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The Almighty Buck

Y Combinator Plans To Start Doling Out $60 Million Next Year to Study Universal Basic Income (gizmodo.com) 376

The research arm of Y Combinator plans to begin a study on universal basic income next year in which it will give unconditional cash payments to 3,000 participants. From a report: The test is partially intended to see if receiving routine payments will quell anxieties around losing jobs to automation. As Wired reports, the study will be called "Making Ends Meet." Under the plan, a thousand people would get $1,000 per month and the other 2,000 would get $50 per month to serve as a control group. Some of the participants would receive monthly payments for three years and some would get paid every month for five years. Sam Altman, CEO of Y Combinator, a highly successful startup accelerator that helped give rise to companies like Dropbox, Airbnb, and Reddit, announced the company's plans to research universal basic income -- or as he put it, "giving people enough money to live on with no strings attached" -- in a January 2016 blog post. Altman explained his belief that universal basic income will eventually be implemented across the nation as more jobs are automated and "massive new wealth gets created."
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Y Combinator Plans To Start Doling Out $60 Million Next Year to Study Universal Basic Income

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  • by The Original CDR ( 5453236 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @06:23PM (#57206562)
    When a leading VC starts chasing after weird ideas, you know that the end is nigh!
    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @07:38PM (#57207076)

      Where does Y Combinator's money come from? How can their investors possibly benefit from this?

      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 27, 2018 @07:57PM (#57207200)

        By keeping their heads off pikes the day a neural network become cheaper than a highschool graduate.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Tuesday August 28, 2018 @12:00AM (#57208254)

        How can their investors possibly benefit from this?

        By society not collapsing. It may well happen that the only other approach is a severe restriction on automation. An UBI could be an alternative to that that actually costs less. Bit this is _research_. As in "we do not know yet".

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 27, 2018 @06:26PM (#57206592)

    We need immigrants to do the jobs that robots won't do and a program to pay people to not care if they lose their job.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 27, 2018 @06:29PM (#57206616)

    When I was 5 years old I figured out that if everyone has $1,000,000 dollars everyone would be rich.

    I realized when I was 10 why if everyone had $1,000,000 nobody would be rich.

    Sure, this experiment will work because the source of the money isn't other people's money and it isn't inflation.

    When the source of the money is inflation or other people's money, that $12,000 a year will be sunk into rent increases and increased home prices, amongst other things.

    • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @07:45PM (#57207128) Homepage Journal

      When I was 5 years old I figured out that if everyone has $1,000,000 dollars everyone would be rich.

      I realized when I was 10 why if everyone had $1,000,000 nobody would be rich.

      Sure, this experiment will work because the source of the money isn't other people's money and it isn't inflation.

      When the source of the money is inflation or other people's money, that $12,000 a year will be sunk into rent increases and increased home prices, amongst other things.

      When I was 25 years old I figured out that $1,000,000 invested in an index fund would increase in value enough to account for inflation and give an income of $2000 a month in perpetuity.

      Also when I was 25, I figured out that any reduction of the workforce would push wages up and make jobs better by way of competition from supply and demand.

      Also also, I noted that you don't need to give everyone the income immediately. Having a lottery will take people out of the workforce gradually, which could be funded over time in a reasonable way. Each $1 billion spent this way takes 1,000 people out of the workforce.

      I noticed many things when I was 25, including that if you took all the entitlements programs and simply gave the money out with no regulatory oversight, you could have 5 times as many people using entitlements.

      Looking at the cost of entitlements [wikipedia.org], it's clear that we *could* start moving people off of welfare and related services and eventually get to UBI or something close to it, with no increase in taxes.

      Individual productivity keeps rising, and it's pretty easy to see that UBI has to happen.

      Or if it doesn't, then we're in for a world of hurt as all the goods and services needed by everyone are made by fewer and fewer people, while the people who can't find a job either starve or revolt.

      • by hjf ( 703092 )

        Do you understand that FREE MARKET works both ways? If everyone had $1M and they gave it to banks, banks wouldn't pay you such high interest rate. You can't play that game with the people that invented it.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Sensible countries have controls on the basic cost of living. Rent, utilities, food etc.

  • $1000 per month? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by PhrostyMcByte ( 589271 ) <phrosty@gmail.com> on Monday August 27, 2018 @06:32PM (#57206636) Homepage

    I think the idea for UBI is that, while you may not be eating out buying filet mignon, you can at least survive on it.

    Is $1,000 survivable? It is significantly less than minimum wage, which people already struggle with.

    • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @06:51PM (#57206760) Journal
      I can't even pay my rent on that little. UBI is worthless senseless nonsense and everyone needs to get it out of their heads already.
    • by AlanBDee ( 2261976 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @06:59PM (#57206818)

      I think it can be done. You're probably taking public transportation, living in vary rural areas, making all your own meals, and splitting the rent with someone else. Would it be comfortable, no. But it shouldn't be. There should still be an incentive for those who want to and are able to work to earn additional money to live off.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        That fails when there are no jobs for most people anymore. Then it _must_ be comfortable. We are not there yet by a long stretch, but it is a good idea to be prepared and actually understand the options when the time comes.

    • by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @07:35PM (#57207058)

      I was making $1500/month in grad school as recently as early 2011, which was enough to afford a two-story apartment, eating out regularly, no lack of groceries, and still have a few hundred bucks a month that I was able to set aside to start building up a 20% downpayment for the house I bought in 2013 in this same area (Bryan/College Station, Texas). $1000/month is doable, at least around where I live now, but you definitely wouldn’t be able to afford a big city.

    • I've been a proponent for a $6k annual BIG for a long time.

      I think that what you are missing is household size. The federal poverty line is roughly $8k for a household, plus $4k per person in it. So a 1 person household has a poverty line of $12k. 2 people is $16k and 4 is $24k.

      $1k/month each person for 4 people living together is the poverty line, and encourages efficiency.

      Unlike current welfare plans, where living with somebody else may cost you benefits.

      Finally, remember that you aren't penalized for

    • Is $1,000 survivable? It is significantly less than minimum wage, which people already struggle with.

      $1000 / month may turn out to be worth next to nothing at all. If UBI is implemented by the process of the government printing more money, then inflation will rapidly devalue the UBI. That will also make the minimum wage worth far less, along with everyone else's wages for that matter. You can't arbitrarily create more fiat money unless it matches a corresponding increase in productivity and economic valu

      • Re:$1000 per month? (Score:5, Informative)

        by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Tuesday August 28, 2018 @11:25AM (#57210790) Homepage Journal

        $1000 / month may turn out to be worth next to nothing at all. If UBI is implemented by the process of the government printing more money, then inflation will rapidly devalue the UBI.

        That's why you don't implement it that way, or at least if you do, you continually increase the UBI payments to match inflation. A steady rate of inflation is useful because it encourages investment by devaluing cash reserves. Assets don't devalue because of inflation, only because of depreciation — which can be written off.

        A better way to implement it, though, is simple taxation. You tax corporate income, not profits.

        That will also make the minimum wage worth far less,

        If you have UBI, you don't need a minimum wage. People's basic needs are met by UBI, so there's no reason not to let people pay any amount they want for work since nobody is forced to do it just to stay alive.

        The only way UBI can "work" without inflation is if economic value is taken from those who produce it (in the form of taxes), and then redistributed.

        You are making the classic blunder of assuming that those who collect the largest share of the profit do the largest share of the work, but that is provably false. The worker's share of the profit has been falling for decades. Most of the profit goes to the people at the top, even though they are not the ones producing the economic value. They absolutely should be taxed more, so that the wealth can be redistributed. If they had been willing to share to begin with, and paid workers a fair share of the profits, then we wouldn't need things like UBI because people would have money, and they would put it into their local economies, which is how jobs are actually created.

        The UBI assumes that everyone who receives it will spend it wisely, hence eliminating dozens of other government entitlement programs, and that just won't happen.

        It may be necessary to also teach household economics in school. We used to do that, but we stopped. We can start again. While we're at it, bring back cooking classes. Make them mandatory for all students. Cooking saves a lot of money. And hey, why not critical thinking, while we're at it?

        UBI only becomes possible if we undergo an economic "singularity" where AI + robotics + cheap energy creates a society where basic food, clothing, and shelter become effectively "free".

        We're rapidly approaching that point. We throw away about as much food as we consume, just for convenience's sake. Clothing costs pennies to produce per garment, unless it's made out of cotton which is now threatened by climate change. We know how to make excellent (not just adequate) shelters out of burlap bags filled with dirt, and barbed wire. (You still need a roof, but if you don't build large structures, roofs made of recycled steel are cheap.) It costs more in some locations just to get the permits to build a traditional 1-bedroom house than it does to buy the materials. And then, of course, there's shipping containers; they are literally a problem, stacking up at ports because nobody wants them, which is in turn a result of regulation as well — you need to do certain types of fumigation when going into certain ports, while other ports won't permit containers which have been treated in certain ways into their ports at all. So container re-use is at probably an all-time low... But that leaves them available to build homes with.

        And in that case, you'll find that your government-produced commodities will be treated as undesirable assets because "only poor people accept them".

        So what? In what way is that a problem? Poor people will still benefit from them.

        The real long-term answer to making UBI or indeed any system work is education, but both parties (though mostly the reps) have deliberately attacked educa

  • ...increase the value of the money VC funders have put into the startup accelerator?

    This will create no jobs and no value. If I were backing Y Cabinator, I'd want to pull all my money out and invest in something that actually creates jobs for Americans (and comes with the possibility of my money earning a profit), rather than waste it handing out welfare.

    (Psst: Universal basic Income failed when they tried it in the SIME/DIME experiments, where it discouraged work. Try reading Losing Ground instead of repea

    • How does handing out random money increase the value of the money the VC funders have put into the startup accelerator

      Well, look at it this way. As automation increases, due to these very startups and their peers, the available number of jobs will decrease. So now, do you want your neighbors robbing you, or hanging out relatively peacefully, painting watercolors or whatever? Seems like a very good time to test these waters (not that this instance is a decent test, it's not, $12k/yr is ridiculously low in th

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        So now, do you want your neighbors robbing you, or hanging out relatively peacefully, painting watercolors or whatever?

        A capitalist might want to see neighbors painting watercolors for paid commissions.

    • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
      You're talking about experiments from 50-60 years ago. Do you realize that the driving force of UBI in today's environment is to actually allow people to survive without working? Automation means fewer workers are needed overall. Unless something major happens, we're going to eventually reach the point where most people will be unable to find work due to it not being available.

      There are only two real solutions, less people or a viable welfare system. Any conscionable society would ignore the first option.
      • by Jack9 ( 11421 )

        > Do you realize that the driving force of UBI in today's environment is to actually allow people to survive without working?

        You realize there's no reason to assert that?

        There's nothing published or publicly said, by the organizations running these experiments, to that effect.

        Can you explain why you imagine UBI is to allow people to survive without working?

      • There are only two real solutions, less people or a viable welfare system. Any conscionable society would ignore the first option. While encouraging reduction in population growth might be good, actually restricting it would be dangerous from a moral standpoint. That only leaves the second option. UBI alone may not be enough, or even the best way. But, it's better we work towards a solution before it's needed.

        Actually, the first option is already implementing itself, and has been for a while. We're just not quite yet to where we'll be seeing the effects without having to check the parts of the demographic data which actually is predictive of what you can expect for the population--it turns out that while restricting it is harmful (not just from a moral standpoint), it pretty much happens of its own accord as basic sanitation, universal basic education, and (very) basic medical care becomes widely available.

        The

    • Firstly, The vast majority of UBI experiments have not shown any definite evidence of discouraging work, except among individuals who opt into training to improve future prospects, or start their own business.

      Secondly, SIME/DIME were NOT UBI experiments in the sense generally discussed as such:
      From the overview of the Final Report: (https://aspe.hhs.gov/report/overview-final-report-seattle-denver-income-maintenance-experiment)

      The cash transfer treatment tested in SIME/DIME, as in the previous income maintenance experiments, consisted of a series of negative income tax plans. A negative income tax is simply a cash transfer program in which there is (a) a maximum benefit (called the guarantee) for which a family is eligible if it has no other income and (b) a rate (called the benefit reduction or tax rate) at which the maximum benefit is reduced as other income rises.

      So basically,they clawed back a substantial amount of every additional dollar reci

      • So basically,they clawed back a substantial amount of every additional dollar recipients earned - to the tune of 50-80% if I'm reading correctly. That's not a UBI, that's just a welfare program with a slightly gentler benefit cliff, from which one would reasonably expect a reduced but still appreciable disincentive to work.

        Indeed. When I've looked at the issue for my proposed $6k UBI, I've set the "clawback" at a relatively gentle 30-33%. It was even "Reverse progressive" because I did it by eliminating the lowest income tax brackets, so the $4k exemption was gone, as were the 10 and 15 brackets, everything was 32%. The UBI wasn't completely eliminated until about $30k of income if you considered previous tax rates, though becoming "tax neutral" happened sooner, at about $18k.

  • Where does this money come from? All the people touting UBI all say to watch this video or read this paper yadda yadda. Bottom line is taxes will go up for middle class.

  • The problem with Universal Basic Income is that it could push wages down and increase prices. If the government is going to give a certain amount of money, then the assumption by business is that people can afford to pay more for goods and services. Furthermore, businesses may assume that with UBI, they can pay their employees less. Therefore, any assistance that UBI offers will end up negating any advantage.
    • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @08:19PM (#57207334) Homepage Journal

      I'm curious as to how you think that this could reduce wages. My line of thinking is that with a substantial portion of people looking at just staying home if the pay isn't worth it, that pay will have to increase to lure people out.

      As such, businesses that assume they can pay less because of the UBI will discover that said potential employees decide that just staying home is better.

      I figure that market forces will tend to adjust such that living on just the UBI sucks enough, and working improves that enough, that most people still end up working.

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        "market forces" cant adjust to a massive new tax to pay for a UBI.
        People expecting to live on a UBI will find that their UBI pays for nothing they expected and need.
        Time to set a new gov system to fully support people who cant live on the UBI?
        Tax people more to make the UBI larger for everyone?
  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @06:43PM (#57206698)

    as more jobs are automated and "massive new wealth gets created."

    If more jobs are automated that means more people without jobs. Who is going to pay them this income? Those getting massive new wealth?

    All you've done is make the masses dependent on a select few continuing to give them money and in doing so create a redistribution of wealth (such that it is ).

    I'm not the smartest person in the room, but how is this even remotely feasible and sustainable?

    • Re:What? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Immerman ( 2627577 ) on Monday August 27, 2018 @08:37PM (#57207434)

      It's eminently feasible - We're currently producing X amount of real wealth (goods and services, not money) and distributing it among Y people without trouble. If technology changes so that far less labor is required to produce the same amount of wealth, that doesn't inherently change anything - you can still distribute the wealth in the exact same way without any physical problems.

      If you're accustomed to thinking in terms of wealth in terms of money, payed in exchange for man-hours of labor, then if technology lets you produce 10x the real wealth per man-hour, then that hour is now worth 10x as much if it's paid in terms of value created. So, let everyone work 4 hours a week instead of 40 and get the same paycheck. The economy continues as it has, except everyone has a lot more free time on their hands to enjoy what they're buying.

      Alternately you could pay one person 10x as much, and let the other 90% eat cake. That has a problem though, even if you can handle the riots to your satisfaction - because now there's only 1/10th as many people with money to spend on buying your goods, and odds are very good they're not going to buy10x as many things - in general, the more money people have, the more they invest. Say they buy 5x as much - now your factories only need to build half as many widgets, so you lay off half your workers. And so the number of people with money to spend halves, so you halve production again... And the whole time, the income of the investors is crumbling.

      It's a vicious downward spiral that demonstrates the fundamental truth that jobs are created by consumers, not investors. The wealth of the top is sustained by the spending of the masses, any serious disruption of that can bring the entire house of cards falling down.

      As for the masses being dependent on the few giving them money - why? Make them investors instead, up front. It's not like the few are inherently worthy of the wealth they lucked into - for the most part if they had been switched at birth it would be someone else sitting in their position now. They don't also don't generate any wealth themselves - investing only leverages wealth - the wealth is always ultimately created by the laborers - if your hard work made it possible for the company to amass enough wealth to automate away most the jobs, why shouldn't you own a share of that new equipment?

      One mechanism I like to implement such a thing is to require that X% of the stock of all corporations or other such liability limiting/wealth concentrating legal tools always automatically and irrevocably belongs to the country's citizens, with control distributed equally, as just part of the cost of being able to hide behind legal fictions when shit hits the fan (it would also greatly discourage the use of shell corporations to dodge liability, as every shell would cost you another X% of asset dilution)

      • One mechanism I like to implement such a thing is to require that X% of the stock of all corporations or other such liability limiting/wealth concentrating legal tools always automatically and irrevocably belongs to the country's citizens

        You mean like state capitalism [wikipedia.org] in the People's Republic of China?

  • That's about as useful as this is. Why not spend that $60,000,000 on training people for different jobs if theirs are in dire danger of being lost to 'automation'? Wouldn't that be smarter? "Teach a man how to fish" instead of "Give a man a fish", remember how that works?
  • Back in the seventies a firm did this in the Seattle area, though back then it was something like $600 a month. The guy I knew who was in the program spent all his money on turquoise jewelry.

    • Well your anecdotal claim has certainly convinced me. Have a copper bracelet, because you know, I know a guy who swears up and down it cured his arthritis.

      • Convinced you of what? I wasn't trying to convince you of anything, just informing you of my experience. Take it or leave it. I don't give a shit.

  • Restrict recipients *only* to people that have lost their job to automation.
    • Restrict recipients *only* to people that have lost their job to automation.

      You might want to look up the word "universal" in the dictionary. Then again, so might the guy at Y Combinator.

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )
        It could eventually become universal, as more people lose their jobs to automation. The entire point of it is to enable people to survive large scale unemployment due to automation anyways, so why not restrict recipients to that group?
        • It could eventually become universal, as more people lose their jobs to automation. The entire point of it is to enable people to survive large scale unemployment due to automation anyways, so why not restrict recipients to that group?

          Because it's just "welfare" if you do that. UBI has to be fundamentally different than welfare programs to work, if it even can work. But simply handing money out to people who "need" it is what we're doing right now, and it's a terrible way to go about trying to help folks.

          • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
            Tested welfare for citizens who are not working. People who are starting approved education. Citizens who need support.
            Citizens who are working do not get a UBI as they are working and paying new taxes to pay for the UBI.
      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        Giving working people who pay taxes a UBI will not work out. Thats too many people to pay and then tax to cover the UBI.
  • Under the plan, a thousand people would get $1,000 per month and the other 2,000 would get $50 per month to serve as a control group.

    Sam Altman, CEO of Y Combinator, a highly successful startup accelerator that helped give rise to companies like Dropbox, Airbnb, and Reddit, announced the company's plans to research universal basic income -- or as he put it, "giving people enough money to live on with no strings attached"

    So $12K is a living wage?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The "fair tax" is a regressive tax though, taking a higher proportion of income from the poor than the rich, for the simple reason that the poor spend more of their money than the rich (who can afford to invest much of it instead). And as such, it is hardly what most people would consider "fair".

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        A $12K/yr UBI with a $40K/yr job taxed at a flat 30 percent is effectively a 0% tax. How is that regressive?

    • The manipulatively named "Fair Tax" is a flat tax, which is always regressive because the poor spends a larger percentage of taxes on necessities. A graduated tax scheme with no loopholes or exceptions is barely more complex to manage than a flat tax scheme. UBI, however, eliminates numerous social programs which are complex to administer, so long as you also have a national health care program. NH is probably mandatory for UBI to work. However, we already have multiple national health care programs; one fo

  • Unless the goal is to kill the idea of UBI, this is wasted money.

    UBI enable people to make projects if the income is high enough that you do not have to starve for a paid job, any shitty paid job, to make a decent living. And it works if you do not have to bother wbout when it stops.

  • is breaking down! Let's make new chains and keep people dependent on the system forever!
  • If I could count on my rent being made and some or all of my monthly expenses I would start making beef jerky on a more than pastime basis. I'd also volunteer more than 1 day a week at the animal rehab preserve, I specialize in snakes and lizards. I also spend one day a week as a library volunteer reading to kids and indexing the books in their book store. I think most people would not just quit doing things but would find more personally fulfilling things to do with their time that wouldn't normally make enough money to warrant or allow them to devote the effort. Imagine musicians, writers and countless other creative pursuits which could arise.

  • For the $60M they are spending on these 1000 people getting free income, YC could instead invest their same standard $120k deal on 500 more startups -- $120k*500=60M. They regularly turn away hundreds (thousands?) of hardworking, dedicated entrepreneurs every year with great businesses that just don't fit their model perfectly, who have likely invested all their time, money and lives building their businesses. The startups would in aggregate create actual jobs, likely more than the 1000 people that are jus
  • by Ancil ( 622971 ) on Tuesday August 28, 2018 @08:56AM (#57209612)

    Blah blah blah ..Good idea!,, blah blah ..Bad Idea!.. blah blah...

    Could someone just post a link where I can sign up to get $1,000 a month?

    I already make good money, but an extra grand would certainly help.

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