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The Almighty Buck

Covid Killed Universal Basic Income. Long Live Guaranteed Income (technologyreview.com) 360

Universal basic income has become a favored cause for many high-profile Silicon Valley entrepreneurs as a solution to the job losses and social conflict that would be wrought by automation and artificial intelligence -- the very technologies their own companies create. But the conversation has changed. Its center of gravity has shifted away from "universal basic income" aimed at counterbalancing the automation of work and toward "guaranteed income" aimed at addressing economic and racial injustices. Where things stand now: As it turned out, what made the difference wasn't more research but a global pandemic. In the face of the recession caused by the pandemic, relief packages were suddenly seen as necessary to jump-start the American economy. The success of the $1,400 stimulus checks make it more likely now than ever before that that guaranteed income could soon become a permanent fixture of federal policy.
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Covid Killed Universal Basic Income. Long Live Guaranteed Income

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  • No, will dry up now (Score:5, Interesting)

    by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:34PM (#61359340)

    Pandemic at least within USA will be petering out, barring mutant that vaccines don't handle. The stimulus checks will dry up too. No such "guaranteed income", you'll have to get a job. As for "racial injustice" I'm all for two things that will help immensely with that, but they'll have to get a job too. Government paying for education and health like smarter countries do is an investment, and we have massive source of money to pay for it. Large corporations under the protection and favoritism of the U.S. government (our corporate fascist system) make transaction in wall street, and tiny tax on that can fund it all. Make that tax slightly less tiny and we wouldn't even need to pay income tax, we're talking trillions of dollars flying through there. These U.S. companies can't relocate elsewhere if we forbid them from doing business with the USA as consequence of doing that.

    It's in the bag, let's get on this

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by grasshoppa ( 657393 )

      Have you ever taken a look at the VA and thought, "Man, I wish I got what they have". No?

      Then why do you want to inflict that system on the rest of the country?

      • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:58PM (#61359482)

        Have you ever looked at the healthcare in the 21 countries (we've been sliding down, could be 22 or more now) that have better healthcare than USA and said "man, I wish I got what they have?"

        You should. We're doing the stupid thing, a feedback loop of higher insurance, higher drug cost, higher treatment cost.

        VA not done the way the smart countries are doing it.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          Have you ever looked at the healthcare in the 21 countries ...

          Those countries built their public healthcare systems from scratch in the aftermath of WW2.

          America has a medical-industrial-insurance complex that controls 18% of the economy and is the most powerful special interest group that has ever existed in the entire history of the world.

          To believe we can just put the government in charge and magically get the same outcome as other countries is absurd.

          • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:56PM (#61359796)

            Why not? We have the advantage of looking at how all those systems evolved and can evaluate the advantages/disadvantages of each one now. Whether we want to go with a multi-payer system like Germany, a full government owned system like the NHS or all the variations of all the other countries. Even just the public option for Medicare would be a big improvement.

            And that 18% is the reason we should do it, most of those countries spend 11% or less of their GDP on healthcare and get similar outcomes, some better, some worse but the US is far from the top of the heap in that department even with all the money we spend.

          • by lexman098 ( 1983842 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @04:12PM (#61360300)

            To believe we can just put the government in charge and magically get the same outcome as other countries is absurd.

            There's nothing magical about it. You vote in politicians who A) want to get it done, B) put experts in the right places instead of the corrupt revolving door, C) aren't afraid to pay up front on "their" budget. Unfortunately, half the US (by voting power) is made up of cultists who want to go back to a caste system instead of a real democracy that works for its people.

        • Better health care by what measure? The US is the only country in the world that offers every treatment for every disease that they have a name for. Other countries, including all of those higher in the list, literally send their sickest patients here. We don't send our patients anywhere else.

          The only reason US patients ever go abroad is if they need black market treatment (i.e. buying solid organ transplants) or if they simply want to lower their costs (and nearly always at the expense of quality).

          Name any

          • by ljw1004 ( 764174 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @02:02PM (#61359834)

            Name any medical specialty that exists, and you'll find that the top medical facility in the world for it is somewhere in the US.

            I'll bite. "Preventative care".

          • by etash ( 1907284 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @02:12PM (#61359884)
            >We don't send our patients anywhere else.
            lol. Never heard of medical tourism? many americans come to europe to be treated FAR cheaper for same quality of treatment
          • by getuid() ( 1305889 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @02:36PM (#61359954)

            You do have some xredit there, but two things you're scrubbing under the table.

            First, the sickest patients die in the US still sick if they're not wealthy.

            Second, the late Sultan Qaboos of Oman, from all places, went to Germany for his colon cancer treatment, not US. So there are countries other than USA that sick people go to, and that can also heal essentially everything there is a name for about as well as the USA. Germany has a well-functioning public healthcare.

            So "not having public healthcare" does not necessarily equal "having the best healthcare".

          • by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @03:13PM (#61360046)

            Better health care by what measure?

            That's the right question to ask, because in conversations like these—including this one—people talk past each other rather than realizing they're talking about two different metrics.

            Metric 1: Which country has the best treatments possible.
            Metric 2: Which country has the best outcomes for its people.

            You're talking about Metric 1, and it's a good metric to consider. The US is indeed at the forefront of a lot of medical care, so you're quite right to suggest that other countries send their patients here. It's not uncommon to hear that a head of state or foreign celebrity sought medical care for a serious condition in the US rather than their home country. The fact that it's heads of states and celebrities, however, highlights the problem in relying exclusively on Metric 1: it speaks to what's possible, rather than what's accessible. Just because a treatment exists in the US does not mean that everyone in the US who needs it can get it.

            And that's where Metric 2 comes in, which is likely what the GP is talking about. Metric 2 is the metric that all of us Joe Schmoes should care about, because it speaks to the actual results that any given person can most reasonably expect. Unless you have liquid assets that afford you access to the sort of care measured by Metric 1—which most of us here do not—Metric 2 is what you'd receive as a typical person living in the country. And by Metric 2, the US is very good, but it's still nowhere close to being the best in the world, nor has it been for quite some time. As the GP said, we've been sliding down the list for quite some time, which would suggest that high quality care is reaching the masses elsewhere at a faster rate than it is in the US.

            Separately, there are a number of legal, ethical, non-controversial treatments (i.e. not organ theft or stem cells) that are readily available elsewhere that for one reason or another have yet to receive FDA approval. Every year or two I hear another story about a US patient being told by one of their doctors to check out a clinic—almost always in southeast Asia—where they can get the treatment they need.

      • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:14PM (#61359558)

        VA approval ratings from veterans routinely ranges from 70-90%

        https://www.military.com/daily-news/2020/06/09/trust-va-now-all-time-high-va-says.html [military.com]

        https://www.va.gov/opa/pressrel/pressrelease.cfm?id=5328 [va.gov]

        https://vfworg-cdn.azureedge.net/-/media/VFWSite/Files/Advocacy/VFW-Our-Care-2019.pdf [azureedge.net] (PDF Warning)

        Anecdotal but I have a few relatives who utilize it and have nothing but good things to say.

      • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @03:21PM (#61360088)

        Have you ever taken a look at the VA and thought, "Man, I wish I got what they have". No?

        That is "single provider."

        Every proposal I've heard is for something more like Medicare, which is "single payer" (but not "single provider").

    • "These U.S. companies can't relocate elsewhere if we forbid them from doing business with the USA as consequence of doing that."

      Seriously? They go out of business, 'cuz you're forcing that, and a bunch of Chinese, Indian, Russian, and European companies pop up to take their place. Wanna tax what they send us? Welcome to Trump tariffs, and having to admit The Donald was right about something.

      You want to really stimulate the economy, and do this social justice thing? Totally eliminate absolutely all Fe

    • These U.S. companies can't relocate elsewhere if we forbid them from doing business with the USA as consequence of doing that.

      If you believe we can get to a point where the government is forbidding US companies from doing business in the US, it's also not such a stretch to believe they'd move, and cater to the already much larger, emerging markets in China and India which have almost 3 billion people combined.

  • Sure, this worked when we tried it once, but if we keep trying trickle-down economics for a few more decades it will surely start working soon!

    • by Entrope ( 68843 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:44PM (#61359382) Homepage

      I guess you missed this morning's employment numbers report: Expected a million new jobs. Actually had 266,000. Unemployment went up. Inflation is now a real risk. It shockingly turns out that when you pay people -- quite a lot -- to not work, lots of people don't work.

      That's not what a successful trial of UBI would look like. It's not sustainable at all.

      • by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <gameboyrmh@@@gmail...com> on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:57PM (#61359474) Journal

        Are these bad things if the people not working are OK with it and couldn't find work otherwise? The magic line is even pleased with the situation! Isn't that the be-all end-all of economic metrics?

        • If they're okay with not working because they've saved up enough to retire or take time off then sure, that's their choice. Of course a lot aren't working because we told them they weren't allowed to and now their employer is out of business so there is t a job to go back to. We've just killed off a lot more small business than you can imagine, but because you'll gladly spout nonsense about trickle down economics (hint: not a real thing) you'll be ignorant of what's actually happening.
      • by dasunt ( 249686 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:15PM (#61359566)

        It shockingly turns out that when you pay people -- quite a lot -- to not work, lots of people don't work.

        It's not that we pay people quite a lot to not work. It is only $300/wk + regular unemployment.

        Instead, the problem is that we pay a large percentage of people quite little to actually work.

        It turns out that many of those who were called job creators were actually poverty exploiters.

        • by Entrope ( 68843 )

          "Only" $300 per week is $7.50/hr more than regular unemployment, assuming a 40-hour week. That's quite a nice bump.

          It turns out that many of those who complain about "poverty exploiters" are as bad at math as economics.

          • by narcc ( 412956 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @05:47PM (#61360628) Journal

            If that is "quite a nice bump" to anyone, they were being exploited. Full stop.

            If you think that's a nice bump, then there's a good chance that you're being exploited as well.

            One complaint I often hear from people about raising the minimum wage is "why should someone making minimum wage make almost as much as I do? I worked hard to get where I am now!" See, they thought that they were successful. the $15/hour minimum wage debate just highlights that fact that they've been grossly underpaid for a very long time. It makes them feel foolish.

      • by Dixie_Flatline ( 5077 ) <vincent@jan@goh.gmail@com> on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:23PM (#61359602) Homepage

        Turns out people that find out what it's like to get enough money to live without stress don't like the idea of working a shit job or four at basement wages.

        Maybe fucking pay people for their work and they'll come back to work. Certainly the tactic of giving tax breaks to billionaires so they can buy back their own stocks hasn't worked either. If a government is going to give money away to a class of people, at least let it be the ones that have a hard time making rent or buying food, not the ones that want to be able to write off their yachts.

      • by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:28PM (#61359634) Journal

        Hummm, I think you're missing something. Something big. Like, I don't know, maybe us being in a pandemic?

        You can't take 1 month of people not yet willing to go back to work during a pandemic and use that to extrapolate anything about UBI. Doing so is both really, really stupid, and pretty dishonest.

      • I guess you missed this morning's employment numbers report: Expected a million new jobs. Actually had 266,000. Unemployment went up. Inflation is now a real risk. It shockingly turns out that when you pay people -- quite a lot -- to not work, lots of people don't work.

        That's not what a successful trial of UBI would look like. It's not sustainable at all.

        You're at the tail end of a pandemic combined with a massive shift towards remote working and online retail.

        It's not what an unsuccessful trial of UBI would look like either, it's just a really bizarre time for the economy.

        • Also, thanks to Trump and the republicans, we're at a very divisive time in the country politically, in particular relating to mask wearing and pandemic rule changes. The people who aren't going back to work are in the service industry, and would need to navigate those waters.

          It's a shit job with low pay in the best of times. During a pandemic when you know you're going to have to deal with assholes who want to make it more likely everyone gets COVID, I can't imagine many are keen to go back.

      • Wages are at low levels relative to real inflation. CPI tricks have masked that (for example, only including the cost of new cars and ignoring skyrocketing used prices) but people can feel it.

        To put things in perspective right now being on unemployment pays around $13.50/hr. And don't forget working isn't free. Travel and childcare aren't cheap.

        Tl;Dr businesses aren't paying sustainable wages. Eventually people making that little have thier lives fall apart. A car breaks down or a kid gets sick or s
    • You nailed it. This is the opposite of trickle-down economics. And given the results of trickle-down economics, we can hope the results of this are opposite that too.

  • UBS > UBI (Score:5, Interesting)

    by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <gameboyrmh@@@gmail...com> on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:37PM (#61359358) Journal

    This would've been a great time to try Universal Basic Services, maybe giving everyone free utilities (including telecoms) would've been a good start. A UBS can't advertise a price floor like a UBI can and doesn't require the traversal of unexplored economic territory.

    • "This would've been a great time to try Universal Basic Services"

      *THIS*.

      "A UBS can't advertise a price floor like a UBI can and doesn't require the traversal of unexplored economic territory."

      It's basically what most of first world already has, understands and knows how to manage, only a bit wider. We already have UBS for military, police, government, healthcare and education. Just make it also cover at least food and shelter and you are done.

      Then why "many high-profile Silicon Valley entrepreneurs" (bull

      • Re:UBS UBI (Score:4, Interesting)

        by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:34PM (#61359656) Journal

        No, UBS has the same issue as food stamps. If your problem isn't food, food stamps don't help you. If your problem isn't utilities, UBS won't help you.

        Four people all getting UBI can team up to rent an apartment, buy food, pay utilities, and have a modest life. Four people all getting UBS can't do that.

        People have basic needs beyond food and utilities. Giving them an income floor lets them direct the money where it needs to go. If it's utilities it can go there, but if it's child care it can go there instead.

    • > Free utilities... free electricity
      Every person with a computer would mine bitcoin and the world's energy usage and global warming problem would increase exponentially overnight.
      I'd say UBI in this case is the better choice
  • Relief packages are just a thing that happens. They come and go and most western societies have done it at some point or another long before America discovered the idea. Congratulations on talking about it, but it's changed nothing.

    As for discussions on racial inequality, yep that was COVID-19, absolutely nothing to do with the USA reaching a tipping point of taxpayer funded execution of black people for violating traffic laws, no sirreee. It was COVID that made people realise racism exists!

  • What if we approach it from a probabilistic perspective? Simple example to start with: A lottery ticket. The trick is that the total paid out in winnings is always less than the total paid for tickets, so the players are sure to lose (but the losers don't get mentioned in the news).

    So what if UBI keeps a person out of prison? Just for grins, start with a sample of 1,000 freshly unemployed people who are watching their children suffer. How many of them are liable to become desperate enough to commit crimes if they aren't given some form of economic help? That could be in the form of a UBI. Then you have to figure out how much it costs to put them in prison plus the costs of caring for the kids.

    Not as weird as "Couch potatoes of the world, Unite! You have nothing to lose but your free time." http://eco-epistemology.blogsp... [blogspot.com] The focus of that old joke is just keeping people involved in the economy even if they don't have any essential work to do. (However I've mutated that idea into a three-part tax system...)

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Oh no! I hope that comment doesn't actually wind up in the FP slot. Talk about weirding out the discussion...

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      While I'm actually relieved my new thought didn't wind up in the FP slot, the actual "winner" managed to be worse. Apparently the editors are experimenting with the FP for some reason...

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by sinij ( 911942 )

      How many of them are liable to become desperate enough to commit crimes if they aren't given some form of economic help?

      There is no data to suggest this is true. Most crimes are committed by serial criminals, who tend to be childless young males. Gangbangers are not doing to feed their starving children.

  • I mean, isn't the UBI just the same thing as a "guaranteed income", really? Sounds like clever re-branding of an idea they couldn't get much traction selling under the first name?

    I *just* had a long, drawn-out argument with an old friend of mine on social media about this stuff last night. Clearly, America is full of a whole LOT of people who just can't or won't accept the reality of basic economics that giving *everyone* (or at least the vast majority) of people a certain amount of money they didn't have

    • "I mean, isn't the UBI just the same thing as a "guaranteed income", really?"

      No, it isn't. UBI means everybody gets a paycheck no matter what. "Guaranteed income" means that your income will be completed up to a minimum if you don't manage to get it by other means. Pesky details due.

      "But as soon as it becomes the "standard" that everyone starts off with X amount of monthly income, even for doing absolutely nothing? Prices will go up to reflect that fact."

      Of course yes. And, if not, it's the onus on the

    • Clearly, America is full of a whole LOT of people who just can't or won't accept the reality of basic economics that giving *everyone* (or at least the vast majority) of people a certain amount of money they didn't have to earn first just creates that amount of inflation in the long-haul.

      Because this isn't basic economics. It's way, way more complicated than that.

      You're ignoring huge economic impacts from UBI, which is why you're stuck on inflation. You're ignoring the very very significant impact of poverty on communities. And you're ignoring every detail of UBI that anyone has ever proposed, and making up your own strawman of "everyone starts with X more money", which is untrue in any UBI scheme that's been proposed.

      When you ignore all the details, yeah, it doesn't seem to make any sense. Instead of arguing with people on the internet about things you're ignorant of, please put in the time to learn about them. It will do everyone some good, yourself included.

  • by Kwirl ( 877607 ) <kwirlkarphys@gmail.com> on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:45PM (#61359396)
    The audience of slashdot is mostly technical people, so while most of us bitch about what we earn (or brag about it), the truth is that our economic view is nothing like what the 'average' citizen experiences. As such, I would imagine most people on ./ are going to cry about 'they didn't earn it' or 'they wan't free money' without understanding the purpose of these programs. When you give money to the upper class or financially stable people, that money leaves circulation (welcome to inflation). When you give that same money to the people who don't have it, what you are really doing is recirculating money in a manner that prevents government from spending money on other social safety nets. Landlords don't have to fight so hard to get their rent payments. Crime goes down because people don't have to steal for a living. People can afford to eat healthier so our health care costs goes down. We have less homelessness. With the crime reduction we get an opportunity to have police focus on 'heavier' criminal activity and less on misdemeanor trivialities. It's a net win for society, but at the cost of those who are not suffering being forced to accept that no matter how well compensated the middle class may be, if you look at historical inflation and economic growth - you will see how under-compensated we are. Since we are aware of the rust on the gears of change, our only respite is to whine about change and social growth and fight to keep the economic caste system intact.
    • by klipclop ( 6724090 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:52PM (#61359444)
      Well, of course it won't be popular. If they will reduce or get rid of the income tax for workers under a certain amount, then your talking my language. When I see guaranteed basic income, I also read it as a guaranteed income tax increase on the paycheck earners.
    • "When you give money to the upper class or financially stable people, that money leaves circulation (welcome to inflation)."

      Are you kidding right? Please, think twice about what you just said.

      Question: the Federal Reserve just minted a bazillion of trillions of dollars and then they put them in their deepest coffin, out of circulation. Disregarding the raw material used to mint them (these are magic dollars that don't cost neither ink nor paper) how much will inflation increase due to the existence of thi

  • by klipclop ( 6724090 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:46PM (#61359404)
    If they really wanted to make a difference, they government would stop charging an income tax on i.e your households first 200k. Problem is that it would actually benefit lower and middle income people the most, and that is the greatest tax revenue sources. IMO they can take their guaranteed income and shove it. (along with the inevitable tax increases on the lower and middle income people who will inevitably pay for it)
  • It has to come from somewhere, it will come from taxpayers eventually or it will come from reducing everyone's economic output by MMT. Another thing: because of the 1400$ checks and unemployment, it has incentivized people not to get jobs (I would not either). Restaurants and many other industries cannot hire people and have many jobs open that are not being filled.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by TFlan91 ( 2615727 )

      You're a moron.

      A one time 1400$ payment doesn't pay next months rent.

      Nothing about these payments make people think they don't have to work.

      Get your head out of your ass and have some empathy, or is that too much for you to handle?

  • What a load of shit (Score:5, Interesting)

    by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @12:48PM (#61359420)
    I've heard plenty about a UBI and there have even been several studies concerning it, some dating back decades before I'd even heard of the concept outside of something analogous enough from a science fiction novel.

    I've never heard the phrase "guaranteed income" before now. That it's being uttered in the same sentence that includes "addressing racial injustice" tells me exactly what kind of idiot charlatans are peddling the idea and how much it's worth. Apparently no one who reads /. submitted this story either, so I won't be surprised if no one else has heard of it either.
  • "Universal basic income has become a favored cause for many high-profile Silicon Valley entrepreneurs"

    That should be enough of a hint to understand it's not in your benefit.

    • by Mitreya ( 579078 )

      That should be enough of a hint to understand it's not in your benefit.

      In defense of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, they might just be genuinely looking for "easy" solutions rather than being evil. Everyone seems to look for an easy solution, which unfortunately doesn't exist for the problem of this scale.

      The success of the $1,400 stimulus checks

      That is a great illustration. The success of $1,400 stimulus checks compared to what? Compared to doing nothing? Of course it was going to be popular. Anything is better than doing nothing, but that's not a good objective measure of "success".

    • It's in everyone's benefit. A stronger middle class makes more people that buy the services and goods of entrepreneurs.

      Don't get me wrong, a lot of these dipshits are trying to reinvent things that already exist—vending machines, buses, tenement housing—but put a modern spin on it, and a strong welfare state is only the latest thing in line. But at least it would make a benefit in the lives of a lot of working class people.

      • "It's in everyone's benefit. A stronger middle class makes more people that buy the services and goods of entrepreneurs."

        Yes. But that doesn't beat being filthy reach in a society of serfs.

  • The world had a Black Swan Event that disrupted the entire economy. Millions of people in the US found not just their employer, but every related industry to their skills rendered obsolete for a whole year and likely millions of jobs are gone permanently. The response was the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 which while it received 99% support by Democrats had 0% support by Republicans in Washington while funding 1 to 2 months of UBI.

    That's not a success, that's a crisis happening and just barely squeaking by on a half measured solution.

  • I'd support UBI style plans more if instead of giving money they provided free housing / food / toiletries.
    A lot of people are poor primarily because they cannot into managing their money, so providing the basics would help protect them from themselves.
  • by dmay34 ( 6770232 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:25PM (#61359610)

    It's just a Tax Credit. That's all. Call it a Tax Credit and Conservatives will get on board.

  • by Cito ( 1725214 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:35PM (#61359666)

    Stop being a bum

    Go get a job, it's time to move out of your parents house now, the free ride is over. Yes growing up is scary, it's very scary and you will fail, you will fail several times spectacularly, but each failure will harden you, give you thicker skin, and give you the skills so if that problem comes around again you'll laugh at how simple it is to overcome now with the skills that you've acquired. Soon you can finally say you can survive on this planet without depending on noone and it will finally be the truth. Your peers will respect you and your word will actually mean something. You'll finally feel the euphoria of being self sufficient regardless when times are hard or not.

      So do the world a favor now, and grow the hell up.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @01:51PM (#61359764)
    I mean, yeah, it would be nice if it was guaranteed and without condition. But taking it away as soon as somebody's got a job kills it. We already know that. Poor folks start earning a bit of money, moving up, and get their benefits taken away. This puts them in a precarious position and eventually everything blows up and they're unemployed. This has been well studied.
  • by cygnusvis ( 6168614 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @02:16PM (#61359896)
    A poor person who has no interest in being more than a gas pumper at age 45 living in poverty is not injustice. We are all responsible for our own situation no matter the race, gender or religious belief.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @03:10PM (#61360034)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @03:22PM (#61360094) Journal

    If I go, get a job at an agreed upon wage, I will (at least to a reasonable level of certainty and legal assurance) get paid. Guaranteed.

    Oh wait, no, you want free money without working.

    That's something different.

  • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @03:42PM (#61360168) Journal

    and toward "guaranteed income" aimed at addressing economic and racial injustices.

    If it's "guaranteed", then what would it have to do with race?

    Unless it's only "guaranteed" for favored races? Because that's so "anti" racist?

  • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 ) on Friday May 07, 2021 @04:03PM (#61360270)

    If I understand it correctly, UBI means "give everyone $x/month" regardless of anything, guaranteed income means "if you make less than $x/month, we give you the difference".

    First, while UBI is often criticized because it makes people unwilling to work, at least it creates no incentive not to work. I mean, working is not free: you may need to commute, eat out, hire a babysitter, etc... It is only worth working if it pays more than it costs you. But if work makes you get less "guaranteed income", then you will get in a ridiculous situation where you can't afford to work.

    It also nullifies one big advantage of UBI. Because it is universal, it lowers administrative costs. Because it is for everyone, there is no need for people to figure out who has the right to it. Also, less fraud and therefore less need to combat it: what is the point of cheating if you get the same thing no matter what.

    And finally, if you remove the cludges, it is functionally equivalent to UBI+tax where past a certain revenue, you will pay more taxes than you get UBI, effectively canceling it.

    UBI, more than just being "free money" is also a simplification by substituting itself to most welfare programs. It also means that for some people, and not only the rich, they will get less money under a UBI system than under a more traditional welfare system, there is no way around that, otherwise, you are just creating inflation.

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