Why UBI Can't Work
A thought experiment in two parts. First: what happens when machines makes everything without workers and the government tries to fix it with UBI. Then: why our real economy already essentially works this way (which is why it's not working!).
Once upon a future, someone invents a replicator — a machine that can produce any good or service, instantly and for free. Let's call him Elon.
Elon's replicator is so good that it outcompetes every other business. The only problem: No one has any jobs anymore, so they don't have any money to pay Elon. Elon turns off the replicator. Everyone's going to starve!
The government responds with the most popular idea in town: Universal Basic Income so that people will have money to pay Elon. Where will the money come from? Tax the replicator. Give the money to the people. Money flows in a circle. Problem solved, right?
Sadly, we'd have to tax Elon to 100% to give people the money they need to buy what they need. But Elon says he won't run the replicator if he can't make a profit. Therefore we tax him at 90%. The government covers the rest of the gap by printing money or borrowing. Will it work?
Press play and find out. The simulation runs for 20 years at US-economy scale. Everyone starts at $0. All money enters the economy through the government — either printed or borrowed. Just like real life.
Part 1: The Parable of the Replicator
Explain this
Tax rates start at 90% — corporate and personal. That's not a typo. We're giving UBI every possible advantage.
Even so, Elon keeps a sliver of profit each month. Just 1% of revenue (0.1 × 0.1). That's the leak. And it's enough.
The government has three options to deal with the growing hole:
Print Money — print whatever's needed to cover UBI. Watch the printing press go.
Borrow — take on national debt to fund the gap. See how far that goes.
Live Within Means — no printing, no borrowing. See what happens.
Try lowering the tax rates. Try 50%. Try 20%. The question isn't whether UBI fails — it's how fast.
Tax Rates & Spending
Simulation Mode
Now Look at the Real Thing
"But we don't have a replicator," you might say. "Our economy is more complicated than that."
Is it? The underlying dynamic is the same: people spend, owners profit, wealth flows up. The reason it doesn't collapse like the Replicator is that we've built mechanisms that are the equivalent — and sometimes the exact same thing — as the borrowing and money printing in the example above:
Asset bubbles are money printing. When stock prices and real estate values rise faster than the actual economy, that's new money appearing from nowhere — just like the printing press. It makes the top 10% feel richer through their portfolios. When the bubble pops, the fake wealth vanishes but the owners get bailed out with real public debt. Then it reinflates and does it again.
Actual money printing. The Federal Reserve creates money out of nothing to buy government bonds — the government borrows from itself using money that didn't exist a moment ago. They call it "quantitative easing." Since 2008 the Fed has conjured over $8 trillion this way. Same printing press as the Replicator scenario, just with more steps.
Debt is the rest. Government debt fills the gap between what people earn and what the economy needs them to spend — the national debt isn't an accident, it's load-bearing. Personal debt — credit cards, mortgages, student loans — lets everyone else keep spending even as their real position declines. Both are just borrowing to keep the Replicator running.
Stock ownership blurs the line. Many Americans own some capital — a lot for the top 10%, a little for the rest. Some of the upward flow lands in your 401(k), which makes the drain less visible. But the structure is the same.
Part 2: Our Economy
Explain this
Now businesses pay wages — 65% of revenue goes back to workers. Corporate tax: 21%. Top income tax: 37%. The economy grows at 2.5% per year (productivity gains). The government fills its deficit with 85% borrowing and 15% QE.
The wage share slider is the key variable. At 65%, workers earn most of what they spend. But taxes and profits still drain money upward, so the government must borrow and print to keep the loop going — even with economic growth expanding the tax base.
Try lowering wage share to 30% — the deficit explodes and owner wealth skyrockets. This is what happens as automation replaces labor: the wage share drops, and the government must print and borrow more to compensate.
Same Replicator dynamics, just with extra steps.
So What's the Answer?
UBI doesn't fix this. Neither does tweaking tax rates. The problem isn't the rate — it's the structure. As long as one side owns production and the other side just consumes, wealth flows upward. Taxes can slow the leak. They can't stop it.
The only variable that changes the outcome is who owns the means of production. If the public owned the replicator, there would be no leak. No need for UBI. No need for money printing or national debt. The wealth would stay in circulation because the people who spend are the same people who profit.
That's not a utopian fantasy. It's a structural observation.