How the Socio-Civic Economy Reconstructs “Employment, Unemployment, and Basic Income Systems”

Avatar photo
Kishou · Feb 5, 2026
Preface: Employment is Not Just a “Livelihood,” but a Basic License for Civic Existence In capitalist ideology, “employment” is brutally reduced to a purely instrumental equation: “Job → Income → Survival.” This logic chains human existence to capital’s hiring whims, systematically equating joblessness with social worthlessness. Unemployment becomes morally weaponized—branded as proof of personal inadequacy, market […]

Preface: Employment is Not Just a “Livelihood,” but a Basic License for Civic Existence

In capitalist ideology, “employment” is brutally reduced to a purely instrumental equation: “Job → Income → Survival.” This logic chains human existence to capital’s hiring whims, systematically equating joblessness with social worthlessness.

Unemployment becomes morally weaponized—branded as proof of personal inadequacy, market failure, and individual worthlessness, driving people into cycles of shame and self-blame. Universal Basic Income (UBI) gets institutionally demonized as a policy that “breeds laziness,” destroys efficiency, and violates the sacred commandments of market fundamentalism.

However, under the framework of the Social-Civic Economy, this entire set of perceptions—based on fear and the supremacy of efficiency—must be thoroughly overturned:

Employment is not a chance gift bestowed by the market, but a fundamental right for citizens to participate in social production, service, and the sharing of civilizational fruits. Unemployment is not a matter of personal ability, but a structural risk generated by technological iteration and industrial transformation.

Basic Income is not alms, but a minimum dividend right to social common assets that citizens deserve as members of the “social community.”

This is the fundamental ethical and institutional watershed between a “capital-centric efficient market society” and a “human-centric civic civilized society.”

I. The Essence of Employment under Capitalist Economy: Not “Letting People Live,” but “Extracting Value from People”

Under capital-dominated economic structures, employment operates on a coldly singular principle: it exists not to ensure human survival and dignity, but to minimize production costs while maximizing capital returns. Workers become replaceable cost inputs rather than autonomous social beings with agency and worth.

This creates a ruthlessly optimized exploitation hierarchy:

High-Value Workers: Retained in the system, subjected to endless performance metrics and hypercompetitive pressure.

Transitional Workers: Discarded by the system, left to navigate risk and uncertainty as expendable individuals. Obsolete Workers: Abandoned entirely, relegated to social assistance as civilization’s unwanted burden.

Terms like “gig economy,” “flexible work,” and “independent contracting” often serve as euphemisms for capital’s exploitation of workers stripped of job security, benefits, and collective bargaining power. Capital cares nothing for workers’ long-term stability, development, or retirement—only whether your immediate “marginal value exceeds marginal cost.”

II. Redefining “Employment” in the Socio-Civic Economy: Not a Job, but a “Right to Social Participation”

In a Socio-Civic Economy, we must expand “employment” beyond the narrow confines of “serving capital’s needs” to encompass: “Institutional pathways for citizens to engage in social production, public service, governance, caregiving, and knowledge creation.”

This means that valuable labor is no longer equated only with labor that “produces direct financial profit.” It includes, but is not limited to:

Public Service Jobs: Basic services for the whole population provided by the government and non-profit organizations. Social Care: Care and emotional support for the elderly, children, and people with disabilities.

Community & Cultural Employment: Community governance, cultural heritage, artistic creation, and non-profit education. Ecological Restoration: Environmental protection, pollution control, and sustainable development projects.

Principles of Value Recognition:

As long as your labor possesses the following characteristics:

Real Social Value: Provides genuine and irreplaceable value to society. Public Resilience Contribution: Makes a real contribution to public safety and resilience. Communal Support: Provides authentic support for the survival of the community.

Such work deserves recognition as legitimate employment, complete with stable, dignified compensation and institutional protections. Without this broader definition, society inevitably creates a perverse system where genuinely valuable work—caregiving, basic research, community building—goes undone, while capital-intensive but socially hollow pursuits like financial speculation and marketing warfare attract all the talent.

III. The Civilizational Characterization of Unemployment: Not a “Loser,” but a “Structural Risk Bearer”

Capitalist moral narratives frame unemployment as personal failure—a scarlet letter marking insufficient effort, inadequate skills, or market maladaptation. This stigmatization dramatically amplifies social instability while crushing individual mental health.

In the Socio-Civic Economy, however, the true nature of unemployment must be de-moralized and objectively characterized as “Structural Sacrifice” caused by systemic forces such as technological iteration, industrial shifts, global capital fluctuations, and policy adjustments.

The Core Logic is:

It is not that you failed, but that the system has upgraded. It is not that you are valueless, but that the current capital structure no longer requires you.

Therefore, unemployment should not be subject to moral judgment, stigmatization, or personalization. It must be institutionally recognized: unemployment is not a personal error, but an inherent cost of social operation and progress.

Since it is a social operating cost, it must be borne collectively by all social citizens through institutional designs (such as social insurance and public finance), rather than being dumped as a survival crisis onto powerless individuals to fend for themselves. This collective responsibility is the basic contract of civilization.

IV. The Civilizational Essence of Basic Income: Not “Feeding People,” but “Giving People the Certainty of Living”

Capitalism’s deepest terror isn’t poverty—it’s the prospect that “citizens might live with dignity without capital’s control and coercion.” Guaranteed survival security would immediately unleash three structural revolutions:

1. Workers are no longer forced by “fear of survival” to accept unfair or humiliating working conditions. 2. Society can refuse to accept low-value, high-attrition “bullshit jobs,” optimizing the overall labor structure. 3. Citizens gain the time and space to “pause, think, and transition,” improving social innovation and resilience.

Therefore, Universal Basic Income (UBI) in the Socio-Civic Economy is precisely the tool for this institutional liberation. Its essence is not welfare, but:

The “Three Rights” Essence of Basic Income:

Minimum Dividend Right: The minimum income distribution right enjoyed by citizens as owners of “social common assets” (including natural resources, public data, basic intellectual property, etc.). Survival Rights Protection: Ensuring that no one starves or becomes homeless due to sudden events like unemployment, illness, or transition. Right to Refuse Support: Providing citizens with the institutional backbone to refuse humiliating and exploitative labor, preventing society from regressing into a barbaric structure driven by fear.

UBI does not guarantee “wealth,” but “freedom” and “certainty.” It is the minimum humanitarian guarantee of modern civilization.

V. The “Trinity” Reconstruction of Employment-Unemployment-Basic Income

In the ideal model of the Socio-Civic Economy, employment, unemployment, and basic income must be designed as a mutually supporting, dynamically stable “trinity” civilizational loop:

Mechanism Role Positioning Core Function & Objective
Employment (Participation) Value Contribution Channel Ensuring everyone has the opportunity to contribute value to society through dignified labor and achieve personal worth.
Unemployment (Risk Buffer) Social Risk Absorption Mechanism Characterizing structural unemployment as a social cost, covered by public institutions (insurance, finance) to prevent individual collapse.
Basic Income (Foundation) Base for Living Dignity Ensuring no one is abandoned by civilization during transition, care, or learning periods, providing institutional security.

When these three are severed by capital logic, society forms a typically cruel structure: High Competition → High Elimination → High Fear → Low Dignity → Extreme Involution → Civilizational Autophagy. The reconstruction of the Trinity is meant to break this cycle of internal depletion.

VI. The Ultimate Question of the Technological Era: When Machines Replace Humans, Who “Deserves to Live”?

With the explosive development of artificial intelligence, automation, and algorithms, traditional and knowledge-based jobs are being systematically and irreversibly consumed.

In the logic of the capitalist economy, this means:

Efficiency increases → People are eliminated; Costs decrease → People become redundant; Structure upgrades → People become a burden.

Clinging to the barbaric equation “no job = no right to income” would plunge society into civilization’s gravest crisis: technological progress becomes a death sentence for growing masses of people. This trajectory leads inevitably to a dystopian reality where technological paradise coexists with human wastelands.

The only civilizational answer provided by the Socio-Civic Economy is:

When a person is no longer needed by the market, they are still needed by civilization and the community.

Basic income is the only non-barbaric, non-cold institutional response of human society to technological unemployment and the era of automation. It liberates the right to exist from “market eligibility” and re-anchors it in “citizenship.”

Conclusion: Whether a Society is Civilized is Not Judged by Employment Rate, but by “How the Unemployed Live”

The capitalist economy excels at creating illusions based on financial indicators: high employment rate → social success; high growth rate → people’s happiness.

But the Socio-Civic Economy focuses on a deeper, more brutal, and truer civilizational indicator:

When someone loses work due to technological disruption, economic shifts, or personal circumstances, does society still treat them as a human being deserving of dignity?

If the answer is no, then:

The celebrated prosperity rests on a foundation of survival terror for the vulnerable. The vaunted efficiency depends on systematically crushing individual dignity. The supposed stability requires existential coercion and endless rat races.

But when a society has the courage to institutionally guarantee: “You may stumble, you may pivot, you may pause—but you will never forfeit your fundamental right to exist”—in that moment, it crosses the threshold into a truly human-centered Socio-Civic Economy.

 

Share this article:
LEARN MORE

Continue Reading

The burden of livelihood in childhood: the hidden crisis of Confucian education in modern East Asia

The burden of livelihood in childhood: the hidden crisis of Confucian education in modern East Asia

Kishou · Jul 2, 2025

Introduction: A hidden disease at the heart of civilization On the surface, Confucian-influenced societies such as Japan, South Korea, and Singapore appear to embody a successful Eastern model of modern civilization—orderly, safe, and built upon a tightly run education system. But beneath this polished exterior lies a deep, systemic fracture in their civilizational foundation: an […]

幼少期の生存競争という禍:近代東アジア儒教社会における教育の見えざる閉塞と文明的リスク

幼少期の生存競争という禍:近代東アジア儒教社会における教育の見えざる閉塞と文明的リスク

Kishou · Jul 2, 2025

序章:文明の奥底に潜む静かな病巣 表面的には、日本、韓国、シンガポールといった東アジアの儒教文化圏諸国は、社会秩序が保たれ、治安も良好で、教育制度も整備されており、現代文明の「東洋型モデル」として称賛されている。しかし、この整然とした外観の裏には、長期的かつ構造的な文明の陥没とも言える「幼少期の生存競争型教育」という深刻な問題が潜んでいる。 この現象は、近代以降の国家建設と産業化の過程において、儒教文化が功利主義的かつ階層的・服従的に利用されたことに起因する。子どもたちは人格が未発達のうちから、生存競争や現実的成果を求められ、「夢見る権利」や「探求する自由」を奪われ、最終的には制度社会の「効率的なツール」として機能するよう仕向けられていく。 一、東アジア儒教社会における幼年期生存競争教育の構造的メカニズム 1. 近代国家建設中の制度化、早期社会化 日本、韓国、シンガポールは、19世紀末から20世紀後半にかけて相次いで産業化と国家統治の近代化を果たした。秩序に従う労働力と服従的な国民の育成を目的に、教育制度は「規律への順応と秩序への適応」の訓練場へと変質した。 幼稚園からすでに「自立」「内務の整理」「集団責任の分担」が求められ、小学校では「集団責任制度」「序列評価」「服従教育」が徹底される。教育の目的は人格の成熟ではなく、「いかに早く社会に適応するか」にある。 2. 功利的で階層主義的な価値観の支配 東アジア儒教文化圏は古くから「勝敗」「功名」「出世」を重んじる風土があり、近代化においてその傾向はさらに強化された。学業成績、行動評価、集団内での規則遵守など、数値化された比較が教育の中心となり、「他人に迷惑をかけるな」「足を引っ張るな」「家族の名誉のために頑張れ」という価値観が子どもに植えつけられる。 個人の夢や興味、創造性は「無駄なこと」とされ、社会で通用する唯一の通行証は「生存能力」となった。 3. 家庭・学校・社会による三重の包囲網 伝統的な儒教の「家族責任観」と近代国家の統治目標が融合し、「家庭—学校—社会」による三重の圧力システムが形成された。 家庭では子どもが「家の未来を担う存在」「名誉の象徴」とされ、教育は「投資」となる。学校は選別と従属を促す場となり、社会は絶え間ない競争の舞台となる。「名門校へ行け」「大企業に入れ」「安定した収入を得ろ」といった教えが幼少期から刷り込まれ、精神の発達や内面的成長の余地はほぼ失われている。教育は生き残り競争の装置と化している。 二、個人レベルにおける深刻な影響 1. 夢見る力と人格の自由の剥奪 本来、幼少期とは空想、好奇心、探求、失敗を通じて人格が発達する時期である。しかし、生存競争型の教育は、子どもに「利益計算」「欲望の抑圧」「リスクの回避」を強制し、「夢を見る力」を徹底的に潰してしまう。 その結果、成人後には物事への無関心、価値観の空洞化、自分自身を探求する意欲の喪失が広く見られる。 2. 感情の抑圧と内面の消耗 「迷惑をかけるな」「集団を優先せよ」「家の名誉のために尽くせ」といった教育文化の中で、悲しみや怒り、恐怖といった本音の感情を表現することは長くタブーとされてきた。その結果、東アジアの若者たちは感情表現が極端に苦手になり、強迫的なワーカホリック、対人恐怖、引きこもり傾向、そして「社畜文化」や「孤独死」といった現象が生まれている。 日本・韓国・シンガポールはいずれも、先進国の中で若年層の自殺率が高い国として知られている。 3. 自己価値感の欠如と精神的空洞化 他者からの評価に依存しすぎるあまり、内発的な価値感の形成が未熟なまま成長する。結果として、成人後には会社、家族、社会の承認を人生の軸としてしまい、それが崩れたときに自己否定や精神的崩壊に陥りやすい。自分という存在の中身が空っぽになる、いわば「精神的ゾンビ化」が深刻化している。 三、社会構造レベルにおける文明的リスク 1.大規模な「ツール人間化」 「生きるための子ども」を大量に生産することで、彼らは成長後、実行力は高いが創造性に乏しく、価値観も同質化され、制度化された社会の「有能なツール」として機能するようになる。その結果、文明の進化に不可欠な破壊的イノベーションや精神的活力が著しく欠如する。 日本の「社畜文化」、韓国の「過労死経済」、シンガポールの「優秀な社畜現象」はその典型的な表れである。 2.精神文明の衰退と文化の空洞化 実用主義・功利主義的な教育が長年続いたことで、東アジア社会では文化的創造力が低下し、若者はオタク文化、バーチャルアイドル、モバイルゲーム経済、低欲望生活に没頭するようになっている。「文明の空洞化」現象は日増しに深刻化している。 日本と韓国はこの30年間経済が停滞し、文化的ソフトパワーも衰退。シンガポールでは若年層のうつ傾向が増加しており、いずれも「幼年期の生存競争型教育」が精神文明の活力を蝕んだ結果である。 四、文明進化の観点から見る構造的危機 「完全公民制度」には、心の信念による内なる尊厳と、文明的信念による外的秩序の両輪が必要である。その進歩は、夢を持ち、創造し、時に反抗する人々によって支えられており、単なる従属者では成り立たない。 儒教文化圏社会が今後も子どもを早期から「生存のための機械」として育て続ければ、表面的な安定と秩序を保つことはできても、文明進化の原動力を失ってしまう。 過去30年、日本・韓国における経済イノベーション力の低下や、文化的影響力の減衰も、まさにこの延長線上にある。「夢見る者」がいなければ、文明はやがて「安定化 → 保守化 → 硬直化 → 退化」の道をたどるだろう。 五、文明型社会との比較 北欧諸国(スウェーデン、フィンランド、ノルウェー)における教育制度は、以下の価値を堅持している: これらの国々は、イノベーション力、幸福度、青少年のメンタルヘルス、社会的信頼水準において、東アジア儒教文化圏をはるかに上回っており、現代文明型社会の模範とされている。 六、東アジア儒教文化圏社会における文明的自救の道 子どもは「生きるため」だけを学ぶ存在ではない。真の教育とは、生存に必要な基本スキルを超えて、「夢を見ること」「問いを持つこと」「探求すること」「反骨精神」「限界の突破」といった生命本能を守る営みである。東アジア儒教文化圏が文明の停滞、創造性の衰退、精神的危機から脱却するには、次のような改革が不可欠である: さもなくば、「生きるための子ども」を量産し続ける東アジア文明は、「ぬるま湯で茹でられるカエル」のように静かに衰退し、夢も文化的生命力も失った「安定した文明の遺骸」と化すことになるだろう。 七、用語解説 幼年期生存志向型教育(Early Livelihood-oriented Education) […]

read more

Related Content

Mastering the Economy, Shaping the Future
Avatar photo
Kishou · Nov 2, 2024
Civic Economics is an emerging discipline that emphasizes the active participation of citizens in the economic system, pursuing a development model centered on sharing and inclusion. This theory promotes fair wealth distribution and improves social welfare through innovative models such as social enterprises. It also advocates for a sense of global responsibility that transcends national boundaries, fostering sustainable development and civilizational progress.
Can People Rely on the Government to Achieve Economic Prosperity?
Avatar photo
Kishou · Jan 22, 2025
When it comes to economic regulation and reducing the wealth gap, many people tend to place the responsibility on the government. As the central entity of macroeconomic control, the government certainly plays a crucial role in promoting economic balance through a series of policies and measures. However, is this reliance enough? Can it truly lead […]
How to Change the Fate of Modern Slaves
How to Change the Fate of Modern Slaves
Avatar photo
Yicheng · Feb 3, 2025
Societal problems are problems in life In modern society, workers, as a key force driving economic development, often face challenges such as low wages, long working hours, high pressure, and a lack of opportunities for advancement, which gradually makes them passive “modern slaves.” Their plight not only reflects deep-rooted issues within the social structure but […]
The Cost of Extending Pension Contribution Periods
The Cost of Extending Pension Contribution Periods
Avatar photo
Kishou · Feb 1, 2026
Introduction: A Global Surrender of Time Amid a profound global demographic reversal, virtually all modern nations are performing the same quiet yet decisive institutional surgery: delaying retirement ages, extending contribution periods, and recalibrating benefit expectations. Technocrats package this transformation as “the necessary response to the aging crisis,” while fiscal departments frame it as “rational adjustments […]
View All Content