled upon a story of a town that had done it -- 174 00:07:46,685 --> 00:07:48,336 had actually eradicated poverty -- 175 00:07:48,336 --> 00:07:50,702 but then ... 176 00:07:50,702 --> 00:07:52,693 nearly everyone forgot about it. 177 00:07:53,667 --> 00:07:56,684 This story starts in Dauphin, Canada. 178 00:07:57,065 --> 00:08:02,691 In 1974, everybody in this small town was guaranteed a basic income, 179 00:08:02,691 --> 00:08:05,589 ensuring that no one fell below the poverty line. 180 00:08:05,589 --> 00:08:07,123 And at the start of the experiment, 181 00:08:07,123 --> 00:08:10,937 an army of researchers descended on the town. 182 00:08:11,345 --> 00:08:13,876 For four years all went well. 183 00:08:14,564 --> 00:08:18,167 But then a new government was voted into power, 184 00:08:18,167 --> 00:08:21,701 and the new Canadian cabinet saw little point to the expensive experiment. 185 00:08:21,701 --> 00:08:25,978 So when it became clear there was no money left to analyze the results, 186 00:08:25,978 --> 00:08:31,145 the researchers decided to pack their files away in some 2,000 boxes. 187 00:08:32,181 --> 00:08:35,189 25 years went by, 188 00:08:35,189 --> 00:08:36,646 and then Evelyn Forget, 189 00:08:36,646 --> 00:08:37,901 a Canadian professor, 190 00:08:37,901 --> 00:08:39,141 found the records. 191 00:08:39,141 --> 00:08:43,132 And for three years she subjected the data to all manner of statistical analysis, 192 00:08:43,132 --> 00:08:44,742 and no matter what she tried, 193 00:08:44,742 --> 00:08:47,478 the results were the same every time. 194 00:08:48,009 --> 00:08:52,398 The experiment had been a resounding success. 195 00:08:53,350 --> 00:08:54,522 Evelyn Forget discovered 196 00:08:54,522 --> 00:08:57,079 that the people in Dauphin had not only become richer, 197 00:08:57,079 --> 00:08:58,643 but also smarter and healthier. 198 00:08:58,643 --> 00:09:02,496 The school performance of kids improved substantially. 199 00:09:03,166 --> 00:09:07,584 The hospitalization rate decreased by as much as 8.5 percent. 200 00:09:08,326 --> 00:09:10,156 Domestic violence incidents were down, 201 00:09:10,156 --> 00:09:11,947 as were mental health complaints. 202 00:09:12,353 --> 00:09:14,409 And people didn't quit their jobs. 203 00:09:14,709 --> 00:09:18,467 The only ones who worked a little less were new mothers and students -- 204 00:09:18,467 --> 00:09:20,391 who stayed in school longer. 205 00:09:21,088 --> 00:09:22,902 Similar results have since been found 206 00:09:22,902 --> 00:09:25,407 in countless other experiments around the globe, 207 00:09:25,407 --> 00:09:28,382 from the US to India. 208 00:09:29,451 --> 00:09:31,698 So ... 209 00:09:31,698 --> 00:09:33,543 here's what I've learned. 210 00:09:34,195 --> 00:09:36,375 When it comes to poverty, 211 00:09:36,375 --> 00:09:41,639 we the rich should stop pretending we know best. 212 00:09:42,287 --> 00:09:45,005 We should stop sending shoes and teddy bears to the poor, 213 00:09:45,005 --> 00:09:46,734 to people we have never met. 214 00:09:46,734 --> 00:09:50,211 And we should get rid of the vast industry of paternalistic bureaucrats 215 00:09:50,211 --> 00:09:52,311 when we could simply hand over their salaries 216 00:09:52,311 --> 00:09:54,086 to the poor they're supposed to help. 217 00:09:54,086 --> 00:09:56,345 (Applause) 218 00:09:56,345 --> 00:09:59,520 Because, I mean, the great thing about money 219 00:09:59,520 --> 00:10:01,871 is that people can use it to buy things they need 220 00:10:01,871 --> 00:10:05,231 instead of things that self-appointed experts think they need. 221 00:10:06,037 --> 00:10:10,302 Just imagine how many brilliant scientists and entrepreneurs and writers, 222 00:10:10,302 --> 00:10:11,314 like George Orwell, 223 00:10:11,314 --> 00:10:14,032 are now withering away in scarcity. 224 00:10:14,295 --> 00:10:16,673 Imagine how much energy and talent we would unleash 225 00:10:16,673 --> 00:10:19,573 if we got rid of poverty once and for all. 226 00:10:19,573 --> 00:10:24,094 I believe that a basic income would work like venture capital for the people. 227 00:10:25,082 --> 00:10:27,361 And we can't afford not to do it, 228 00:10:27,361 --> 00:10:30,206 because poverty is hugely expensive. 229 00:10:30,644 --> 00:10:34,030 Just look at the cost of child poverty in the US for example. 230 00:10:34,030 --> 00:10:38,290 It's estimated at 500 billion dollars each year, 231 00:10:38,290 --> 00:10:40,212 in terms of higher health care spending, 232 00:10:40,212 --> 00:10:41,243 higher dropout rates, 233 00:10:41,243 --> 00:10:42,541 and more crime. 234 00:10:42,797 --> 00:10:46,902 Now this is an incredible waste of human potential. 235 00:10:48,391 --> 00:10:51,008 But let's talk about the elephant in the room. 236 00:10:51,526 --> 00:10:54,790 How could we ever afford a basic income guarantee? 237 00:10:55,129 --> 00:10:58,231 Well, it's actually a lot cheaper than you may think. 238 00:10:58,375 --> 00:11:01,850 What they did in Dauphin is they financed it with a negative income tax. 239 00:11:01,850 --> 00:11:03,858 This means that your income is [stacked up] 240 00:11:03,858 --> 00:11:06,229 as soon as you fall below the poverty line. 241 00:11:06,229 --> 00:11:07,817 And in that scenario, 242 00:11:07,817 --> 00:11:10,355 according to our economists' best estimates, 243 00:11:10,355 --> 00:11:13,404 for a net cost of 175 billion -- 244 00:11:13,404 --> 00:11:15,918 a quarter of US military spending, 245 00:11:15,918 --> 00:11:18,394 one percent of GDP -- 246 00:11:18,394 --> 00:11:22,420 you could lift all impoverished Americans above the poverty line. 247 00:11:22,656 --> 00:11:25,797 You could actually eradicate poverty. 248 00:11:26,342 --> 00:11:28,514 Now that should be our goal. 249 00:11:28,981 --> 00:11:32,560 The time for small thoughts and little nudges is past. 250 00:11:32,980 --> 00:11:36,312 I really believe that the time has come for radical new ideas, 251 00:11:36,312 --> 00:11:39,391 and basic income is so much more than just another policy. 252 00:11:39,391 --> 00:11:43,886 It is also a complete rethink of what work actually is. 253 00:11:44,048 --> 00:11:45,806 And in that sense, 254 00:11:45,806 --> 00:11:48,732 it will not only free the poor ... 255 00:11:48,732 --> 00:11:50,489 but also the rest of us. 256 00:11:51,293 --> 00:11:53,562 Nowadays, millions of people feel 257 00:11:53,562 --> 00:11:56,013 that their jobs have little meaning or significance. 258 00:11:56,013 --> 00:11:59,102 A recent poll among 230,000 employees, 259 00:11:59,102 --> 00:12:01,032 in 142 countries, 260 00:12:01,032 --> 00:12:05,967 found that only 30 percent of workers actually like their job. 261 00:12:06,671 --> 00:12:10,491 And another poll found that as much as 37 percent of British workers 262 00:12:10,491 --> 00:12:13,656 have a job that they think doesn't even need to exist. 263 00:12:14,386 --> 00:12:16,905 It's like Brad Pitt says in "Fight Club," 264 00:12:16,905 --> 00:12:20,585 "Too often we're working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don't need." 265 00:12:20,585 --> 00:12:21,584 (Laughter) 266 00:12:21,884 --> 00:12:23,425 Now don't get me wrong -- 267 00:12:23,425 --> 00:12:25,915 I'm not talking about the teachers and the garbagemen 268 00:12:25,915 --> 00:12:27,592 and the care workers here. 269 00:12:27,592 --> 00:12:29,198 If they stopped working, 270 00:12:29,198 --> 00:12:30,849 we'd be in trouble. 271 00:12:31,217 --> 00:12:34,691 I'm talking about all those well-paid professionals with excellent resumes 272 00:12:34,691 --> 00:12:36,668 who earn their money doing ... 273 00:12:36,668 --> 00:12:38,664 strategic transactor peer-to-peer meetings 274 00:12:38,664 --> 00:12:41,635 while brainstorming the value add on all disruptive co-creation 275 00:12:41,635 --> 00:12:42,732 in the network society. 276 00:12:42,732 --> 00:12:43,731 (Laughter) 277 00:12:43,731 --> 00:12:44,733 (Applause) 278 00:12:44,733 --> 00:12:46,296 Or something like that. 279 00:12:46,296 --> 00:12:49,172 Just imagine again how much talent we're wasting 280 00:12:49,172 --> 00:12:53,481 simply because we tell our kids they'll have to "earn a living." 281 00:12:53,722 --> 00:12:56,400 Or think of what a math whiz working at Facebook lamented 282 00:12:56,400 --> 00:12:57,580 a few years ago: 283 00:12:57,580 --> 00:12:59,546 "The best minds of my generation 284 00:12:59,546 --> 00:13:03,124 are thinking about how to make people click ads." 285 00:13:04,566 --> 00:13:06,548 I'm an historian. 286 00:13:07,073 --> 00:13:09,285 And if history teaches us anything, 287 00:13:09,285 --> 00:13:11,879 it is that things could be different. 288 00:13:12,101 --> 00:13:13,406 There is nothing inevitable 289 00:13:13,406 --> 00:13:16,346 about the way we structured our society and economy right now. 290 00:13:16,346 --> 00:13:18,623 Ideas can and do change the world. 291 00:13:18,877 --> 00:13:21,412 And I think that especially in the past few years, 292 00:13:21,412 --> 00:13:22,853 it has become abundantly clear 293 00:13:22,853 --> 00:13:24,825 that we cannot stick to the status quo -- 294 00:13:24,825 --> 00:13:27,003 that we need new ideas. 295 00:13:28,604 --> 00:13:31,935 I know that many of you may feel pessimistic 296 00:13:31,936 --> 00:13:34,023 about a future of rising inequality, 297 00:13:34,023 --> 00:13:35,308 xenophobia 298 00:13:35,308 --> 00:13:36,692 and climate change. 299 00:13:37,087 --> 00:13:39,309 But it's not enough to know what we're against. 300 00:13:39,309 --> 00:13:40,813 We also need be for something. 301 00:13:40,813 --> 00:13:43,626 Martin Luther King didn't say, "I have a nightmare." 302 00:13:43,626 --> 00:13:44,873 (Laughter) 303 00:13:45,336 --> 00:13:46,638 He had a dream. 304 00:13:46,638 --> 00:13:47,740 (Applause) 305 00:13:47,740 --> 00:13:50,140 So ... 306 00:13:50,140 --> 00:13:51,670 here's my dream. 307 00:13:52,300 --> 00:13:54,165 I believe in a future 308 00:13:54,165 --> 00:13:58,061 where the value of your work is not determined by the size of your paycheck, 309 00:13:58,061 --> 00:14:00,046 but by the amount of happiness you spread 310 00:14:00,046 --> 00:14:02,111 and the amount of meaning you give. 311 00:14:02,111 --> 00:14:03,358 I believe in a future 312 00:14:03,358 --> 00:14:04,690 where the point of education 313 00:14:04,690 --> 00:14:06,869 is not to prepare you for another useless job, 314 00:14:06,869 --> 00:14:09,039 but for a life well-lived. 315 00:14:09,208 --> 00:14:10,707 I believe in a future 316 00:14:10,707 --> 00:14:13,910 where an existence without poverty is not a privilege 317 00:14:13,910 --> 00:14:15,718 but a right we all deserve. 318 00:14:15,862 --> 00:14:17,086 So here we are. 319 00:14:17,296 --> 00:14:18,296 Here we are. 320 00:14:18,296 --> 00:14:19,391 We've got the research, 321 00:14:19,391 --> 00:14:20,465 we've got the evidence 322 00:14:20,465 --> 00:14:21,714 and we've got the means. 323 00:14:21,714 --> 00:14:25,646 Now, more than 500 years after Thomas More first wrote about basic income, 324 00:14:25,646 --> 00:14:29,806 and 100 years after George Orwell discovered the true nature of poverty, 325 00:14:29,806 --> 00:14:32,389 we all need to change our worldview, 326 00:14:32,389 --> 00:14:35,484 because poverty is not a lack of character. 327 00:14:35,867 --> 00:14:38,844 Poverty is a lack of cash. 328 00:14:39,247 --> 00:14:40,602 Thank you. 329 00:14:40,756 --> 00:14:43,112 (Applause)