Sure, but that's like saying, "A committee will look into it."
Human beings are horrible at seeing the future. What we need to see is the costs of our decisions: right at the point we make them: the checkouts.
Everything that corporations and governments do is predicated on those purchasing decisions.
So-called "progressive" ideas have done their best to prevent us from seeing the real costs at the purchase point, and instead, to obfuscate our ability to see the future (to 'stimulate' The Economy God).
There are some who have a mechanism in mind (FairTax.org), and the only thing the committees need to do is increase the prebate to become UBI and healthcare (not insurance), and increase the sales tax rate to cover all of the overhead costs of civilization.
Labor's wages need to be paid in full, so that citizens know what they are worth (while UBI tells them what everyone is equally worth to society; if only as cannon fodder), and purchase taxes have to show us the future.
If the future of buying an $80,000 truck costs an additional $80,000, then the human will find other ways to transport things, or learn to share and buy a fraction of that purchase.
That's the bottom line to changing the way we act, think and plan: knowing the actual risks and costs at the point we make decisions.
People aren't stupid. Our systems are designed to individuate us, to make us act stupid and drive us insane trying to figure out why those systems work for some people and not for others (Religion, competition, investments in competitive moral turpitude, etc).
It's all in the marketing and lobbying (income tax code), and the pyramid-sitters know it.