The First Basic Income Experiment in Germany Will Start in 2019 (basicincome.org) 232
Basic income is going to be tested in Germany next year. From a report: The setup of the experiment will be similar to the one now ending in Finland, which means there will be an unconditional cash transfer to 250 randomly selected people among those already receiving benefits (250 others will act as the control group), and evaluate the impact in terms of labor market behavior, health and social relations. Behind this initiative, to be initiated in May 2019, is the Sanktionsfrei organization, a non-profit managed by volunteer professionals from administration, IT-tech, communications and law. Sanktionsfrei (meaning "free from sanctions"), with headquarters in Berlin, specializes in helping sanctioned citizens by the Hartz IV social security system in Germany. It will conduct this experiment in Berlin, for a 3-year period, accepting volunteers who may apply for it through their website.
Quite the honor (Score:2)
"unconditional cash transfer to 250 randomly selected people among those already receiving benefits (250 others will act as the control group),"
Oh, the honor!
Participating in the unconditional cash test and being in the control group who doesn't get a dime. That's love of science.
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In places where this system was tested, it has been fairly well established, that unless it is universal it will lead to some people stop working and things like that.
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This test, like those in the past, is not a good test.
1. It uses people that apply, and are thus self selected. They will likely behave very differently than randomly chosen people.
2. It ends in 3 years. People will behave differently if they know they will need a job again in 3 years.
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People will pick up garbage and do all kind of hard work in order to get more confort in their life than UBI will get them.
UBI is for survival, not confort. And while some people with simple tastes will be happy to live with it, I expect that most people will want more.
And how do you get people to pick up trash and do hard work? By paying them more of course. There is no universal rule saying that picking up trash should be paid less than office work. In fact, the garbage man probably has a more difficult a
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1) The B stands for Basic. You could work to get more, if you want. Somebody probably will.
2) If that doesn't work, make it a condition of receiving it that you're eligible for some kind of draft, for those times when 1) doesn't work. Could also be used for seasonal things and emergencies.
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Nonsense. The demand doesn't change, just the ability to pay for it. That means there will be MORE competition for a newly expanded market, a company that raises prices when their competition can undercut them will simply lose market share.
The "increased demand" leads to a larger supply, not higher prices.
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Perhaps if occupancy was close to 100%, and no one anticipated an increase in demand (due to the UBI), prices might increase temporarily, to the extent that people who already had rental housing get an increase in income.
We're not at 100% occupancy, though. If some landlords raise rates, others will undercut them. With more people able to afford a place to stay, more units will be built. Supply will increase, to match the demand. The only constraint is the number of people who can afford to pay a rent (
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citation?
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Technically speaking, these are not experiments, these are trial runs to gauge impact and outcomes in order to establish the best method by which to handle automation. Clearly labour concentration camps which you are no allowed to leave unless you have a job to do for the 1% will, well, no matter how hard they try and how many they imprison and how many they kill, will not work, they will fail, they seem to have finally accepted this. Though they still demand to live in opulent, extraordinarily wasteful and
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just look at google maps at all the national and state parks around the country. it's clear they are stealing resources
Look at the exclusive logging and mining rights in "national forests" around the country and tell me that's not stealing resources. The US government treats national forests like the fucking King's Hunting Preserve from the 10th century. People with the King's ear get to go in and exploit the fuck out of natural resources the rest of us would be arrested for touching, while paying a minuscule royalty, or no royalty at all. They even call it a fucking royalty still.
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LOL, Walked to gas station yesterday. one of the begger couples, you know the older people with no teeth and obvious drug addictions.. Sitting behind the gas station with a new Iphone, looked like atleast the 8 maybe X.. Was newer than my iphone 6S.... Not to mention right before that I walked past 2 junkies smoking heroin in the trash can area. Think what you want, but come live somewhere that isn't a suburb. Its fun, trust me. Hope you know how to fight.
Might I mention this is on Las Vegas BLVD... yes tha
Broken by design. (Score:2, Insightful)
The people who run the world have announced their intention to starve us to death when our jobs are automated. If you live somewhere it's legal, buy guns.
Re:Broken by design. (Score:4, Funny)
The people who run the world have announced their intention to starve us to death..
Nonsense. I'm sure every Tuesday will be soylent green day. Om nom nom!
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It was a fine experiment, worth trying out. However if it didn't work then it doesn't work. If Germany is trying, what are they doing different than Finland.
The problem has always been, there is a good portion of the population, will not choose to work if their basic needs are met. There are a lot of jobs that just simply suck, and there isn't too many people with such ambition to do such work. However the sting of capitalism is enough to get them to do whatever job they can do wither they like it or no
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The idea of UBI is that if people had enough, they would would be more willing to take extra risks, to have their lives above basic income, but so far that doesn't seem the case. I think people value security vs wealth.
Exactly this. All the current experiments are a failure because they only give extra short term security not long term security. None of the UBI experiments last long enough for someone to even go back to school and get a 4 year degree. If you want a good UBI experiment then model it after one of the many lotteries which give X dollars for life. If this sounds too expensive, then you can do this on the cheap by selling lottery tickets to fund this. This might skew the stats slightly but lottery ticket
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But what would they study in their 4 year degree?
The problem with Liberal Arts, isn't the Liberal Arts degree, it is the bulk of the students who get it. A lot of students go for the degree because it is light on classes that most people find Hard, Math, and Science, mostly because you cannot BS your way to a passing grade, either the answer is correct or it is not. So for students a Liberal Arts degree is the easiest route to a College Degree.
However what has happened is these students who just BS their w
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If you think there is any skill that won't be automated in the next five to twenty years, you are insane. There will still be jobs, but they will be fake jobs in which the wealthy are "assisted"
This is not UBI. (Score:5, Insightful)
That would perhaps be because there has never been a UBI program, and this is not one?
Or to you not understand what Universal means, and cannot read: 'which means there will be an unconditional cash transfer to 250 randomly selected people among those already receiving benefits'
This is just 'giving more to those already receiving government money' - ie: those least likely to use it well (note I am not commenting on their need, just their likely motivation/ability to work).
Why is it not a TRULY random selection of 250 people? Because the people designing it want it to fail. They cannot accept the possibility that they will lose control of the state dependent level of society where they can basically buy votes in return for welfare.
Simple, really.
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Self driving cars are decades away. They aren't even at alpha quality stages. In reality this AI is going to look like the two machine gun sentries in Idiocracy shooting at each other.
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Same with Electrical. I worry not about robots taking my job. I do however worry about self-entitled people trying to take the money I earned for doing my job.
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Same with Electrical. I worry not about robots taking my job. I do however worry about self-entitled people trying to take the money I earned for doing my job.
You already pay social security you asshat. Someone's grandmother is making her electric bill payment every month using your payment into social security. UBI is more of the same.
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I'll bet in 20 years time, we still have humans installing and maintaining pipes in this country - as well as many many other things.
Maintaining, yes. Installing in new build houses? That could be automated in a handful of years, as could vast swaths of other labor in current house building.
Home construction hasn't changed appreciably in terms of labor inputs since... basically ever. Humans still build houses the way humans have built houses since the 15th century. Sure the carpenter now has pneumatic tools, and the foundation was dug by one man with a machine instead of 40 men with shovels, but other than that, there's precious litt
Re:Broken by design. (Score:4, Insightful)
I am fairly certain that other countries having recovered from WWII, while they stayed neutral in the conflict, had nothing to do with it right?
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
11th per capita.
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They are NOW. But then in just the last few years they've implemented Progressive ideas again... like open borders.
Apples and oranges.
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I don't think it's a coincidence. I think their inability to recover from the financial crash constrained their ability to pay for entitlement programs, and that's why they were cut. There's no reason to suspect the entitlement programs caused a real-estate bubble. After all, in 2008 the United States had a worse bubble [citation needed] and far less generous entitlement programs.
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There have been at least 3 recent experiments at UBI. One in Norway, one in Canada, and one in the U.S. (State, not Federal).
There was also an old one in Canada. Still, as a supporter of having a UBI, I have felt that the mentioned programs all had issues. It's like trying to test the diesel fuel cycle using a gasoline engine. Apples and Oranges.
Sweden tried something similar quite a while ago. It wasn't exactly UBI but the effect was about the same. According to a Swedish fellow who worked at my company, "Back home, if you don't want to work you just don't. You still collect a nice 'paycheck' from the government every month."
Here's the problem, the paycheck was nice. Nothing about a UBI mandates that it has to be a large payment.
Personally, for the USA I'd peg the amount at around $6k/year per person, and that is with eliminating all other non-medical forms of welfare. Most UBI proposals I see are for 2-
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That's not even starvation income. No one can live on that, since you're also proposing cutting off all non-medical assistance. Hell, that won't even cover the rent alone in most places.
Learn to math. 35 hours/week, $7.25/hour, and losing two weeks a year to unpaid vacation, sick time, etc., would be a gross of about $12688/year, or $1057/month. That's survivable in most areas only if you get HUD.
Sure... that m
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That's not even starvation income. No one can live on that, since you're also proposing cutting off all non-medical assistance. Hell, that won't even cover the rent alone in most places.
Sure they can. Plenty do in the USA. Household size of 4, that is the poverty line.
Learn reading comprehension. I wasn't talking about the UBI being the amount of a minimum wage job, but replacing the need for it, as it provides the floor.
Fuel and such isn't required because I'm not paying you to keep a vehicle. Want one? Get a job.
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More like history has proven that the majority of the poor spend their money wisely just fine, but those wise decisions, by necessity, must exclude things like savings, investments, buying in bulk, replacing worn-out or damaged things when repairs are possible, buying new instead of used, etc. The money one might normally spend on those things just. is. not. there. when you're poor.
Sure, there are outliers who trade their benefits for cash, but they're not absolutely representative. The USDA claims about
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There have been at least 3 recent experiments at UBI. One in Norway, one in Canada, and one in the U.S. (State, not Federal).
All three failed miserably.
And yet all three were not at all fitting the definition or the economic theory of UBI. And this new experiment doesn't either.
"Back home, if you don't want to work you just don't. You still collect a nice 'paycheck' from the government every month."
If the paycheck was "nice" it wasn't Universal Basic Income. UBI keeps people off the street, it doesn't keep people out of work.
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I must have pissed off some Progressives.
Another flawed study (Score:4, Informative)
You can't tell how it actually works unless everyone gets it and the society is given enough time to adjust to it.
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It's not supposed to be a complete, society level experiment. It's supposed to address the biggest worry most people have - that it will end up being worse than the current benefit system for those who are reliant on social security. That could be in terms of leaving them worse off, or in terms of discouraging them from working (which personally I think is nonsense, but let's test it).
Boot of Tyranny ion Your Face (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh how lovely.
Give the masses just enough income so that they do not take notice of your ill gotten wealth and tyranny and rise up and hang you in your guilded enclave. We can not allow people to actually contribute to society, work and profit from their own endeavors and be independant could we?
Oh heavens forbid no!
Merry Xmas slaves and Happy New Year!
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You seem to be arguing that people have to suffer in order to rise up against wealthy criminals... I'm not sure that's a good basis for society. Or realistic, for that matter.
In fact, let's compare democracy in Europe and the US. In Europe we all have very generous welfare systems compared to the US. By your logic Europe should be run by criminals, massively corrupt and full of rich people living in enclaves while the rest of us scrape by. But in reality there is less wealth inequality and in many places a
Universal income (Score:4, Insightful)
Is a sensible, logical, rational, cheap way to run a society, and gives the electorate the power to hire or fire those controlling the supply.
It doesn't make people lazy, all evidence says the opposite. Every scrap of evidence shows that crippling people's ability to work is what makes people lazy but that UI facilitates work.
It also facilitates good work, employers can't risk unsafe or abusive conditions. Furthermore, healthy people with adequate resources can - and probably will - work harder as a result.
Real work is about feeling fulfilled and productive, deep inate human needs, not about surviving to the weekend and dying young from work-related conditions.
There are other philosophies. Other countries are welcome to them, so long as they keep them to themselves. Every country should be free to live as it pleases, not as some other country's pet.
Will Germany's program meet the requirements? Doubt it. It's not a scale invariant concept, the numbers aren't statistically useful, the Germans are too rightwing to think collectively.
Re:Universal income (Score:5, Informative)
It doesn't make people lazy, all evidence says the opposite. Every scrap of evidence shows that crippling people's ability to work is what makes people lazy but that UI facilitates work.
Would love to see that evidence; what UBI experiment succeeded? Or is this a case of "no True Scotsman" in terms of UBI never really being implemented correctly?
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In Ancient Athens they had silver mines. The income from the silver mines was IIRC mined by slaves and distributed to the citizens of Athens. All the citizens had to do was attend the Agora, i.e. the citizen's assembly, and they would be paid for each day they went there. Judges were also paid per each court case they judged and it wasn't a profession back then. This did eventually lead to a lot of frivolous litigation cases though.
IIRC the income from attending the citizen's assembly was enough to eat.
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Re:Universal income (Score:5, Insightful)
Also known as automation. It's been happening for a while.
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We could enslave all the illegals. Republicans are happy they are getting treated like shit, Liberals are happy they get to cross the border. Win Win? I'm just saying something has to make you people happy.
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Not right wing? (Score:4, Interesting)
What continuously astounds me is people who dont understand that true UBI is actually a right wing/liberal concept.
Most people forget that UBI involves the REMOVAL of almost all other state payouts.
No pension, no unemployment, no housing, no sickness/disability benefit, no parental benefit, etc, etc.
State medical care is a gray area..
That is the reason UBI can function, because it removes a huge amount of corruption, bureaucracy, fraud, and inefficiency from the system and replaces it with something almost trivial to administer and deliver.
It removes the punishments for trying to succeed.
Politically, Socialists generally HATE UBI (at least those who understand it) as they believe the state is the best at decising how everything is distributed, and UBI is exactly the opposite of that.
Unfortunately it ALSO removes the states ability to reward and punish based on cash payouts to voters.
That is why it is never actually tried, and probably never will be, at least by a state - since it lowers their control.
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Most people forget that UBI involves the REMOVAL of almost all other state payouts.
That is the reason UBI can function, because it removes a huge amount of corruption, bureaucracy, fraud, and inefficiency from the system and replaces it with something almost trivial to administer and deliver.
That's why I tend to like the approach. If you're on food stamps, they don't do you much good if your car breaks down and you can't get to work, if you'll even try to get a job because doing so might threaten your ability to get government aid.
There are a lot of people who also like to complain that this would be some kind of massive handout, but if you look at taking all of the federal spending that would otherwise go into a UBI, you end up with enough to give everyone in the U.S. around $7,000 per year
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I think the people that don't need the monthly dole should be able to get a yearly check. But that means the removal of every other dole program. Unemployment shouldn't be removed because that money is taken from the wages of the person claiming it while they were working. But it should not have indefinite extensions like we find now. But I don't see any of this changing here in the US anytime soon. Also should be added Term limits on everything.
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What a load of crap. Everything spouted here is based upon wishful thinking, ideal conditions and the HOPE that the people in power won't abuse it. Recent Soviet and Venezuelan history shows where it leads.
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UBI of $2000/month (less for dependent children) can be paid for by changing to a 50% flat tax with a 25% VAT. The UBI itself is not taxed. The UBI combined with a flat tax and VAT is not regressive (remember, everyone gets the UBI payment, which reduces the higher taxes at a rate depending on your income).
You eliminate all other forms of social welfare, eliminate minimum wage as well, reduce bureacracy. You'd still need Universal Health Care.
You control inflation by adjusting the tax rate. If you need
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is doomed to fail for the same reasons as any attempt at communism that has ever been attempted or will ever be attempted
I strongly recommend you take a look at a colony of Hutterites [wikipedia.org]. They embrace a philosophy that is far more in line with Marx's ideals of Communism than any state that has ever claimed to be following his philosophy, and they are doing just fine on their own. They trade just fine with outside cultures as well. Every large nation that has established a government claiming to be Communists have missed the point and without fail distorted the message as well.
Strange definition of "unconditional" (Score:3)
FTFA -- it's not the best translation but doesn't feel like a translation issue:
Participants will receive unconditionally the amount from whatever sanctions they will be subject to by job centers (e.g.: by not responding to certain job offers or refusing to get suggested training actions); Sanktionsfrei will always try to recover the sanction money through legal action, and if it does, the participant will transfer the contested amount back to Sanktionsfrei. Otherwise, each participant gets, for the whole time period of the experiment, the full amount of their social security benefits, no questions asked.
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But that's bullshit, UBI is to be paid whether you make more or not. If they take away money when you make money it's no different from welfare schemes like we have here on the USA. When you start to make enough that you don't need them any more, they cut you off and you fall back into poverty.
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Why not just have the question of "are you working and paying tax?"
Yes and get no basic income.
No and get a basic income until the person is working again.
That would reduce the tax money needed to 30% of the population?
The rest of Germany will have to pay a new tax rate to give 30% of Germany free cash payments.
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You don't get it. If it includes means testing, it is not UBI. The basic income part means you get it whether you "need" it or not, and the universal part means everyone gets it. What's so hard to understand about this?
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A means test would reduce that number to support in a normal advanced working nation to say 20-30% of its normal citizens as most normal people "work" and pay "tax".
The rest of the population would be in education getting gov support, some other gov support, getting an old age minimum gov pension.
Nations cant cover that "the universal part means everyone gets it." par
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Nations cant cover that "the universal part means everyone gets it." part with a tax system that expects most of the normal population to work, have jobs and pay "tax".
You still don't get it. No matter what, a system which expects most of the "normal" population (whatever the hell you mean by that) to work is doomed to fail, because there is not going to be enough work for that. If that's one of your basic criteria, you can only imagine systems which will fail.
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Then who is going to pay the tax needed for all the nations Basic Income to hand out for free?
No work, no tax on working class people, no basic income to give to "everyone".
Tax production? We have that not "enough work for that" problem
Tax income? Not many people are working in the private sector to pay a new "tax"....
Tax bank account and saved wealth? The wealthy are moving to better nations with less tax. A 70-90% tax on all savings will hel
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The easiest way (that is, while retaining capitalism) is to print money.
Printing money creates inflation, which is good because it discourages cash hoarding, which means it encourages investment. Rich people are sitting on trillions because they can.
You print the money and hand it to the people. They spend it, creating jobs.
In the bargain you get to bring back piece work, and eliminate the minimum wage and basically all social programs except universal health care, which means an enormous boost to business.
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Germany does not have that ability and has to actually back its money with something.
Exports? Once Germany is giving 100% of its working population free gov money that's not going to be a very export friendly nation.
Raw materials? Germany does not sit on much of export value the world does not have at a much lower cost. Raw material cant pay for every German to get free cash.
Banking? Does Germany have some special place in private an
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"Germans like the tradition of the economic miracle "
That was based on growth of certain sectors which are now shrinking. Can't repeat or even maintain that in the modern age.
I wonder if we can agree on success criteria time (Score:3)
It would be really interesting if two people who disagree on the likelihood of success could agree on how to measure the success of this experiment.
Anyone have any suggestions on how to measure success of this experiment in a year or two or three, such that those who think it's a good idea AND those who think it won't work can both agree it's a reasonable way to measure success?
Posts above mine claim that all UBI studies have failed, and that UBI proponents always say "the study had to fail because not everyone in the country got it". If that's not true, is there any UBI proponent here who can imagine any way this study could support their position? What outcome of this study would you consider "success"?
Personally, based on history I think UBI is a really bad idea, but I'm open minded enough to look at the results of a study. What positive results should I be looking for? If you make a reasonable suggestion, I might agree that the result you suggest would in fact indicate a degree of success.
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Anyone have any suggestions on how to measure success of this experiment in a year or two or three, such that those who think it's a good idea
I don't think it's possible to measure the success or failure of something like UBI at year 2 or year 3 because I think it takes longer than 3 years to see actual changes in people's behavior. I think the bare minimum needs to be 5 years so that it at least gives someone enough time to go back to college. If we want to see actual results then look at the many smaller lottery winners with 20 year payouts. Does getting an extra 1k or 2k a month cause long term changes in behavior?
That's an interesting thing to look at (Score:2)
> If we want to see actual results then look at the many smaller lottery winners with 20 year payouts. Does getting an extra 1k or 2k a month cause long term changes in behavior?
That's an interesting idea. That might be worth looking at. I haven't looked at it. I wonder what sample size we could find - winners of $1,000-$2,000 month for which we have long term information from a credible, unbiased source. It's time for me to get my daughter ready for bed, so I can't go hunting for that right now, but t
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Without having seen any studies on people who won long term lottery payouts of $1,000-$2,000 / month, I'll willing to predict / guess that in most cases it didn't profoundly affect their lives. Anyone care to predict that it did?
You will find that almost no one takes the annuity for the largest lottery prizes. There is extremely little data of the sort needed because short term greed wins so frequently. Most lottery winners are right back where they started within 5 years, because they take the lump sum payout (which is a fraction of the nominal prize amount) and shysters are capable of absorbing literally infinite amounts of money selling fools brand names. Just look at so-called "audiophiles".
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Humanity has tried nationwide UBI - USSR, Cuba, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, various native American reservations, Alaska - you CAN get guaranteed basic income until the money runs out. In case of Cuba it was using USSR money and Saudi Arabia and Alaska is using oil reserves to fund its population, native American reservations kind-of-work (although being blamed for alcoholism and other issues) until the casino goes bust.
In every case, everything works until you run out of - literally - someone else's money.
Alaska is somewhat different (Score:2)
Actually, Alaska has what is known as a "permanent fund". Oil money goes into the PF, and payouts are from the dividends of the fund, and are averaged over several years of income. The payments are currently around 1/3 to 1/6th what even I think a UBI should pay out for the states.
It is structured such that the money should never run out.
From what I understand of the studies done on the Alaska PFD, it has been moderately successful at limiting poverty, limited by how much it is and that it is only paid ou
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what even I think a UBI should pay out
Right here is the fatal flaw of all UBI, "think" and "should".
The Alaska fund is the only system that actually makes any kind of sense. It takes a specific source of money and divides it among a specific group of recipients. It may not completely eliminate all possible forms of corruption, but if you can have a reasonably unambiguous definition of what constitutes the source and what determines who is "eligible" then it's just a matter of arithmetic which is objective and doesn't lead to giving away money y
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It would be really interesting if two people who disagree on the likelihood of success could agree on how to measure the success of this experiment.
They could start by agreeing on the goal of the experiment. For starters don't call it an experiment of UBI if what they are testing isn't Universal, isn't Basic, and isn't Income.
"accepting volunteers who may apply for it" (Score:4, Insightful)
In the US (Score:2)
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This is a bad thing (Score:2, Insightful)
They import 2 plus million people, very few of which can work or will work.
This will simply reduce the value of money. So if you don't get a fairly immediate pay increase when this goes into effect, you're suddenly losing money.
This is kind of like qiantitive easing. Not good for the middle class at all.
Very basic economics and logic really. Very basic.
Predicting the Future (Score:4, Interesting)
I believe something needs to be done to keep society functioning if, as many expect, automation will lead to a fall in the demand for labour.
But I am skeptical of universal basic income, and there are aspects that for some strange reason never seem to be discussed:
1. Whose definition of basic? Is it subsistence, or some minimum of material comfort?
2. There are people with light mental illness who will still need social workers intervening in their management of adult responsibilities.
3. What happens if there's a change in technology or other societal change (could be global warming, or something else) that leads to a massive labour shortage?
4. Will there be inflation? Will changes in housing costs force people to relocate against their will?
5. Will people really be able to lead meaningful lives without employment? (Maybe you will, but will everyone?)
Future answers (Score:3)
I'm a libertarian who supports an UBI program:
My general plan:
Around $6k/year, paid in monthly installments of approximately $500 per person. This happens to be the federal poverty line for a household of 4. I'll also listen to proposals for $8k per adult, $4k per child(perhaps sliding by age?).
Eliminate all other non-medical welfare payments.
Restructure the tax system. It was neater before Trump changed things up, but basically eliminate the first two tax brackets and bump up the 3rd by 1-2% to pay for
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2. There are people with light mental illness who will still need social workers intervening in their management of adult responsibilities.
The basic income would remove all other city, state and federal support. That person better be "adult" in terms of a bank account, rent, food, health care.
3. Massive labour shortage? Look to history. Riots, wars.
4. Will there be inflation? In a funny way. The gov has to tax everyone sti
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6. How to keep people from borrowing money against the future basic income benefit?
Impossible to stop them from doing that now with regular welfare payments. Don't even try to stop it, however you can keep the lenders from loaning money under such if you make such debt easy to discharge in bankruptcy.
They have to be able to anticipate being paid back, after all, and if the UBI is only just enough to live on...
7. How to provide UBI concurrently with single payer health care, or concurrently paying a lot more for the people who now use government assistance for health care?
I support UBI with single payer. One of the sick jokes is that between state and federal governments we already spend more than enough money to provide single payer for the whole n
This reminds me of wireless charging (Score:2)
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This will solve the refugee problem (Score:2, Insightful)
Professional unemployed class (Score:3, Insightful)
Germany already has a professional unemployed class who collect "hartz 4".
These people already know all the tricks to keep getting their benefits and to rarely pay rent and not get kicked out.
If you are a property owner in Germany, the first rule is NEVER rent to a person on H4. While they are on H4, you are paid by the unemployment center. If the people get a low paying job or a part time job, then they have to pay you and not the H4 office. Which means you will likely never see a cent.
Then, since they are on H4, it is almost impossible to get them out of your building.
Even if they are literally destroying your building, you still need to start a long and costly legal battle which can take months to finally get them removed.
Then, the parasites move to the next victim.
Are there people who need a helping hand? Of course. Should we, as a society help them? Of course.
But we also need a common sense way of doing it. Why are people allowed to just keep popping out more and more babies so they never have to work?
I know many people who took a chance on H4 people and nearly every single one of them got totally screwed over for trying to help them out.
The only thing more money in their pockets will do is let them buy more stuff. Which I guess is great for the local liquor markets.
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Why? They literally are parasites.
That is what they do. They get a rental contract with the help of the H4 office with zero intention of ever paying a cent. They know all the tricks.
A friend of mine took 1 year to get rid of a renter. She had not worked in 6 years. Every time her H4 was about to end, she would get pregnant again.
She would never clean, she would neglect the babies. She was and likely still is a parasite. Living off others work while she does nothing to survive.
There are many, many such peopl
Count me in - I need a new laptop! (Score:2)
Re: UBI an extension of digital serfdom. (Score:4, Insightful)
It's always a rope held by someone, whether honestly or not, whether accountable or not.
I'd rather have someone who could be held accountable and isn't above the law.
I'd rather a rope of high quality because all resources were put into just the one, than a hundred million rusty ladders that are still being held but could collapse at any moment. Especially as the screams of those falling from the ladders are getting worse.
You're welcome to your choice, just don't get in the way of mine. I'm tired of do-gooders telling me my choices are wrong, my culture is wrong and my philosophy of efficient, compassionate, cooperative societies is wrong.
I don't like their views either, but I'm not into trying to deprive them.
It's only a rope if you choose the rope (Score:2)
It's always a rope held by someone, whether honestly or not, whether accountable or not.
Incorrect. It can be a rope of that is the life you choose.
But if you are careful, rung my rung you build a ladder, that only you yourself is in control of.
You're welcome to your choice, just don't get in the way of mine.
You are welcome to your choice as long as you are not stealing from those working to build in order to simply sustain.
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> It's always a rope held by someone, whether honestly or not, whether accountable or not.
In a free market, that person is yourself.
> You're welcome to your choice, just don't get in the way of mine. I'm tired of do-gooders telling me my choices are wrong, my culture is wrong and my philosophy of efficient, compassionate, cooperative societies is wrong.
You have it backwards; They are not trying to get int the way of your method. The free market is all voluntary, and you can opt out of any thing any ti
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You know that your system requires universal theft and prohibition. You are the one who wants to interfere in other peoples freedom.
Taxes are not theft you flaming asshole, and until you can concede that there's no talking to you. But you will be taxed, at gunpoint if necessary. I very much like the fact that men with guns will come and force you to pay your fucking taxes, you and Al Capone both.
You know, there are other things in life (Score:5, Insightful)
There's this Puritanical belief, crammed into your skull by various ruling classes, that the only thing that gives meaning to human life is desperately working to survive. We'd shook it off in the 60s and 70s, at least in the nerd community, and were looking forward to a life without constant toil and desperation. And somehow, against all odds, we sucked it down again.
I don't get it. In 2018 we shouldn't be struggling to survive. And we sure as hell shouldn't be romanticizing a desperate struggle for survival. I mean, I get that it's easy to fall for propaganda (that's kinda D'Souza's thing, he's a propagandist) but you'd think we'd have grown out of that too. It's not like we don't know what it is.
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It doesn't (or at least shouldn't) have to be a choice between desperate struggle and making no material contribution at all. Finding meaning is not trivial. The basic income experiment happens every time someone wins the lottery and is given the opportunity to never work again except by choice. It turns out they rarely end up with a meaningful life.
I'm sugesting that it _is_ trivial (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, you have completley misunderstood basic income. BI means giving everyone enough for food, shelter healthcare, education and a modicum of entertainment. This has enormous society consequences. Here are a few:
1. People don't have to live in major cities just to have work. Housing prices will drop as a result.
2. The wealthy can no longer leverage their wealth into power as easily. They lose the threat of starvation and death from lack of medical care.
3. People can't be frightened into turning on each other by demagogues. Society as a whole becomes more stable.
4. The bad decisions people make when stressed (multiple studies have shown pressure does _not_ make diamonds, it makes garbage more compact) stop.
I can't overstate the impact of #2 and #3. And these are just the most obvious. Keeping our entire society except a lucky few at the top in a constant state of mild terror at the prospect of losing everything has far reaching consequences.
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> Nothing in life is free. The gov't can't just print money and hand it out. "Money" doesn't work that way. It must be backed by productivity, otherwise you have Weimar or Zimbabwe.
Yep, so a UBI must be backed by appropriate taxes. A UBI cannot be backed by simply printing money.
Yep, Robot tax (Score:2)
I don't see anything wrong with these taxes either. The people who'd be paying them aren't doing any work either, they're letting robots and a few engineers do all the real work. They're not
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The "B" in "UBI" means basic, i.e., enough to pay for what you need, not what you want. If you think getting $400 a month is like getting hooked on meth, then you've obviously never tried meth.
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I'm so confused by your logic. "Let's keep the rich people from having complete control over us" Okay, that sounds like a good goal. "Therefore, the last thing we should do is take away some amount of their money by force, and use it so people can get healthcare without begging on the internet for help paying for it." Wait, what? That's totally backwards.
You then go on to use the phrase "marketable skills". But marketable skills just means you spent part of your life learning how to do somethign that
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East Germany kept prices as constant as they could over many years to show they had none of the Wests "price" problems.
Now Germany will tax its working population more and more and give more money away to random people in Germany.
The "unemployment" problem in German is just going to rise with illegal migrants and random people wondering around Germany.
Now Germany has to pr