People can work all they want, but if nobody needs the product they provide (ie: people have basic needs provided) the demand for those workers is infinitesimal. You can have the brightest and smartest mathematicians in the world, but what will they produce that people need? Will they produce more houses for all the new kids in this world? Would there be enough people who enjoyed making houses to cover this need? If not, wouldn't they start taking bribes to work on someone's house first? Wouldn't they have to start resorting to charging people for this service in exchange for their house-building skill? Isn't that were we are now? Humanity had a hundred (thousand?) chances to provide the basic necessities for everyone. We fought wars over resources because there wasn't enough. Land, food, gold... humanity created several systems throughout the hundreds of thousands(?) f years of our existence and we've yet to see humanity reach the level we are today because we found a system where people are required to work to obtain their needs. Our system feeds of the fact that resources are limited and people need to compete to get them. There has been no successful system in history that allows people to do whatever they want without someone else taking what that want from them or being able to support the entirety of that population.
You'd have an entire population trying to do the least amount of work that leads them to the reward they want.
You do realize this is exactly the mentality that has given us the great many technological, scientific, and economic boons we enjoy today, right?
But guess what - it turns out giving people more generally doesn't tend to make them stop working so much as aim for more rewards.
More rewards to do what? Pay for housing, food, and electricity.
It does and it doesn't. You're claiming that society can't function unless people are forced to work by making it an immediate and constant requirement for their survival. This is essentially an argument of work for its own sake. What I just explained shows that we're driven and capable of minimizing the amount of work that is required of us, whether it's for maintaining a functioning society or simply feeling like we're working when we're not.
Part of the problem with the job market today is so many jobs have been going obsolete over the last several decades. We're constantly able to accomplish more with less effort. Those with control over resources necessary for job creation don't need any more people working for them. But your position is that we must require them to work anyway.
This centralized control coupled with belief that a person must have a job to justify their existence is very much blocking humanity from progress. We're working backwards. We're forcing ourselves to struggle to invent work to do, no matter how unnecessary it may be, and in the process we're generating extreme excesses of material wealth that only goes to waste because it's just not needed and less people over time are able to justify by virtue of their labor their own privilege to share in the product.
What you are claiming then is that we go through a "correction period" where money is taken from those that desired social reward so much that they out competed the people would do the least amount of work. What does that accomplish? It may put the current generation in homes, give them food, and let them pop out a few billion more kids that will need more resources. Someone is going to have to make those resources and without anyone "needing" them... what person is going to be mining some resource if they don't need to be? We'd smack right up against a brick wall because we have to monetize and compete over raw material.
If we ever got to a point where energy production was free and resources were fabricated out of nothing then it might make sense to let people freely pick and choose what they want to be doing.
which runs starkly contrary to your other beliefs that it's regulation and not lack of ambition keeping people down
My beliefs?
I said my belief. I believe that if everyone on Earth was given the ability to just do whatever they wanted and were guaranteed food, shelter, and care we'd have less production of goods that people desire and some people would find ways to take from others in order to provide for themselves instead of doing the work themselves. You point to Sweden as an example, but without goods coming from other competitive states... the situation may not be so. I'd even go so far as saying that they enjoy that ability due to the work people are doing outside that ecosystem. Their whole economy is based around foreign trade. They depend on exports and they depend on us. Not every country in the world can rely on that if they all follow the same systems.
Provided that a situation where all these nice things can be plausibly provided, should people be forced to work? My experience is that only people who hate their jobs do the bare minimum to avoid being fired. You only get brilliance from people who want to be where they are, anyway. Besides that, while I know this sounds likely to lead to an imbalance of a world with no janitors, there are bound to be people who'll seek a job for extra money even if all their necessities and several luxuries besides are met without work, because money is more personally fulfilling to them than whatever else they could be doing. The number of teenagers working lousy minimum wage jobs is nonzero, after all.
Not only janitorial, but public sector jobs like water treatment, paving streets, or gathering resources. Sweden has a government owned mining company while practically every other service is provided by private companies. There are simply jobs that would seem undesirable and without some motivation people would not do them. People will claim that that motivation is getting money for more things but who will make the things if everyone has them?
Also, and since Sweden and France were brought up, skilled trade jobs... according to
this:
Employers in Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany, Belgium, France, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Sweden and Switzerland all ranked skilled trades as their hardest jobs to fill in 2010.
Apparently, given the choice and necessities met, people did not want to work in these skilled labors jobs.
All I'm gonna say is if I had my medical bills paid for, my housing taken care of and my food provided... I'd do jack shit all day long and screw around. I'd lose all productivity.
See: Roman empire, actually. They gave out free food and entertainment (in the form of gladiator matches and such).
Did they provide housing for everyone that entered the gates of Rome? Cause that would be sweet... until of course Rome falls from lack of income from freeloaders.
Ironically, and unfortunately for you, one of the main - probably even the main - reasons Rome fell was extreme capitalism and concentration of wealth, which eventually caused the economy to not just crash, but to drive of a cliff, ignite midair, create an atomic explosion, and rain napalm all over the landscape before finally landing in a volcano and burning up. In short, Rome fell because she did not give enough to her poor segments.
I read a different angle... actually several of them. Nobody seems to have a clear and vivid understanding of why Rome fell (or if it really did) but some historians believe that it was partly due to their excessive expenditures on military, a literal division of the country and gradual dissemination into the separate kingdoms that would make up the Middle Ages. (Families splitting the lands...) there are all kinds of theories for every angle (mercenaries that got strong enough to become traitors...Christianity...)
The social pressure is that of another burden. They are pressuring you to ease their own burden. If everyone was given a free home, food, and care this burden would not exist. the person living in that situation could just go get their own place and would feel no social pressure to move out and/or make an income.
People want to go to the movies, concerts, and sport games. They want to eat out and yo clubing, or invite friends over to dinner. Theg want to buy status symbols, be it furniture, cars, or brand clothes. They want a basic car and gas yo drive it in the first place. They want more than yhe basic tv-channels, faster than the lowest Internet speed, eat expensive and exotic, or just varied food. They want to provide a good, joyful life for their kids, with games, toys, sports, interest-clubs, camps and happy summertimes. They want to go on vacation, see the world, own a summer house or winter cabin where they can go and relax. They want to give to charity and help other people. They want to feel richer and better than their neighbour.
People want a lot of things. Every thing, even. All of that are things people can't afford just by having their basic need for home, food, and clothes covered by the state. So why would people stay at home and not work, when they wouldn't be able to afford anything else than sit at their windows staring and have cheap noodles, beans and bacon for dinner every night?
Sure, those things take resources. I already covered this. Also, feeling richer and better than your neighbor (on a global scale) leads to things like military buildup and claiming rights to a stretch of land where your religious leaders want to worship or that part of land that contains oil that you need to keep your people happy.