-
I'd like to start with a simple question.
-
Why do the poor make
so many poor decisions?
-
I know it's a harsh question,
-
but take a look at the data.
-
The poor borrow more, save less,
-
smoke more, exercise less, drink more
-
and eat less healthfully.
-
Why?
-
Well, the standard explanation
-
was once summed up by the British
Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher.
-
And she called poverty
"a personality defect."
-
(Laughter)
-
A lack of character, basically.
-
Now, I'm sure not many of you
would be so blunt.
-
But the idea that there's something
wrong with the poor themselves
-
is not restricted to Mrs. Thatcher.
-
Some of you may believe that the poor
should be held responsible
-
for their own mistakes.
-
And others may argue that we should
help them to make better decisions.
-
But the underlying assumption is the same:
-
there's something wrong with them.
-
If we could just change them,
-
if we could just teach them
how to live their lives,
-
if they would only listen.
-
And to be honest,
-
this was what I thought for a long time.
-
It was only a few years ago
that I discovered
-
that everything I thought I knew
about poverty was wrong.
-
It all started when I accidentally
stumbled upon a paper
-
by a few American psychologists.
-
They had traveled 8,000 miles,
-
all the way to India,
-
for a fascinating study.
-
And it was an experiment
with sugar cane farmers.
-
You should know that these farmers
collect about 60 percent
-
of their annual income all at once --
-
right after the harvest.
-
This means that they're relatively
poor one part of the year
-
and rich the other.
-
The researchers asked them to do
an IQ test before and after the harvest.
-
What they subsequently discovered
completely blew my mind.
-
The farmers scored much worse
on the test before the harvest.
-
The effects of living in poverty,
-
it turns out,
-
correspond to losing 40 points of IQ.
-
Now, to give you an idea,
-
that's comparable
to losing a night's sleep,
-
or the effects of alcoholism.
-
A few months later,
-
I heard that Eldar Shafir,
-
a professor at Princeton University
and one of the authors of this study,
-
was coming over to Holland,
-
where I live.
-
So we met up in Amersterdam
-
to talk about his revolutionary
new theory of poverty.
-
And I can sum it up in just two words:
-
scarcity mentality.
-
It turns out that people
behave differently
-
when they perceive a thing to be scarce.
-
And what that thing is
doesn't much matter --
-
whether it's not enough time,
money or food.
-
You all know this feeling
-
when you've got too much to do,
-
or when you've put off breaking for lunch
and your blood sugar takes a dive.
-
This narrows your focus
to your immediate lack --
-
to the sandwich you've got to have now,
-
the meeting that's starting
in five minutes,
-
or the bills that have
to be paid tomorrow.
-
So the long-term perspective
goes out the window.
-
You could compare it to a new computer
that's running 10 heavy programs at once.
-
It gets slower and slower,
-
making errors.
-
Eventually it freezes
-
not because it's a bad computer,
-
but because it has too much to do at once.
-
The poor have the same problem.
-
They're not making dumb decisions
because they are dumb,
-
but because they're living in a context
in which anyone would make dumb decisions.
-
So suddenly I understood
-
why so many of our anti-poverty
programs don't work.
-
Investments in education for example
-
are often completely ineffective.
-
Poverty is not a lack of knowledge.
-
A recent analysis of 201 studies
-
on the effectiveness
of money management training
-
came to the conclusion that is has
almost know effect at all.
-
Don't get me wrong.
-
This is not to say that the poor
don't learn anything --
-
they can come out wiser for sure,
-
but it's not enough.
-
Or as Professor Shafir told me,
-
"It's like teaching someone to swim
-
and then throwing them in a stormy sea."
-
I still remember sitting there,
-
perplexed.
-
And it struck me that we could
have figured this all out decades ago.
-
I mean these psychologists
didn't need any complicated brain scans;
-
they only had to measure the farmers' IQ,
-
and IQ tests were invented
more that 100 years ago.
-
Actually, I realized I had read about
the psychology of poverty before.
-
George Orwell,
-
one of the greatest writers
who ever lived,
-
experienced poverty firsthand
in the 1920s.
-
"The essence of poverty,"
-
he wrote back then,
-
is that it "annihilates the future."
-
And he marveled at quote,
-
"How people take it for granted
-
they have the right to preach at you
-
and pray over you
-
as soon as your income falls
below a certain level."
-
Now, those words are every bit
as resonant today.
-
The big question is of course,
-
what can be done?
-
Modern economists have a few
solutions up their sleeves.
-
We could help the poor
with their paperwork,
-
or send them a text message
to remind them to pay their bills.
-
This type of solution is hugely
popular with modern politicians.
-
Mostly because,
-
well,
-
they cost next to nothing.
-
These solutions are,
-
I think,
-
a symbol of this era
-
in which we so often treat the symptoms,
-
but ignore the underlying cause.
-
So I wonder,
-
why don't we just change the context
in which the poor live?
-
Or, going back to our computer analogy,
-
why keep tinkering around
with the software
-
when we can easily solve the problem
by installing some extra memory instead?
-
At that point,
-
Professor Shafir responded
with a blank look.
-
And after a few seconds,
-
he said,
-
"Oh, I get it,
-
you mean you want to just
hand out more money to the poor
-
to eradicate poverty.
-
Uh, sure, that'd be great ...
-
but I'm afraid that brand
of left-wing politics
-
you've got in Amsterdam ...
-
it doesn't exist in the States."
-
But is this really
an old-fashioned, leftist idea?
-
I remembered reading about old plan --
-
something that has been proposed
by some of history's leading thinkers.
-
The philosopher Thomas More
hinted at it in his book, "Utopia,"
-
more than 500 years ago.
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And its proponents have [spent]
the spectrum from the left to the right,
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from the civil rights campaigner
Martin Luther King, Jr.,
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to the economist Milton Friedman.
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And it's an incredibly simple idea:
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basic income guarantee.
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What it is?
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Well, that's easy.
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It's a monthly grant,
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enough to pay for your basic needs:
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food, shelter, education.
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It's completely unconditional,
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so no one's going to tell you
what you have to do for it,
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and no one's going to tell you
what you have to do with it.
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The basic income is not a favor,
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but a right.
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There's absolutely no stigma attached.
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So as I learned about the true
nature of poverty,
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I couldn't stop wondering --
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is this the idea
we've all been waiting for?
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Could it really be that simple?
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And in the three years that followed,
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I read everything I could find
about basic income.
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I researched the dozens of experiments
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that have been conducted
all over the globe,
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and it didn't take long
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before I stumbled upon a story
of a town that had done it --
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had actually eradicated poverty --
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but then,
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nearly everyone forgot about it.
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This story starts in Dauphin, Canada.
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In 1974, everybody in this small town
was guaranteed a basic income,
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insuring that no one fell
below the poverty line.
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And at the start of the experiment,
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an army of researchers
descended on the town.
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For four years all went well.
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But then a new government
was voted into power,
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and the new Canadian cabinet saw
little point to the expensive experiment.
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So when it became clear there was
no money left to analyze the results,
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the researchers decided to back
their files away in some 2,000 boxes.
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25 years went by,
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and then Evelyn F....,
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a Canadian professor,
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found the records.
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And for three years she subjected the data
to all manner of statistical analysis,
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and no matter what she tried,
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the results were the same every time.
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The experiment had been
a resounding success.
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[Evelyn Frije] discovered
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that the people in Dauphin
had not only become richer,
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but also smarter and healthier.
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The school performance of kids
improved substantially.
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The hospitalization rate decreased
by as much as 8.5 percent.
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Domestic violence incidents were down,
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as we mental health complaints.
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And people didn't quit their jobs.
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The only ones who worked a little less
were new mothers and students --
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who stayed in school longer.
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Similar results have since been found
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in countless other experiments
around the globe,
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from the US to India.
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So,
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here's what I've learned.
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When it comes to poverty,
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we the rich should stop
pretending we know best.
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We should stop sending
shoes and teddy bears to the poor,
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to people we have never met.
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And we should get rid of the vast
industry of paternalistic beaureaucrats
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when we could simply
hand over their salaries
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to the poor they're supposed to help.
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(Applause)
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Because, I mean, the great
thing about money
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is that people can use it
to buy things they need
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instead of things that self-appointed
experts think they need.
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Just imagine how many brilliant scientists
and entrepreneurs and writers,
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like George Orwell,
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are now withering away in scarcity.
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Imagine how much energy
and talent we would unleash
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if we got rid of poverty once and for all.
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I believe that a basic income would
work like venture capital for the people.
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And we can't afford not to do it,
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because poverty is hugely expensive.
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Just look at the cost of child poverty
in the US for example.
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It's estimated at 500
billion dollars each year,
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in terms of higher health care spending,
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higher dropout rates,
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and more crime.
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Now this is an incredible waste
of human potential.
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But let's talk about
the elephant in the room.
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How could we ever afford
a basic income guarantee?
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Well, it's actually a lot cheaper
than you may think.
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What they did in Dauphin is they
financed it with a negative income tax.
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This means that your income
is [stacked up]
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as soon as you fall
below the poverty line.
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And in that scenario,
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according to our economist's
best estimates,
-
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for a net cost of 175 billion --
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a quarter of US military spending,
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one percent of GDP --
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you could lift all impoverished Americans
above the poverty line.
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You could actually eradicate poverty.
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Now that should be our goal.
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The time for small thoughts
and little nudges is past.
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I really believe the time has come
for radical new ideas,
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and basic income is so much more
than just another policy.
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It is also a complete rethink
of what work actually is.
-
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And in that sense,
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it will not only free the poor ...
-
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but also the rest of us.
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Nowadays, millions of people feel
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that their jobs have little
meaning or significance.
-
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A recent poll among 230,000 employees,
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in 143 countries,
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found that only 30 percent of workers
actually like their job.
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And another poll found that as much
as 37 percent of British workers
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have a job that they think
doesn't even need to exist.
-
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It's like Brad Pitt says in "Fight Club,"
-
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"Too often we're working jobs we hate
so we can buy shit we don't need."
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(Laughter)
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Now don't get me wrong --
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I'm not talking about the teachers
and garbagemen
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and the care workers here.
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If they stopped working,
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we'd be in trouble.
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I'm talking about all those well-paid
professionals with excellent resumes
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who earn their money doing ...
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strategic transactor peer-to-peer meetings
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while brainstorming the value add
on all disruptive co-creation
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in the network society.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Or something like that.
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Just imagine again how much
talent we're wasting,
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simply because we tell our kids
they'll have to "earn a living."
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Or think of what a math whiz
working at Facebook lamented
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a few years ago:
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"The best minds of my generation
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are thinking about how
to make people click ads."
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I'm an historian.
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And if history teaches us anything,
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it is that things could be different.
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There is nothing inevitable
-
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about the way we structured our society
and economy right now.
-
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Ideas can and do change the world.
-
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And I think that especially
in the past few years,
-
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it has become abundantly clear
-
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that we cannot stick to the status quo --
-
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that we need new ideas.
-
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I know that many of you
may feel pessimistic
-
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about a future of rising inequality,
-
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xenophobia,
-
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and climate change.
-
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But it's not enough
to know what we're against.
-
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We also need be for something.
-
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Martin Luther King did not say,
"I have a nightmare."
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(Laughter)
-
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He had a dream.
-
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(Applause)
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So here's my dream.
-
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I believe in a future
-
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where the value of your work is not
determined by the size of your paycheck,
-
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but by the amount of happiness you spread
-
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and the amount of meaning you give.
-
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I believe in a future
-
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where the point of education
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is not to prepare you
for another useless job,
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but for a life well lived.
-
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I believe in a future
-
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where an existence
without poverty is not a privilege
-
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but a right we all deserve.
-
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So here we are.
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Here we are.
-
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We've got the research,
-
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we've got the evidence
-
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and we've got the means.
-
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Now, more than 500 years after
Thomas More wrote about basic income,
-
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and 100 years after George Orwell
discovered the true nature of poverty,
-
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we all need to change our worldview,
-
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because poverty
is not a lack of character.
-
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Poverty is a lack of cash.
-
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
Riaki Ponist
4:38 Typo:
more that 100 years ago
->
more than 100 years ago
Swenja Gawantka
Question: At 12:01 I hear "30 percent" instead of "13 percent". Does anyone agree or did I mishear?
Mihaela Niță
I heard 13.
Swenja Gawantka
P.S. How stupid of me, the number 13 is actually written down on the following slide ;-)
Mihaela Niță
Oh, it was just a little bit of inattention, it can happen to all of us :)