What motivates people to work harder? What causes them to
strive to improve their economic circumstances, to get ahead in the world, to
earn more and to be more productive?
Are people better motivated when they receive more
government payouts or when they are uncertain about their economic future?
Those who believe in the welfare state see great benefits in
providing economic security to everyone. In motivational terms, they believe
that a secure individual, one who is not worrying about his next meal, who does
not suffer the burden of quotidian concerns, will be liberated to work at what
he really wants to do.
Allison Schrager has summarized the arguments of those who believe in the virtue of providing enhanced
security through a guaranteed income:
A
proposal in Switzerland ensures that everyone, whether through work or government
handouts, is paid enough money for a comfortable lifestyle. Artist and founder
of the movement Enno Schmidt explained to the magazine: ”What would you do if
you had that income? What if you were taking care of a child or an elderly
person?” Schmidt said that the basic income would provide some dignity and
security to the poor, especially Europe’s underemployed and unemployed. It
would also, he said, help unleash creativity and entrepreneurialism:
Switzerland’s workers would feel empowered to work the way they wanted to,
rather than the way they had to just to get by.
The question then becomes: does having a comfortable
lifestyle guaranteed by the government motivate people to do what they really
want to do? Or does it turn them into slackers?
Does the recipient of government largesse feel infantilized?
Does he believe that he is being paid not to work? Does he feel like a decadent
aristocrat, living off the labor of others?
Apparently, his comfortable condition does not provoke more initiative and more hard work.
After consulting with psychologists and economists Schrager responds
that people are not motivated by security. They are motivated by uncertainty.
In her words:
But if
we define success as economic growth, security hardly holds the key. Economic
growth comes from employing labor and capital more efficiently. That comes from
people working hard and innovating. Each of these requires motivation. Thus,
motivation is the foundation of success. What drives motivation? The need to
resolve uncertainty. In other words, the opposite of guaranteed security.
And:
Because
uncertainty is inherently uncomfortable, when it crops up we’re compelled to
resolve it. That’s how uncertainty motivates people.
Also:
But if
you are certain to be paid a comfortable salary, no matter how many hours you
work or education you have, there’s no motivation to become more productive or
educated—and that undermines growth.
So far, so good.
The problem is: just as too much security demotivates, so
does too much uncertainty. Some people who are wards of the state feel that they are so far that they cannot imagine
getting up. Too much uncertainty makes people feel hopeless about changing
their circumstances through their own initiative.
Schrager writes:
Ideally,
policy strikes the right balance it protects the most vulnerable from hardship
but also exposes people to the right kind of uncertainty. This requires
ensuring that low-wage workers have viable way to provide their own security,
by enhancing economic mobility.
The right degree of uncertainty must be coupled with job
opportunities. Otherwise, it will produce despair.
7 comments:
for some reason, starving artists of the past were more creative than fatted calves like Jeff Koons.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgMUtwWxipA
How's this for motivation?
American morality in the 21st century.
Trashy.
Dissociation of risk (e.g. libertinism) is the opiate of the masses and elite, of humanity, really. It encourages the progress of a spoiled child syndrome, which engenders extreme expressions of liberalism and progressive corruption.
Case in point, abortion was sanitized and rationalized in order to overcome natural feedbacks and "equalize" women. However, in order to ignore what is self-evident, it was necessary to invent a false myth of spontaneous conception, and grant an extra-legal and moral right to women to commit murder, which is unmatched by other large-scale murder events, including most wars.
The process of normalization was usurped and perverted in order to force their degenerate religion (i.e. moral philosophy). A consequence of this action was to corrupt science and devalue human life. So, not only is uncertainty a valuable natural attribute, but it also acts as a control to mitigate opportunities for immoral or amoral people from running amuck.
re: Does having a comfortable lifestyle guaranteed by the government motivate people to do what they really want to do? Or does it turn them into slackers?
and: The problem is: just as too much security demotivates, so does too much uncertainty. Some people who are wards of the state feel that they are so far that they cannot imagine getting up. Too much uncertainty makes people feel hopeless about changing their circumstances through their own initiative.
Interestingly, the same questions can be asked of inherited wealth.
The nature of what's "comfortable" is open to debate. Having a car is "comfortable", but having a bicycle might be better for your health, and cheaper.
What's really missing from the question is the nature of status. If your goal in life is to go for quiet walks by the local pond and feed the birds, you don't need much status or wealth. But if you want to get married and raise a family, you're going to work harder to gain the status to attract the woman who will be worthy to raise your kids, and all that.
So maybe the whole question is divided by those who are interested in raising children, and those who are not. Both need different sorts of motivation to work hard.
"The right degree of uncertainty must be coupled with job opportunities. Otherwise, it will produce despair."
Despair only in those who are slackers at heart ... the motivated will find a job ... and improve their condition ... always ...
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