How We Can Leverage AI to Create a “Jobless” society: Part 2

In Part 1 of this Blog, I described some of the possibilities that AI might provide us in terms of developing what could become a utopian Society.  I named the economic system that such a society would need as an Equalitarian Economy as opposed to a Capitalistic, Socialistic, Communistic or any other type of economy that ever existed.  This new economy would be extremely Democratic in that everyone would be able to benefit from it.  I described several critical parameters of such an economy which included: 

Core Principles of Equalitarianism:

Shared Prosperity: Wealth produced by automated systems and AI is treated as a collective inheritance, not private privilege.

Universal Security: Every person is guaranteed access to health, education, housing, food, and connectivity as rights of citizenship.

Democratic Ownership: Data, infrastructure, and automation are managed for the public good through civic and cooperative institutions.

Ecological Balance: Progress is measured not by growth alone but by sustainability and planetary stewardship.

Purpose Beyond Profit: Humans pursue creativity, service, and learning as the highest expressions of freedom in a post-labor world.

Transparency and Trust: Economic algorithms and institutions operate openly, accountable to citizens, not corporations.

Responsibility and Contribution: Freedom is balanced with duty—to community, environment, and future generations.

Cultural Flourishing: Arts, education, and civic engagement become the new engines of meaning.

Global Solidarity: Equalitarianism recognizes that abundance must be shared across borders to preserve peace and human dignity.

The Equilibrium Principle: Every policy seeks harmony between technological power and human values.

Some people would call me overly idealistic or say that I had my head in the clouds.  They would argue that humans being can never create a society that evidences the characteristics noted above.  Karen says I am the ultimate pessimist.  That I don’t trust anyone or anything.  How do I resolve these apparent contradictions in my personality?  Who is right?  Am I a fuzzy headed idealist or a skeptical pessimist who thinks the worse in every situation? 

When someone calls me an unrealistic idealist who doesn’t understand human nature, I take it as a backhanded compliment.  I do understand human nature—both its flaws and its possibilities.  I’ve spent a lifetime studying how fear, greed, and ego shape behavior, but I refuse to believe they are destiny.  To me, realism without conscience is cynicism, and idealism without realism is sentimentality. The space I try to inhabit is between the two: the realm of the pragmatic humanist. 

I believe that understanding human nature means believing that it can grow—through education, empathy, and systems that bring out our better selves.  I’m not an unrealistic idealist; I’m a realist of potential.  The human race has yet to tap the potential that lies in all of us.  From the newborn baby to the fading senior citizen.  From America to Europe to Africa to Asia.  From the poorest people in the world, to the richest.  We have so much untapped potential.  If we could only learn to love others instead of hating others. 

Baha’u’llah taught that love is the fundamental principle of existence, the “spirit of life” for humanity, and the most powerful force for progress.  Jesus said that the two greatest commandments are to love God with all your heart, soul, and mind, and to love your neighbor as yourself.  Buddha described love as a boundless, benevolent wish for the happiness of all beings, a quality he called loving-kindness.  Muhammad’s teachings on love emphasized love for the sake of Allah, which includes compassion for all of humanity and other creations.  Krishna teaches that “he who does my work, who loves me, who sees me as the highest, free from attachment to all things, and with love for all creation, he in truth comes to me.”

Dr. Deming once told me that transformation starts in the heart but ends in the brain.  Transformation requires a new way of thinking and not following the dead ends that come from thinking in a box.  Einstein said that we cannot solve the problems of today with the same level of thinking that created these problems.  We can make a better world, and we can be better people, but it requires love, empathy, compassion and kindness.  Once we understand this, we can think our way to the world that we can only dream of now.   How can we get there from today? 

Transitioning from Today to Tomorrow:

The road to 2075 could unfold in three arcs:

2025–2035: Universal healthcare, education, pilot dividends, civic wealth funds.

2035–2055: Scaling UBB modules, digital public wallets, land value taxes.

2055–2075: Constitutional right to the Bundle, full Automated Productivity Dividend (APD) , AI-audited transparency.

The system’s heart is trust.  Algorithms determining the APD or resource prices must be openly audited.  Fiscal boards set rules, not politicians seeking applause.  Citizen assemblies test and refine programs through feedback loops, ensuring continual improvement—Plan, Do, Study, Act (The Deming Cycle) on a planetary scale.

Here are the key elements of my Equalitarian Economy and how they would work.

1) What’s guaranteed (the “Universal Basic Bundle”)

Instead of only cash, society guarantees a bundle of essential services, delivered like utilities:

  • Healthcare: universal coverage with public providers + private options layered on top.
  • Food: a baseline food allowance redeemable at grocers/meal services; nutrition standards, not one-size-fits-all rations.
  • Housing: right to housing via public development + vouchers + mutuals; minimum quality standards.
  • Education: free lifetime learning, credentials, and creative/technical studios.
  • Connectivity & Mobility: free broadband and a mobility pass (local transit + basic distance allotment).

The bundle is portable, unconditional, and choice-preserving (people pick among accredited providers).  Think “public option platforms” rather than one provider per need.

2) How people get spending power (beyond the basics)

Everyone receives an Automated Productivity Dividend (APD)—a cash-like stipend reflecting the value created by AI/robotic capital. It’s funded by:

  • Sovereign & civic wealth funds that own broad stakes in AI/robotic enterprises.
  • Resource rents (land value, spectrum, minerals), carbon fees, and environmental charges—returned equally as dividends.
  • A luxury VAT and/or robot/compute levy on supernormal AI rents (carefully designed to avoid stifling innovation).

Result: basics in-kind + optional cash for variety and luxuries.

3) Who owns the machines (so the dividend is real)

Without purposeful ownership design, a few owners capture everything.  Options that spread the gains:

  • National/municipal wealth funds (Alaska-style, but scaled and diversified into AI).
  • Pension & community funds mandated to hold a share of AI/automation indexes.
  • Data & model trusts that license public data/commons to AI firms in exchange for recurring royalties paid to residents.
  • Cooperative platforms where users/workers/cities co-own service robots and local models.

Mixing these creates a plural, resilient ownership base that throws off steady APD cashflows.

4) How to allocate real scarcities

Even with abundant automation, some things will remain scarce: prime urban land, top-tier medical slots, rare materials, energy peaks.

Use clear, fairness-preserving allocation rules:

  • Congestion pricing for peak resources (electricity at 6–9pm, popular transit slots)—revenues go back to people.
  • Auctions with dividend money for luxuries/rare items (keeps fairness and price signals).
  • Lotteries with rotation for non-monetizable scarcities (e.g., coveted campsites).
  • Personal environmental/material budgets (cap-and-dividend) to keep within planetary limits while preserving individual choice.

5) Governance that people can trust

  • A Constitutional floor of social rights (bundle + APD) guarded by independent fiscal/actuarial boards.
  • Transparent algorithmic policy: models that set APD levels, bundle rates, and scarcity prices are open-audited; citizens’ assemblies review changes.
  • Local experimentation / national reinsurance: cities iterate; the center backstops risks.
  • A Deming-style continuous improvement loop: publish indicators, test alternatives, keep what works.

6) Work, purpose, and status in a post-work world

“Jobs” give income, yes—but also identity, mastery, and community. Replace the income function with APD + bundle; replace the meaning function with:

  • Civic & creative missions (caregiving, arts, restoration ecology, mentoring, open-source, local news).
  • Reputation and recognition systems (think honors, badges, grants, residencies) that are non-financial but unlock opportunities (studio access, travel fellowships, lab time).
  • Voluntary problem prizes for hard societal challenges—open to anyone.

Let us look at how the above ideas would work on a day-to-day basis.  We will watch how Maya, one citizen in the new economy would receive economic benefits:

  • Maya receives the bundle automatically (healthcare, housing lease, mobility, broadband, education access) plus a monthly APD deposited into her public wallet.
  • She books a surgical consult on the health platform, enrolls in a ceramics + music course, and applies for a community garden micro-grant.
  • Peak-hour e-bike lanes use congestion pricing; her wallet is refunded weekly with the proceeds.
  • She enters a materials-light design contest; the prize is a year in a shared studio with high-end tools—no salary needed, but high status and joy.

How long would it take to transition to this new economy.  We can look at a path that such a transition might take.  (so this isn’t sci-fi hand-waving or pie in the sky thinking)

Years 0–10

  • Make healthcare and education genuinely universal; scale housing-first programs.
  • Launch/expand sovereign & civic wealth funds; start data trusts for public sector datasets.
  • Pilot UBB modules (mobility, broadband, food) in cities; pilot APD at modest levels via carbon/resource dividends + luxury VAT.
  • Enact land value tax shifts and congestion pricing with rebates/dividends.

Years 10–25

  • Ratchet APD as automation rents grow; fold in compute/robot levies if warranted.
  • Convert portions of tax expenditures into automatic bundle entitlements.
  • Standardize digital ID + public wallet (privacy-preserving) for payments and allocations.
  • Scale community/co-op ownership of local service robotics.

Years 25–50

  • Codify the social rights floor; stabilize APD against business cycles with rules-based mechanisms.
  • Shift most routine administration to auditable public AI; keep humans on goals, ethics, and appeals.
  • Tighten ecological caps with cap-and-dividend so abundance doesn’t overshoot the planet.

Now let us look at the Feasibility or Likelihood that such a transition could ever take place. 

  • Feasibility (could we?)

High, in terms of some  pieces.  Every element has real-world precedents: public services, dividends from shared assets, congestion pricing, social wealth funds, lotteries, co-ops.  Stitching them together is an engineering-and-governance project, not magic.

  • Likelihood (will we?)

Medium-low.  Left to markets alone, AI rents concentrate; political resistance to broad ownership and unconditional floors is strong.  Likelihood rises if we start now with: building civic wealth funds, enshrining social rights floors, deploying public wallets, and sharing automation rents early so people feel gains, not only disruption. 

Every component already exists somewhere—Alaska’s oil dividend, Norway’s wealth fund, Singapore’s housing model, open-source governance.  Integration is engineering, not fantasy.  We must act deliberately and share compassion for all of humanity.  Otherwise, AI and automation will only amplify inequality.  But if we start early—own public AI equity, legislate social rights floors—than the likelihood rises sharply. 

Bottom line

A post-work economy is possible if we socialize a slice of the returns to automation (not all of the economy), guarantee a Universal Basic Bundle, and use transparent, fair allocation for what remains scarce.  People keep freedom, society keeps stability, and progress keeps its edge.

9 Comments (+add yours?)

  1. waynewoodman's avatar Wayne Woodman
    Nov 09, 2025 @ 19:24:24

    Wow, that is quite a detailed plan John and maybe if enough of us believe then it can happen.

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    • Dr. John Persico Jr.'s avatar Dr. John Persico Jr.
      Nov 09, 2025 @ 21:12:49

      Wayne, Deming used to say that all it took for change was a critical mass that wanted to change. However, he never defined how big or the percentage needed for a critical mass to be reached. Across history and empirical studies, a critical mass of roughly one-fifth to one-quarter of an engaged population — especially when strategically positioned — is sufficient to ignite large-scale systemic change. The key is not size alone, but density of conviction, cohesion, and influence within that fraction. Good to think about in this era of trumpism.

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  2. Mark Edward Jabbour's avatar Mark Edward Jabbour
    Nov 10, 2025 @ 14:07:39

    Hi John, I’ll give you points for thinking; and trying to come up with a solution. However, I think what your argument amounts to is a validation of Thomas Sowell’s thesis in “A Conflict of Visions”. That which is (Sowell’s position), I think, simplistic.
    So now what?
    Have you read Sowell?
    From a distance I’d say you are conflicted. Your wife (who knows you best?) is not wrong.
    Thanks for this. Cheers.

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    • Dr. John Persico Jr.'s avatar Dr. John Persico Jr.
      Nov 10, 2025 @ 15:50:06

      The mark of an intelligent person is that they can hold two opposing beliefs. I can hold a constrained position on some ideas while also holding an unconstrained position. Like Yin/Yang they are not necessarily opposite. The world is not black and white. My model of the world is a kaleidoscope. The problem with Sowell’s framework of “constrained” versus “unconstrained” visions is that it is too binary, flattening a rich spectrum of philosophical and political traditions into two camps that don’t fully capture nuance. This has been noted by many of his critics and is the major flaw in his book. As I am usually conflicted it is because as Shakespeare said of Caesar “His life was gentle, and the elements so mix’d in him, that Nature might stand up and say to all the world, ‘This was a man!'”.

      Solutions will always be political and politics reflect power. If we want to make a better world, we must create the power to do so. Unfortunately, too many people rely on others to do it for them and that is their big mistake. I think your book The “Election 2016: Great Divide” did one of the best jobs in the emerging Trump era of diagnosing what was going on in America and why the country was shifting towards Trump. I was looking for explicit condemnations of the root causes of fear and greed or perhaps amorality to be more evident in your book. Your analysis was more subtle and perhaps more accurate. I had read so many books back then, every one with a different theory for the rise of Trump.

      You implied that greed and amorality are not the causes but the symptoms behind trump’s rise to power and the decline of democracy in America. You argued that Trump’s rise was chiefly driven by a deep cultural and psychological alienation of large segments of Americans who felt ignored by the political-economic elite and thus were drawn to a candidate who seemed to reflect their anger and desire for change. I have no argument with that but it never pointed to a cause that would go deeper. There is always a cause behind a a cause. I wrote a blog called “The 5000 Year Journey to Trump” in which I posited that world culture had made a 5000 year shift towards the values of corporate capitalism and that this is the substrate which supports trumps popularity.

      So now with the value of hindsight, do you stay with your former thesis or do you posit something else perhaps something deeper. We can go down the person hole or down the society hole or perhaps both. Psychology or Sociology or maybe Anthropology? Which best explains the consistent 30 percent of America that love Trump? BTW, I find some of the explanations about suffering Americans to be exaggerated. Perception is not always reality except to the perceiver. IMHO

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    • Dr. John Persico Jr.'s avatar Dr. John Persico Jr.
      Nov 10, 2025 @ 16:03:36

      Mark, I should say “how dare you agree with my wife?” I will never show her your comment. She is already way ahead of me on points. But thanks for your comments. I keep needing to remind myself of the real complexity of the world. I had an advisor in grad school who told me “Anytime you study anything, it becomes more complex.” That sure seems to be the case. Of course, my mother always said that “Ignorance is bliss.” I alternate in wondering how she came up with what I think is a very simple minded way of looking at life and wondering if she was not a genius. 🙂

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  3. jonangel's avatar jonangel
    Nov 10, 2025 @ 14:37:52

    John, I believe the concept of an Egalitarian Society is marvelous,, but it could only work (in my view) if the world’s population was already on a level playing field.
    As I have stated many times, first world countries should be aiming to raise the standards of countries less fortunate, but sadly they won’t.

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    • Dr. John Persico Jr.'s avatar Dr. John Persico Jr.
      Nov 10, 2025 @ 15:59:07

      Jon, I think we have to make it work with the worst case scenario. Which is as you note the world is not on a level playing field but it never will be level. Level is like the perfection one can seek. It is a journey. You never get there. There is no perfection, no truth, no level playing field, no true Mean. I learned this from Dr. Deming. There is no such thing as a true population either. Took me a while to get Deming but his explanation of why there is no true population and everything is a process became fundamental to my way of seeing the world. Of course, what if he/I am wrong. 🙂

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  4. donutvaliantlyaa842aca43's avatar donutvaliantlyaa842aca43
    Nov 10, 2025 @ 15:16:19

    John,

    I vote for Equalitarian Economy.

    You have obviously thought about all aspects of the concept.

    Congratulations!

    How do we get this adopted?

    Do you have to run for president?

    >

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    • Dr. John Persico Jr.'s avatar Dr. John Persico Jr.
      Nov 10, 2025 @ 16:08:56

      Well, I think it takes that critical mass which I discussed. How we get there is one step and one person at a time. The real question is how we can spread this idea, but then how do any ideas spread? Media, word of mouth, tv, evangelism, martyrdom, war, conquest, marketing strategies? I suppose the means might be endless but people will initially reject ideas and concepts that seem incomprehensible to them. I think the ideas I am promoting will seem this way to many people. Change must take place in the heart and the rest is than just an engineering problem. IMHO.

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