Wage

Elon Musk Touts Universal Income As Remedy To AI-Driven Unemployment





Elon Musk is reigniting the debate over economic safety nets in an age of artificial intelligence—this time with a twist. In a series of posts on X last Friday, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO championed what he calls "Universal HIGH Income," positioning it as a necessary buffer against the wave of job displacement expected as AI and robotics reshape the global workforce.

The Proposal: More Money, Powered by Machines

Musk's vision hinges on a bold economic premise: that AI-driven productivity gains will naturally expand the money supply, enabling the federal government to issue direct payments to citizens without triggering inflation. In his words, the "output of Business Services" will outpace traditional monetary constraints, creating a surplus that can be redistributed.

> "AI and robotics will create so much abundance that we can afford to give everyone a high income," Musk wrote, reposting a clip of himself elaborating on the concept.

While details remain sparse, the idea builds on Musk's longstanding advocacy for universal basic income (UBI). He publicly endorsed Andrew Yang's "Freedom Dividend" during the 2020 Democratic primaries and has repeatedly warned that AI could render traditional employment obsolete for millions.

A Familiar Idea, Rebranded

Musk's shift from "basic" to "HIGH" income isn't just semantic—it signals an aspirational reframing. Speaking at the Saudi-US Investment Forum last year, he described a future where AI unlocks "a level of prosperity… that we can't quite imagine yet." The implication: why settle for subsistence when abundance is possible?

But Musk isn't the only tech leader pushing policy solutions for an AI-disrupted economy. Just days before his X posts, OpenAI—led by former collaborator-turned-rival Sam Altman—released a detailed industrial policy proposal. While avoiding direct mention of UBI, OpenAI's plan calls for:

- A **Public Wealth Fund** granting citizens automatic equity stakes in AI companies and infrastructure
- Higher corporate tax rates to offset declining income tax revenue
- Targeted levies on businesses that replace human workers with automated systems

The timing has fueled speculation that Musk's announcement was, in part, a strategic counterpunch in his ongoing legal and public feud with Altman.

 Critics on All Sides

Not everyone in Musk's orbit agrees with the approach. Nobel laureate economist Joseph Stiglitz recently warned *Fortune* that unchecked AI development risks deepening inequality—and that calls to shrink government could undermine the very transition tech leaders claim to support.

> "If the tech oligarchs continue in their mindset overall of downscaling government, that will impair the ability of government to facilitate the AI transition," Stiglitz said.

Meanwhile, prominent techno-optimists aligned with Musk have rejected UBI outright. Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, in his 2023 *Techno-Optimist Manifesto*, argued that guaranteed income would "turn people into zoo animals to be farmed by the state." Former White House AI advisor David Sacks echoed the sentiment on X, dismissing UBI as a "Left" fantasy of a "post-economic order" where "everyone [is] on welfare."

 The Bigger Picture

What unites these disparate voices is a shared recognition: AI isn't just a technological shift—it's an economic earthquake in slow motion. Whether the solution lies in direct cash transfers, public equity stakes, tax reform, or something yet unimagined remains fiercely contested.

Musk's "Universal HIGH Income" may lack legislative detail, but it succeeds in one regard: forcing the conversation into the mainstream. As AI capabilities accelerate, the question is no longer *if* work will change—but *who* benefits, and *how* society ensures no one is left behind.

For now, the debate is as much about ideology as economics. And with trillion-dollar industries and millions of livelihoods at stake, the stakes have never been higher.