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> like population control

I don't think many people that support a UBI oppose better sex education, greater availability of contraceptives/birth control medication, and abortions.

That's still population control doesn't matter how you dress it up.

There is nothing wrong with sex ed and abortion should be a basic medical procedure accessible to all but that's not the point.

UBI has never been tested on a large scale it works great in small scale experiments but those are balanced by the existing open market.

Communism also works great on smaller scales like communes and kibbutz's but it doesn't really work on national scales that well.

If you implement UBI in a single city the fact that it's only confined to that place makes things like potential inflation untestable even local resources like rent can be controlled in such cases where in reality they'll run amok.

Rent control for example was also posed as a great service but in pretty much all cases it either resulted in an extreme shortage of housing or a huge price inflation over time because government funded rent set the low bar as far as pricing goes regardless of the actual worth of the tenancy in an open market.

If you implement UBI on a national scale the open market is quite likely to adjust fairly quickly which will make most basic goods and services out of reach of low income families again. It also can come at expense of other projects like vocational training and tuition grants.

And if you want to control the adverse effects of inflation you usually start to step in into the realm of planned economies which never has ended well so far.

> That's still population control doesn't matter how you dress it up.

Yes, apologies I wasn't clear.

There seems to be a strong correlation between total fertility rate per woman and the probability of survival of infants.

I don't know if there is a direct link here but a low infant mortality rate seems to correlate to a low birth rate as well.

In any case, I fully support better sex education, greater availability of contraceptives and birth control, and access to voluntary abortions.

Yeah, evolutionary... what's our planning horizon on this supposed to be, a thousand years?

(Fun fact: The European Central Bank (ECB) once bought bonds off Portugal due on... wait for it... 9999-12-31.)

Whoa there Moshe!

While there are undoubtedly counterproductive incentives created by a basic income program most governments already have numerous programs with arguably worse incentives that are less effective.

In most conceptions of basics income it replaces all the other assistance programs for the poor. Although in practice this would be difficult for two reasons: (1) some people are simply incapable of budgeting their income across their needs and (2) the poverty industry would resist any reduction in their role.

Eugenics and forced sterilization are as unnecessary with basic income as with the modern welfare state.

Would hate to hear this guy's thoughts on caring for the disabled.
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Something ought to be done to: A) take advantage of our technical advancements to provide better for all B) decrease hoarding of wealth at the very top (that's not to say inequity can/should be solved for all).

That said, I don't see how a UBI works as long as people's appetites remain, basically, insatiable. Providing a UBI would seem to end up increasing inflation of basic goods and services.

> Providing a UBI would seem to end up increasing inflation of basic goods and services.

Seems like that would be good for investors, bad for everyone else.

Hoarding = saving and investing. Almost every point you make is confused about basic economics.
But you can't be bothered to explain where I've gone wrong? That's too bad.

Regarding hoarding, do you think I meant they're keeping it under a mattress? Hoarding (which I'll admit is poor word choice and inflammatory) means they're allowed by policy to keep more than they ought to be if we want a UBI, or to raise up the lowest end of income spectrum.

How would that inflation work, exactly? UBI doesn't mean creating new money.

This article [1] addresses that concern in a little more depth. Basically, the evidence we have from places that have tried this is that it might decrease inflation, and that in any case, the value of the income would far outstrip increased prices.

[1] https://medium.com/basic-income/wouldnt-unconditional-basic-...

I'm looking forward to reading that. I think of a UBI as a redistribution, not creating new money. So once it's redistributed, how do we keep that money circulating and growing among the populations who need it? How do we prevent it not all floating back to the top. For example, if the low-income population in a town suddenly has a little more resources and groceries are no longer quite so difficult to procure, how do rents not rise soon after?

I hope the answers are in that article! Thanks.

Because we constantly keep redistributing it via income taxes. Because if they raise the rents they loose their UBI customers to someone who doesn't (of course that assumes there's no collaboration nor a monopoly). Already I see this in college housing. Some company increases their prices, a bunch of people move out to the place two blocks down with the old prices, and then they lowered them again to get those people back.
Right, but that's absent an income increase among the students. You're missing that key piece of the question.
If rents start to rise, then it also increases the demand for new housing in the area, and eventually supply pushes it back down.
Certainly SOME inflation would happen if "all people get more money", but a thought on that, since it seems to be more subtle than that:

I'd imagine that we'd already SEE that inflation, motivated through e.g. SNAP instead of UBI. There's an optimization curve that producers are fitting; and if the lower segments of the economy have more money to spend, that curve would probably lift some, but to lift sufficiently as to preclude such a significant market segment I imagine would be self defeating.

That being said; I only feel that intuition for goods that can readily market to the poorest market segments with profit. For goods that already require jobbing (mid-high end luxury goods as an easy example), if UBI was on top of that, I imagine you'd certainly see inflation in those domains, unless enough people stopped working entirely to fall into the UBI-only market segment. I'd be curious to hear what someone with any real economics background (not I) has to say on this, since I can only reason about it on a very first-order level.

Based on what I've read, inflation is one of the weaker arguments against UBI assuming that it was implemented as a pure redistribution. (i.e. no increase in money supply, deficit, etc.) That said, given the scope of such a hypothetical program, it's probably reasonable to assume that there would be some demand shifts that could drive up certain wages and certain goods (perhaps housing in some areas).

Or not. With, presumably, no more minimum wage and everyone with a poverty line-ish income without working, maybe Walmart doesn't need to pay as much to get part-time workers who just want to earn a little extra.

You touch on actually another part of the question that I haven't heard discussed much. Many UBI proponents suggest that it would allow people to allocate smaller portions of their lives to "earning a little more" rather than their whole time on one job, but is the economy even set up (or able to evolve sufficiently) to support this? Additionally, would WE be ok with it? There's already a lot of push-back around buzzwords like "gig economy", and that would seem more prevalent in an era of ad-hoc work as needed for luxuries.
If it's a wash for the middle income household, that's fine. The UBI would primarily help those at the very bottom, people with essentially zero income. They can't afford anything now, but with the UBI they will be able to pay for their basic necessities, at least, more than they can now.
It probably wouldn't be. Median US household income is about $50K. So as a rough cut, households making more than about that would presumably end up putting more money in. There aren't enough of "the rich" to make a dent by themselves.
> B) decrease hoarding of wealth at the very top (that's not to say inequity can/should be solved for all). <

Nobody is hoarding wealth, they are hoarding money. There's a huge difference between the two. When money is 'hoarded', it results in lower prices for the remaining goods and services in the economy, which is equivalent of investment in money itself.

To put it another way, whenever someone hoards money, it becomes equivalent of him investing into every other investor's investment in proportion.

You maybe mean higher prices?
No, lower prices. Whenever voluntary savings go up, consumer prices fall.
Talk about moving the goalposts. People's appetites are not literally insatiable; it's certainly possible to make sure everyone is well fed. Making sure everyone has a roof overhead is a doable goal, and Canada seems to be making good progress on it. [1]

It's true that no amount of money will let everyone have a house in San Francisco, so for real estate in particular, inflation is a big problem. But there are other places to live, and on the margin, UBI will make it more feasible to move to cheaper places instead of where the most jobs are. (Social security is why there are so many senior citizens in Florida.)

[1] http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2015/08/13/housing-first-federa...

> Providing a UBI would seem to end up increasing inflation of basic goods and services.

I don't understand where this argument comes from. A basic income doesn't create money. For the average (literally average) taxpayer, the tax required to pay for the basic income will exactly match the amount of the basic income and it cancels. Higher-than-average income people would pay more in taxes which money would fund the basic income for lower-than-average income people.

The only argument you can really make is that lower income people are more likely to actually spend the money. But that is true of anything that increases the income of lower income people.

Moreover, most of the goods people buy today are either not of the type you consume significantly more of when you have more money, or are not rooted in scarcity. If you give lower income people more money and they buy more iPhones, Apple is not going to run out of iPhones and have to raise prices to ration them, they're just going to make more iPhones.

The goods that actually are scarce, like housing and food, would be affected in theory, but we already artificially prop up the prices of those things. If we wanted the price to go down then there are obvious things we could do, like not impeding high density housing construction or not paying farmers to not plant crops.

I'm excited for this idea to hit the mainstream, it's compelling enough to warrant a public discussion.
Are the proponents for basic income willing to cut other social programs related to food, housing, child care, unemployment, etc and cut down costly bureaucratic infrastructure supporting government programs??

Or are they trying to double down on basic income + all these government programs?

I would guess they'd be willing to do whichever one is most equitable and effective.
As far as I understand it, the whole point of basic income is replacing most of other social programs, especially those related to unemployment.
Sadly, it will be difficult to explain why we will give Donald Trump and Warren Buffett a basic income of the same amount we will give to a homeless person.

It seems we don't discuss the details of any plan and all the news outlets want sound bites that they can repeat every hour. Even NPR hourly news seems full of sound bites.

The explanation would go something like this (I think, but I'm not a proponent of the system):

You'd give them the same payment, but you'd take back a much higher payment in taxes. Giving people $40k just to send a bill of $100k seems inefficient to me.

It's just an accounting movement, you don't need to actually transfer them the money so that they can pay it back. You calculate their balance and just tell them to pay $60k.
I support Universal Basic Income. In my opinion, the main problem a UBI would tackle is non-participation. We can get more people to take benefits if we show that everyone takes the benefits.

Of course, other supporters will talk about the savings with decreased bureaucracy costs but those are like nice bonuses to me. Personally, I want everyone who is eligible for a program to enroll and benefit. Yes, this could mean increased taxes but I think it will be well worth it.

UBI is often described as a negative income tax for a reason. You don't send those people the money, you give them a tax credit for the money.
There's no way you'd be able to get rid of them all. What happens when people spend their entire income on lottery tickets? You can't let them starve, you'd need a way to divorce money from services in that case, which is part of what the US welfare system tries to do in part.
At the risk of downvotes, why can't you? At some level, personal responsibility must come into play. There's a limit on how much you can protect people from themselves, though where that limit is can be a very political topic.
People aren't responsible though, especially not people who are needing social services like welfare. People think short term, and some need to be protected from themselves.
Poor people don't always make the best financial decisions, but I think the number of people who would waste all their money without buying any food is relatively small.
Because then the right lobbyists contact either FoxNews or MSNBC (depending on who's apparently to blame) and ignite a two-minute hate about how horrible this is by trotting out a few tragedies and the sheeple get their outrage on, no?
Sure, there's also stuff regarding disabilities, health and probably way more that simply didn't slip into my mind right now. That's why I phrased it as I did.

However, I suppose the existence of basic income could also change the character of those remaining social programs. If someone spends their entire income on lottery tickers, they probably need different kind of help than more money from welfare.

What happens when someone sells their EBT for money and spends that money on $addictive_substance? Fundamentally, forcing adults to not die requires quite a bit of coercion.

There will still be soup kitchens, which will have low demand anyway. If we really want to, we could just send those folks to CCC-style work camps I guess?

Nobody who has money in hand and is starving is going to buy lottery tickets instead of food.
Exactly. If you're worried, just give in small amounts, so that one can never blow the month's income when they're well-fed.
They are very likely to buy drugs though
Exactly. Once the government takes responsibility for something society will never let them take it away. Basic income with no other welfare might be plausible, Basic income on top of all the existing welfare is a socialist dream
I haven't listened to the podcast yet, but it is my understanding from past discussions of this idea is that cutting all the other social welfare programs would pay for the basic income and bring conservatives on board.

I like the idea of a national sales tax with a prebate. Everyone pays the national sales tax instead of income tax. A prebate is given to everyone to rebate them for taxes paid on necessities like food. The prebate is similar to a basic income. A tax on spending instead of income has many advantages like not penalizing production, encouraging savings, easier reporting requirements, etc.

A UBI is very similar to an EITC in a lot of ways. To me, the benefit of a UBI is cleaning up a lot of the crap kludges in place that it can substitute better for. Similar to how single-payer lets us get rid of complex insurance subsidies and market places.
"And a guaranteed income would be instead of a whole lot of existing welfare programs."

It's a proposal to simplify the social support structure.

Some want to do the first, some want to do the second.
Is there some transcript available or is it only in audio form?
See also: Silicon Valley's Basic Income Bromance by Lauren Smiley https://medium.com/backchannel/silicon-valley-s-basic-income...
That essay seems unnecessarily ad hominem and I find it hard to read with the unnecessary amount of neologism. Certainly people are welcome to find ideas advocated for by fairly socially well-off groups to be suspect, but it doesn't make those ideas inherently bad.
The tone of that article is very confusing. What's the point he's trying to make? (honest question)
I've thought about this a lot, and if you assume that automation will continue to put more and more people out of work, then there seems to be two probable paths forward: either bureaucracy continues to grow, causing more and more people to do meaningless busywork, or a UBI is established. Neither option seems great to me, considering human nature, but if I were to bet I'd say that current inertia is moving us toward the bureaucracy option.
What happens in the case I am working in a foreign country on a visa? In that case, I can imagine the home country would refuse GBI because I am no longer resident, and the host country would refuse because I am not a citizen.

If that is the case, I can imagine that GBI would put a drag on workers abroad. Maybe people would even refuse to emigrate because they wouldn't be able to afford the few years without GBI before they are a citizen in their new country.

Best question about UBI I've heard. Usually the argument is that poor people won't work.

I don't have an answer, actually, I just wanted to say that your question is reasoned and not politically charged, so thanks. I'm also curious about this?

I think that what you describe is a good thing, when you look at the complete picture.

GBI could (should?) function, effectively, like a negative income tax -- below a certain income level the government pays you. Above that level, you earn nothing from the government, because you're making more than some specific threshold already (probably at least 1.5x GBI, preferably higher [1]).

So yes, it would discourage people from going to a new country for fun and lounging around there and not working. People who want to move to a new country should do it because there's a job for them in that new country, and if it doesn't pay above the GBI threshold, then yes, they should probably stay home. If you're a consultant who can work from anywhere, and you make more than the cutoff (which I would hope!), then GBI is similarly irrelevant.

GBI for a backup income while you're starting a company is also something to think about: Where would the US prefer that you start a company? Here, of course. So I think that GBI encouraging people to work in the country is absolutely appropriate.

Finally, GBI could be provided to US citizens and permanent residents who spend more than X% of their time in the country. If that's 51%, then you could spend nearly six months in another country getting situated before GBI would cut off, which should be more than enough time to pick up a job there. Even if it only paid you for 2-3 months of living abroad, that's not bad for a paid vacation and/or job hunt.

[1] This may be obvious to most; apologies in advance. If you phase out GBI at a 1:1 rate with what you earn, as in, if you earn $10, you get $10 less GBI, then taking a job that paid less than GBI would earn you nothing (unless you're being paid under the table, but let's assume we don't want to encourage people to cheat). EDIT: My math was wrong. The idea is that you set the marginal tax rates such that every dollar you earn earns you more money, but that by the time your income is at some arbitrary level, you're paying more than GBI in taxes. Figuring out the exact rate curve is left as an exercise for the reader. ;)

> So yes, it would discourage people from going to a new country for fun and lounging around there and not working. People who want to move to a new country should do it because there's a job for them in that new country, and if it doesn't pay above the GBI threshold, then yes, they should probably stay home.

Absolutely not. I've been traveling through many countries over the past >year working remotely on my personal business based at home in the US. Who are you to say I should be tied down in my home country to receive the same benefits everyone else does, especially since I pay taxes like everyone else?

* Sent while on a train traveling through Vietnam

Please re-read my reply, especially the line that says:

> If you're a consultant who can work from anywhere, and you make more than the cutoff (which I would hope!), then GBI is similarly irrelevant.

What you're suggesting is possible, and perhaps even likely, but ANY large change to a system likely has massive unintended consequences, that doesn't mean you stay in stasis. In my opinion, we have an economic system that demands that you must work for your keep, while at the same time, work is drying up because automation means we need less workers. When you have a large amount of people that WANT to work, and yet no work for them, and as a consequence they're left in poverty, it implies our economic ideas have failed. We're clearly in a transition period.
Just came here to say that the tired argument that UBI "start[s] creating some pretty powerful disincentives to work" is really just old at this point. What someone that trots that out is saying is that more people would be able to forgo wasting their lives in menial jobs and instead create art and new businesses, or stay home to raise a family or care for elderly parents, as if either of those is somehow morally wrong or shameful.

There will still be incentive to working - cars and houses and jewelry and iPhones and etc and etc will still cost money, likely above what a basic income gives you (except for the most basic apartment and car maybe). But people will be able to choose to not work in deplorable conditions or for terrible wages or for below minimum wage because tips, and won't have to live in constant fear of losing a minimum wage job and losing the leaky roof above their family's heads, or going bankrupt when your kid breaks his arm.

When people claim UBI will disincentivize working, they mean disincentivize being taken advantage of by a system meant to keep them under foot and under served - and that not willingly participating in such a system is somehow morally reprehensible. Which I find morally reprehensible.

Yes. One need only consider that the threat of starving to death is an incentive to sell yourself to another person in order to dispel the euphemistic and misanthropic rhetoric.
Yep, and considering that extreme poverty leads to all kinds of avoidable crime, I'd much rather live in a society where people are doing something unproductive (like playing video games all day) rather than going out and hurting each other, themselves, and their communities.
Sorry, but I don't feel like paying more in taxes so that people can "create art" and take care of their own families. When did it become my responsibility to work harder so that they can do that?

Taking care of my family involves me working hard, so why are you willing to make me work harder so that others can work less?

An no one thinks taking care of your own family is shameful or morally wrong. Taking more money from me to pay you to take care of your family, on the other hand, is morally wrong.

You could look at the idea of people creating art, new business, making movies as something that you and your family could benefit from.

Art, one could argue, is the whole point isn't it? Otherwise, what else do we as a species leave behind?

People have things called hobbies. I have several, but I don't expect to be paid for them. I do them during my free time.
Answers like this consider a society of one (or one plus family) and doesn't comprehend how the health and well being of a society directly correlates to the health and well being of the one.

But put that aside for a second. You also get this basic income, which is basically just printed money, so your taxes aren't helping someone else create art with UBI (but they sure are now, in actual reality). Your moral outrage about someone "creating art" as though it's less hard than your job is laughable, and oh by the way, your reward is income far above UBI, so you exist on a different financial plane for your hard work anyway.

But lower crime and happier people and less burden on courts and properly fed kids that lead to a better educated generation and less terrible schools in inner cities and every other benefit you receive from basic income and not one ounce of your "hard work" is just a step too far for you?

So we're just printing all this money? Wow. I can't see anything wrong with that. If it's that easy, let's start at $1 million a person per month. We'll all be rich!
An excellent answer. It's alarming how easy it is for young, childless, well-off people to simply not have any capacity to understand these points. I say that having been such a person, so it really is sad how long it can take to learn such lessons!
It seems like you're projecting your own bias onto those who disagree with you. What makes you think the GP is young, childless, and well-off?

I oppose this, and I certainly don't fit your preconception.

You'd be right if I said all young people feel that way and all parents above a certain age felt my way. But I didn't say that, and I don't believe that. To rephrase: it is alarming the rate at which young, childless, and well-off do not support family-centric public policy.

Do you make a distinction between "projecting" and simply having an opinion? I do.

You said "It's alarming how easy it is for <group>" - that does not imply that you are alarmed at the rate at which something occurs, but that you believe that the condition is an attribute of group membership.

My sincere apologies if I've misread your intent, but it certainly seems to me that you've taken a viewpoint with which you don't identify, and assigned it to a group with which you also don't identify.

If you have any evidence that young, childless, well-off people tend to hold these beliefs, I'd love to see it.

Answers like this would make sense if we didn't already spend billions and billions a year to address those exact topics, or if I was saying we shouldn't have any welfare programs at all.
> Answers like this would make sense if we didn't already spend billions and billions a year to address those exact topics, or if I was saying we shouldn't have any welfare programs at all.

But then your argument doesn't make any sense because it applies more to means-tested programs than UBI, because working can't cause you to lose the UBI.

"which is basically just printed money"

This is not the case for most proposals I have seen.

Yep, a universal basic income guaranteed by government (using violence at gunpoint to redistribute other people's money). The socialists leave out the part in brackets.
The government already uses implied violence at gunpoint to redistribute money, socialist or otherwise. The question is, does that terrifying government power mean that money goes to the rich banker, or the struggling clerk?
As opposed to a property system guaranteed by government (using violence at gunpoint to enforce distribution of resources according to particular rules). The libertarians leave out the part in brackets.
Why pay for roads other people use or public education or the fire department? There are plenty of things you're not using right now that are good ideas.
That's not what's being discussed here at all, nor did I say I don't want to pay taxes. I said I don't see the moral good in paying more in taxes so that others can work less and avoid "menial" jobs.
Basic income creates a more robust consumer base with fewer workers, allowing you to get better jobs from your willingness to work. You won't have to work harder, your wages will go up because you are willing to work at all.

Also you would likely pay the same taxes. Remember the system gives you (and bill gates) money too. But still taxes on income. If you're making over 150k, then yea maybe you might pay more for this system. On the other hand you already control more resources than 99% of the people in the world.

Your premise relies on the idea that without the (rather severe) consequence of becoming homeless, people will not be inclined to work. I just don't buy it. I don't think that if you remove the draconian consequences of not working a shitty job, that people will suddenly just sit at home and watch jeopardy all day.

And the people that would sit at home watching jeopardy all day regardless -- would you really want to employ them? This probably won't be a well received idea, but not every person is actually economically useful, at least not in the current system. Unemployment is high because to a certain extent, there's probably 5-10% of the population that most companies look at and go "yeah, we probably don't need that".

I'm not saying scarcity no longer exists, but the US government literally sets excess grain on fire to subsidize farmers. When people starve to death, its not because we don't have enough food, it's because the food doesn't make it to the people that need it. Our biggest societal health problem is that people are getting too fat.

The whole "you need to work for the food you eat" system is based on a context that hasn't existed in first world countries for quite a while.

> Taking care of my family involves me working hard, so why are you willing to make me work harder so that others can work less?

Nobody would make you do anything. You'd make exactly the same as other people. If taking care of your family for you means giving a certain standard of living, you'd certainly get a higher standard of living since you are working and getting more money than other people. Otherwise, if you're content with the bottom line you can just stop working and coast along.

> Taking more money from me to pay you to take care of your family, on the other hand, is morally wrong.

Can you stop thinking in terms of money for just one second? In the Middle Ages there were around 80-90% farmers in order to feed everyone. Now we need less than 5%. Sure, now there are new jobs, like making phones, travel, and millions of other things. But the other things nobody needs to be alive. Thus, why would we not take advantage from this huge technological advance by giving everyone enough money to eat, since making food is now so incredibly cheap? And if people stop working because of that, well, maybe they don't give enough shits about smartphones and they were there just to make a perverse economy to work. It's not about those things. It's about food and a roof - both things we can make in an incredibly cheap and automated way (we can 3d print houses, would you have ever believed it??).

> When did it become my responsibility to work harder so that they can do that?

That's the thing - it isn't and won't be. Basic Income is designed for, and in fact only works in, civilizations with enough excess productivity that they don't have to have their entire population working their assess off to maintain homeostasis and well-being. The USA is just about to get there. Some of the Nordic countries were there probably five or six years ago. There's a reason they're implementing it before us.

BI isn't "so that people can sit on their couches and do nothing all day while I support them". BI is so that people aren't required to have jobs to survive. Because when your civilization has sufficiently efficient per-person production, you end up with an issue where you're not just overprovisioned, but so overprovisioned that companies must start laying off large portions of the population to avoid wasting money hiring uselessly overproductive employees. At which point you end up with 30% or 60% unemployment and you have to choose between letting a third of your population starve or implementing something like BI.

That's the situation. BI isn't here to make it your responsibility to support everybody. BI is here because it's become so easy for people to support others that the economy, which up until now has assumed that there'll never be enough support to go around, has fallen apart. It's set up so that you can choose to support others instead of taking care of your family, and still have everything make sense.

The case needs to made that we're at this stage. And high unemployment is a result of the financial crisis, not over production.
There is no "this stage" -- a basic income provides a smaller disincentive to work than providing low income people with the same amount in mean-tested welfare programs, because you don't lose the basic income when you get a job. If you're in a society that can afford welfare programs at all then it can afford the equivalent basic income.
1. Basic income would need to be more than welfare, if people can't live completely off welfare easily. 2. Many people oppose welfare that doesn't require a job precisely because of the societal costs to the disincentive to work.
> 1. Basic income would need to be more than welfare, if people can't live completely off welfare easily.

Who says you need to be able to live completely off of it?

> 2. Many people oppose welfare that doesn't require a job precisely because of the societal costs to the disincentive to work.

So we're getting rid of all the programs that don't then? Requiring someone to work to receive benefits is unbelievably easy to scam anyway because two people can just hire each other to watch television and have the payments cancel.

It is possible to make the argument that there should be no social assistance at all. But that isn't the status quo, and the argument cannot be made that the status quo is better than a basic income.

>Who says you need to be able to live completely off of it?

I thought the argument for basic income is that it could support someone without the need for a job. If it can't, then that's not what I've been discussing.

>Requiring someone to work to receive benefits is unbelievably easy to scam anyway because two people can just hire each other to watch television and have the payments cancel.

"Illegal thing X cannot be enforced, therefore X should be legal" is an invalid argument.

> I thought the argument for basic income is that it could support someone without the need for a job. If it can't, then that's not what I've been discussing.

The amount is independent of the thing. You could have a basic income of $5000/year and it would still work better than $5000/year in means-tested welfare. You could have a basic income of $50,000/year but that is probably inadvisable. What probably makes the most sense is to replace existing welfare at approximately the same level and then collect data on how that works to decide the best amount in the long-term. (But $12,000/year is probably in the ballpark.)

> "Illegal thing X cannot be enforced, therefore X should be legal" is an invalid argument.

How is it an invalid argument? Passing unenforceable laws is futile and stupid. It fosters disrespect for the law and gives advantage to people willing to break the law when they know they can get away with it.

> You could have a basic income of $5000/year and it would still work better than $5000/year in means-tested welfare.

But BI of $5000 costs far more, because anyone can get it. You'd need to reduce the amount to keep costs the same, at which the argument that it's better becomes weaker.

>How is it an invalid argument? Passing unenforceable laws is futile and stupid. It fosters disrespect for the law and gives advantage to people willing to break the law when they know they can get away with it.

If it's difficult but possible to break the law and get away with it, then laws and some enforcement deters breaking the law. E.g. it's pretty easy to get alcohol under 21 and cigarettes under 18 , but the age laws make it harder than if there were no laws, which reduces the amount of underage drinking/smoking. If you agree that's a good thing, then the law is good insofar as it encourages that.

Or in the welfare example, it's not easy to scam welfare, it takes time, organization, etc. Many people who would never try to scam welfare would sign up for basic income, because it's official and there's no risk of getting caught.

Of course, it depends on the ease of scamming, the benefit, etc, but the general argument of "unenforcable->make it legal" is invalid unless accompanied by those arguments.

Why it would be your responsibility to work harder? In fact, you could also decide to work less.

Your comment is based on misunderstanding of what actually is money. Money is just a claim for some commodity, like resources or work; it's not a commodity in itself. From microeconomic perspective it is interchangeable, but not from the macroeconomic one.

In fact, under UBI, someone may decide to pay you more money exactly because you're willing to work hard. If you really have the choice of not working, you will have to be more incentivized (with money) to actually work.

In reality, UBI is just a different money redistribution scheme (compared to capital investment), nothing changes much for people who work. It won't however make the people who invest and live from rent (capitalists) very happy, because they will get less of the pie to compete for.

It would be my responsibility to work harder because all of this money has to come from somewhere. It doesn't just come from the magic money tree, it comes from people who work.

No one is going to pay me more under UBI than I earn now because I work harder. I already get paid to work hard.

>It would be my responsibility to work harder because all of this money has to come from somewhere.

You don't work because it's your responsibility to make the economy function. You work because people give you incentives to do so. UBI just changes the incentives slightly: You can choose whether you want the minimum or whether you want to earn some luxuries.

You can argue about how many people are going to take the latter choice, but it's ludicrous to suggest you would be forced towards it by your "responsibility" to the economy.

>No one is going to pay me more under UBI than I earn now because I work harder.

If lots of people stop working, then those who continue to do so will become a lot more valuable, and companies will have to pay them more as a result.

Happily, what we're now talking about is a matter of policy, not of principle.

You don't feel like paying taxes so that our society can support artists, fine. You might not feel like paying taxes to maintain rural roads (after all, you never drive there) or a public education system (you can pay for your kids' schooling). And that's all fine, but you're already doing all that, just in a relatively clumsy way.

"Taking more money from" you to support my family is something that taxes and society have done from the very start.

This just shifts the bar a bit further. It's a matter of degree and not of kind.

Nope, I happily pay money for schools, roads, government, police, etc. I vote for almost every tax increase that comes to the ballot. I do understand why people keep trying to make this argument because it's far more effective than the "let's pay people to make art and not do unfun jobs" argument.
Well, great, then it really won't be much of a stretch to add one more tax, this one to ensure that everyone has a basic guaranteed income!
> Taking care of my family involves me working hard, so why are you willing to make me work harder so that others can work less?

Because when you decide you'd like to launch a startup, you don't want the failure mode to be “I lose my house and live out of my car”.

Because in a year when you or a family member develops a debilitating disease, you'd want there to be an option available which is better than “I go bankrupt and end up on the street”.

Because if you or a family member decides they want to switch careers, go back to school, etc. you'd like food, health care, etc. not to be a major source of stress unless you're independently wealthy.

Because if you or a family member ends up in a bad relationship and needs to leave in a hurry, the answer isn't hoping there's room at a shelter because all of the landlords in town want a deposit or there's a year delay getting the subsidized child-care needed to actually be able to get a job.

Most of the people in the United States who go bankrupt were willing to work hard and didn't think that would happen to them. That went well until they had medical bills, a major employer left the area, etc. and they either couldn't work or were unable to find a job. People like to say you should keep 6-12 months income in the bank, which is certainly great advice but even if you're one of the relatively fortunate people who can afford to save that much money it can disappear faster than expected if more than one thing goes wrong at a time.

As a society we've decided we don't want to live in a world where poor people die on the street (or are forced into terrible jobs, begging, prostitution, etc.). The problem UBI tries to solve is that the existing systems are incomplete, often create bad incentives, and require hugely expensive bureaucracies to review people at every step of the way. Providing a consistent income to everyone avoids things like someone getting the support they need to get a job, working hard and then having it all fall apart when they get a raise which is large enough to disqualify them from housing/child-care support but not large enough to replace it.

It doesn't get rid of the incentive to do more, however, unless you really think that most people in society will hit the basic minimums needed for life and never want nicer food, housing, entertainment, etc.

I mostly agree and I find that most of the arguments put forth in favor of UBI seem relatively narcissistic in nature (Your startup fails and you end up on the street? Yeah, not my problem actually, nor would it be my problem if you spent your entire paycheck on losing powerball tickets etc).

That said, I think Martin Ford has made a decent case towards imposing an automation tax to fund the UBI for displaced workers. And I agree 100% that the only way this is remotely viable is in a society where there is insanely excess productive capacity such as what is likely to happen with the automation of jobs.

>Your startup fails and you end up on the street? Yeah, not my problem

It kind of is though. The cost of making failure painful is all the potential innovators who decide to get a safe job instead.

Utterly false dichotomy. You can innovate from a safe job(tm) as well (not that any job is safe in an age of at-will employment). The difference is that in exchange for a lower payout for success, one gets a much higher payout for failure, a sort of UBI if you will.
>You can innovate from a safe job(tm) as well

To some extent, but big companies are likely to be much more conservative towards new ideas. If they weren't, there would be little benefit to being an entrepreneur.

Another bogus assertion: Big companies like Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Apple etc. are constantly iterating on innovation. Most of that innovation never sees the light of day just like most startups are destined for failure.

IMO the benefit to being an entrepreneur is that if you truly have a winning idea, you can own a lot more of its fruits by pursuing it from your own business. For it requires nearly the same skillset to procure VC as it does to persuade a large company to let you build something. Risk is and should be proportional to return.

To that end, I have nearly 20 patents filed from within large companies, most of them single inventor. And my salary amortized over a 4-year startup life cycle is on par with what I would have gotten as a non 3-letter title at an acquired startup that wasn't a Google or a Facebook.

So why take a chance on failure without the chance of a big payout? And except for the 3-letter titles, that's what a lot of newbies unknowingly sign up to do, risk >>>> return. I have no desire to socialize this learning experience for them.

Sure, you can innovate in a safe job. And then your employer likely owns it. Good for them!

That's not a criticism of corporations, just pointing out that taking a risk and striking out on your own isn't necessarily a reckless decision.

Yes, they own it, in exchange for protecting you from the 90% chance of failure (perhaps you should save your best ideas for when you've acquired enough resources to build it on your own? I don't, ideas are cheap, it's the executions on those ideas that has built value for me).

And I don't think startups are reckless, but I think a lot of the people that join them fail to do rudimentary financial calculations as to whether doing so has a better expected return than a safe(tm) job.

Otherwise, they wouldn't accept chicken scratchings worth of lottery tickets and 20-50% lower compensation. But yet they do, over and over, no matter how many people lay it out how bad an idea this usually is.

https://michaelochurch.wordpress.com/2012/07/08/dont-waste-y...

How noble of those large corporations to save you from yourself!

So, basically, your point is that you should sneakily hide your best ideas from your employers and then strike out on your own when you hit that magical amazing idea! You know, that idea that is obviously going to be an amazing success and you can know that ahead of time! People that foolishly try to succeed on their own time are rubes! Instead of accepting a check from the government, you should mail it in with a job you're entirely checked out of until you find the magical secret sauce to make yourself a billionaire. That's great for everyone right?

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This goes both ways. The cost of making failure painless is that people don't try as hard to avoid it. If the relative difference in utility between success and failure goes down, the incentive to achieve that difference goes down.
> I find that most of the arguments put forth in favor of UBI seem relatively narcissistic in nature (Your startup fails and you end up on the street? Yeah, not my problem actually, nor would it be my problem if you spent your entire paycheck on losing powerball tickets etc).

I look at this from a different angle: right now, startups skew heavily towards founders with significant risk-tolerance (young, healthy, good educations, family money, business connections, often partnered with someone who also has high-income career options, etc.) for whom the worst-case outcome is probably something like taking a job at BoringCorp and hanging out in cube-ville until they build up their reserves.

There's nothing wrong with that but there's an argument that society is missing out on a lot of ideas which won't grow out of that fairly homogenous subculture. If we provide a basic cushion, it makes it less intimidating for someone from a less comfortable background to take a chance. That could be particularly beneficial to society: someone coming up with some business ideas which are viable in, say, a factory town or agriculture has the potential to affect a lot of people who are largely ignored by Silicon Valley culture.

I've been ahead of the curve a couple times and I've crashed and burned because of it only to see someone else do essentially the same thing 5 or so years later and knock it out of the park. That's bad luck and bad timing IMO not some social injustice. Anyone with talent these days can soft land into BoringCorp IMO. We're not exactly swimming in talent.

I'm not far from taking another swing these days and I think the time I've taken to develop financial cushioning has also let me develop better skills to analyze both the nature and the timing of the sort of businesses I wish to pursue.

And if you have kids, that's your startup, take 'em to IPO. They're worth far more than $$$.

If we really could have a system where we could just stop working and have basic income that would be the great liberation of the masses.

But all these basic income proposals require people to pay taxes to support us.

I've lived on 20k a year with almost no required work. And I've lived on 200k with a job. I'd pick the former everyday and twice on Sunday.

So I don't have some moral problem with not working. The problem is the tax base would implode and there wouldn't be anyone left paying the bills. The system would collapse.

Maybe if software actually eats the world but not until then.

>I've lived on 20k a year with almost no required work. And I've lived on 200k with a job. I'd pick the former everyday and twice on Sunday.

Almost no work is not the same as no work, and 20k is not the same as 12k.

> So I don't have some moral problem with not working. The problem is the tax base would implode and there wouldn't be anyone left paying the bills. The system would collapse. > Maybe if software actually eats the world but not until then.

That's the most likely way I see a basic income happening, too: automation eats into a huge number of jobs – self-driving vehicles take out a LOT of people currently working as truckers, delivery drivers, etc.; robots turn Amazon warehouses into ghost towns where a few technicians tend the machines; whole categories of office jobs continue to fade as analog data entry goes away and processes are automated; and so forth.

In that kind of scenario, it's easy to imagine voters supporting a tax on high earners and corporate income to provide an income for people who simply don't have skills which can't be done by a machine.

Why do you think middle class suburban teenagers work awful jobs with no chance of career growth (Walmart, McDonald's, etc)? Most of them have parents providing for necessities. It's because people always want more. Even the poorest people today live like kings compared to five centuries ago, but people still strive for more despite this relative prosperity!
The concern is that the loss of workers will hurt production/the economy/etc.

If right now, people are willing to do simple work for minimum wage, but we change the system so that people want twice as much before working, then anything that depends on that kind of labor goes up in price, with ripple effects. If less people work, less goods are produced, and prices go up. Similarly, if more people are buying things with their guaranteed income, there's more demand, and prices go up.

This has nothing to do with judging people for choosing not to work, despite what you claimed.

Do you understand that opposition to this idea might not be motivated by wanting to have a system "take advantage " of people? It sounds like you don't, from what you wrote.

BI can't be static, and will have to be tied to the affordability of basic necessities like housing and transportation. As prices rise, so must BI, or it's not BI.

I don't mind discussing the finer points, but work disincentive as it exists as an argument to work as a moral obligation, yes, I think (know [0]) the common thought pattern is that work is a moral requirement, that those that don't are bad, and all social status is earned by those that have, while have-nots just haven't worked hard enough.

As a basic argument of production, it's basically been proven that work disincentive is not actually a thing. Here's a good gathering of evidence: http://www.economonitor.com/dolanecon/2014/08/25/a-universal...

[0] http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/business-jan-june13-makingsen...

>As prices rise, so must BI, or it's not BI.

Well then you need to include that in the cost. You can't look at current costs and current tax revenue.

>As a basic argument of production, it's basically been proven that work disincentive is not actually a thing

Saying "this does not lead to a work disincentive" is a very different argument from saying "this leads to a work disincentive, but that's a good thing". Make up your mind. Above you argued that work disincentives were perfectly fine, and are the intended outcome, and anyone who doesn't like them is a monster that wants to enslave people. When I point out that there's a legitimate concern that production will go down, and possibly enough to make BI unviable, you turn around and say that there's no disincentive.

Also, "one guy here argues something, while quoting extensively from many people who disagree" is by no means a "proof" for that side. It's an argument. When there's an economic consensus, that would be closer to proof.

I also have a problem with this:

>However, if, as I have suggested elsewhere, the UBI is financed in part by eliminating middle-class tax loopholes (without changing marginal tax rates), Dave’s income would increase by less than the full $8,000 and he would reduce his annual work by less than 13 hours

This is saying that increasing someone's effective tax rate will increase the number of hours they work. That seems wrong, even if marginal rates are fixed.

You're twisting my words. I am saying there is no work disincentive. None.

That said, certain types of work that are more aggressively taking advantage of the lower class and those down on their luck will no longer have as an incentive staying just a hair above total homelessness and bankruptcy. Therefore they can pick their work with more dignity (goodbye Amazon warehouse pressures, hello treating people better).

I'm also saying that the work people choose may not be entirely typical, or fit within everyone's definition of "work" as they define it as a moral imperative.

>You're twisting my words. I am saying there is no work disincentive. None.

I agree that's what you said in your most recent comment. But that's not how you started. I quote:

>What someone that trots that out is saying is that more people would be able to forgo wasting their lives in menial jobs and instead create art and new businesses, or stay home to raise a family or care for elderly parents

You clearly said that some people are going to stop working, and instead focus on things like art, and that's a good thing. Changing your argument halfway through and not acknowledging it is bad form.

In fact, you even said in this comment that there's a disincentive. It's beyond me how you can say "certain types of work ... will no longer have as an incentive" and still claim there's no work disincentive at all.

Make up your mind, choose an argument and stick with it.

>I'm also saying that the work people choose may not be entirely typical, or fit within everyone's definition of "work" as they define it as a moral imperative.

You're still straw manning your opposition, even after I pointed out that moral imperatives to work need play no role in opposing BI. So using your terminology, how would you respond to the concern that this "untypical work" would reduce output enough to threaten the viability of a society?

Your attempt at a "gotcha!" is a pretty tone deaf. "Creating art" is a job. It is work. As is caring for the elderly or young children - a lot of this is currently considered not working, which is laughable to anyone currently doing it. (It's also the only time I suggested people might not hold down a traditional job.)

I don't think production and output would go down and I most certainly don't think it would lead to societal collapse, or I wouldn't be arguing for it. Obviously.

Creating art is always work, but it's probably not a job unless you can regularly sell the product for sufficient funds to support yourself (short of that, it's more of a hobby).
How do you expect less people to hold down "traditional jobs", yet expect traditional measures of production and output to not decrease?

Redefining work doesn't answer any of the questions. Calling art work doesn't affect production, unless art suddenly becomes edible.

"I don't think production and output would go down and I most certainly don't think it would lead to societal collapse, or I wouldn't be arguing for it. Obviously."

You could say that about any position anyone takes. Nobody's accusing Bi advocates of trying to cause societal collapse. They say that BI might, in spite of the advocates best intentions, lead to problems. Your good intentions don't cause good outcomes, so just saying "I don't want society to collapse" is not a useful argument.

'How do you expect less people to hold down "traditional jobs", yet expect traditional measures of production and output to not decrease?'

This is interesting. I can't speak for the parent; I would weakly guess that their response would be that they never specified that they were talking about "traditional measures of production" but were specifically objecting to traditional measures. If that's the case, they should have done so more clearly at the outset.

That said, I can see a couple ways that could happen that workers might opt out of traditional jobs without a decrease in "traditional measures of production and output". I make no particular claim that any of these is likely.

One potential outcome is that increased options for workers leads to increased upwards pressure on wages, leading to increased pressure for automation. Improvements to automation could mean increases in production in the medium term, at the cost of some production in the short term.

Another possibility appears if we consider the following model, which may or may not be related to reality:

1 Some workers are disgruntled.

2 Disgruntled workers, on average, have a negative marginal productivity.

3 Because of economic incentives, disgruntled workers must make themselves indistinguishable from regular workers along axes actually used when making hiring/termination decisions.

4 Given other opportunities, those most dissatisfied with their current situation will be most likely to leave.

In this case it would seem that on providing a basic income, we would see those negative marginal productivity workers leave first, which could mean an immediate gain in productivity.

>increased pressure for automation

I doubt this. There's plenty of pressure for automation now, and I don't see wages increasing as being the final straw to accelerate automation research.

The argument I've seen elsewhere is the other way around: that once we develop better automation, the demand for labor will drop enough that BI will be feasible. But until we reach that stage, I'm not convinced that BI will be sustainable.

>Another possibility appears if we consider the following model, which may or may not be related to reality:

I expect the group of workers that have negative marginal productivity (or, less marginal productivity than their salary) is chiefly those people that are good at fooling the system into thinking they're productive, and not necessarily intersecting heavily with the group of people that would leave under BI. But this is very low confidence.

> I can't speak for the parent; I would weakly guess that their response would be that they never specified that they were talking about "traditional measures of production" but were specifically objecting to traditional measures. If that's the case, they should have done so more clearly at the outset.

If that's what they mean, then I'd ask specifically about food and other essentials. How would those be guaranteed production? How much would the cost of those go up in response to higher wages, and how do you protect against a vicious cycle of "inflation->BI increases-> higher wage demand->inflation"?

And if they think that production of those won't go down, then which people are doing "art"? Who's doing their current job, etc?

> I doubt this. There's plenty of pressure for automation now, and I don't see wages increasing as being the final straw to accelerate automation research.

It's not a question of final straws or dramatic thresholds, but of a constellation of smaller decisions.

If I have to pay my workers $X, it's worth investing in automation that amortizes out to less than $X. If workers demand $2X, then two things follow:

First, more existing solutions in the marketplace are likely to be worthwhile. There may be economies of scale, where this would help lower the cost of similar automation. At an extreme, there may be tools available that could cost <$X if they were being bought by the whole industry, but between $X and $2X in the case where no one is yet buying them.

Second, if I'm considering building automation tools, there are more things I can expect to successfully bring to market if workers are being paid more. And so I am more able to raise funds to do research into that automation.

These kinds of things should lead to an increase in automation as compared to the status quo. It may not be dramatic, but I'm not sure it needs to be dramatic.

> I expect the group of workers that have negative marginal productivity (or, less marginal productivity than their salary) is chiefly those people that are good at fooling the system into thinking they're productive, and not necessarily intersecting heavily with the group of people that would leave under BI.

I think that's plenty possible. But note that we don't require that most of the negative-marginal-product workers leave, just that a large enough portion of leaving workers be negative-marginal-product.

> But this is very low confidence.

Certainly, as was my example in the first place :)

> how do you protect against a vicious cycle of "inflation->BI increases-> higher wage demand->inflation"?

As I've said elsewhere, I think this is a concern. It's my understanding that the result of a BI that is too high for a society to support would precisely be rapid inflation. I propose protecting against the cycle you describe by refusing to raise the BI level in response to inflation, which lets the (real) BI fall to a sustainable level if we set it too high. Growing BI at (or slightly above) targeted inflation seems appropriate. Growing it with observed (or expected) inflation seems dangerous.

"BI can't be static, and will have to be tied to the affordability of basic necessities like housing and transportation. As prices rise, so must BI, or it's not BI."

I could not disagree more.

(Or if you want to nitpick definitions and insist that you've defined BI the one true way, then we can be pedantic and say I strongly oppose BI and strongly support a system that is very nearly BI but for this difference...)

I believe that a basic income at an appropriate level will, over time, increase productivity. But I also believe that the result of a basic income higher than the economy can support is a high level of inflation. If we don't raise BI in response, that's naturally self-correcting. I don't want to remove that safeguard.

Increasing it at (or slightly faster than) targeted inflation sounds advisable. We should not increase it based on predicted or observed inflation.

> If right now, people are willing to do simple work for minimum wage, but we change the system so that people want twice as much before working...

...then they would still be getting paid minimum wage, because the other half of the money comes from the basic income.

It might even allow employers to pay them less, because the UBI would remove the need to have a minimum wage. So someone who was making $15K/year full time at minimum wage who is now getting $12K/year UBI may now have to accept $12K/year in wages because the market for unskilled labor is highly competitive and $24K/year in total income is highly preferable to $12K.

You misunderstood. When I say "people want twice as much before working", I mean a marginal doubling. If I'm working for a marginal $10 doing unfun work because I need to feed myself, and I'm given basic income, I might say "hey, I'm not willing to do that same work unless I get $20 an hour for it". I might prefer "do nothing and collect BI" to "work for $10 and get BI".

>It might even allow employers to pay them less, because the UBI would remove the need to have a minimum wage. So someone who was making $15K/year full time at minimum wage who is now getting $12K/year UBI may now have to accept $12K/year in wages because the market for unskilled labor is highly competitive and $24K/year in total income is highly preferable to $12K.

It's not obvious which way it would go. I think my scenario above is plausible, but yours is as well.

But in your scenario, why wouldn't the employer capture the entire difference, or a larger part of it? Even if they pay $16k, that's still better than 12k. Or, maybe they'd work less hours.

I think that a more robust analysis than these kinds of handwaving arguments is needed. It's not a simple question.

> If I'm working for a marginal $10 doing unfun work because I need to feed myself, and I'm given basic income, I might say "hey, I'm not willing to do that same work unless I get $20 an hour for it". I might prefer "do nothing and collect BI" to "work for $10 and get BI".

You might. And then that employer might prefer to hire someone willing to accept $12 (or $10 or $8) and you become the unemployed person instead of them. Or the employer might realize that it's cost-effective to replace you with an automated process at the point of $11/hour and do that.

> It's not obvious which way it would go. I think my scenario above is plausible, but yours is as well.

It's pretty clearly going to be some of each. But if they even approximately cancel, I don't see what problem that is supposed to create.

> But in your scenario, why wouldn't the employer capture the entire difference, or a larger part of it? Even if they pay $16k, that's still better than 12k. Or, maybe they'd work less hours.

Maybe they would.

> I think that a more robust analysis than these kinds of handwaving arguments is needed. It's not a simple question.

The problem is it's not an analysis thing. It's a facts thing and the facts are always changing.

If you give $12,000/year to a person, what does it cause them to do? It depends what their options are. Maybe they'll keep doing exactly what they were doing and just have more money to spend, or use it to pay off debts. Maybe they'll demand a raise. Maybe their employer can now get away with paying them less. Maybe they'll quit their job and start a business. Maybe they'll quit their job and go to school. Maybe they'll take a different job that they like better but pays less. Maybe they'll take a different job that pays more but has a higher risk of loss of employment.

It depends on the person and their circumstances. Trying to measure it across the entire economy is chaos theory and the measurement you get today in one place won't be the same as it is at some other place or in the same place after a period of time.

The only way to know is to do it and find out. And if the worst case scenario is that companies have to pay some employees more to convince them to do unfun work, is that really the end of days?

>But if they even approximately cancel, I don't see what problem that is supposed to create.

If they cancel, there's no problem. If mine is significantly greater than yours, then production goes down, and BI becomes unsustainable.

>The only way to know is to do it and find out. And if the worst case scenario is that companies have to pay some employees more to convince them to do unfun work, is that really the end of days?

If it leads to less production, and then shrinks the economy, then everyone will be worse off.

> If they cancel, there's no problem. If mine is significantly greater than yours, then production goes down, and BI becomes unsustainable.

At which point you're just making the argument for not turning on the Large Hadron Collider. We don't know what would happen. It could create a black hole and destroy the world.

There is only one way to find out. And at least in this case we can go back to the old system if it doesn't work out. Or try a version at half the dollar amount first to see what happens.

>At which point you're just making the argument for not turning on the Large Hadron Collider. We don't know what would happen. It could create a black hole and destroy the world.

That's unfair. There's a plausible argument that this would be harmful, while there's far less plausibility that the LHC would be harmful.

>There is only one way to find out.

Somehow I don't think you mean "more experiments".

Your making assumptions that people who rely on it will put their time to good use when a great many of them are not currently do so, why would they change with even less reason?

Incentive to work would more like incentive to receive even more benefits for other items. The problem is politicians, suddenly there will be all sorts of new exceptions to your BI "because". Then we are back to square one.

I see most BI suggestions as rationalization for giving up. Face it, there are a lot of people who would be and even some who are living at a level none of us can fathom. Do we really want to legislate an permanent poor class of people, one where there is likely more incentive to not leave it?

Finally how do you plan to prevent self destructive and generally harmful activities some will engage in. There are countless stories of generational incompetence, from high frequency of out of wedlock children if not even out of school, to not even finishing school? How can we incentivize good behavior, good for self and society?

But we already have that permanent poor class, vanishingly few of whom escape it, and they're actually getting poorer as time goes on.

I see UBI as the best plan by far I've heard to address homelessness and poverty and education and hunger with a single solution. No it's not perfect, but for as little as working provides poor people now, what incentive do they have now that they'd lose later besides those below basic human dignity (like eating)?

To your point about politicians mucking with BI on the regular, I concur that is a real concern to proper execution.

Some of us just aren't so sure that we know better than poor people and should decide what's best for them. If they want to dedicate their lives to "unproductive" activities, so what? What makes your job so important, anyway? Mine certainly isn't world-changing, despite earning me a better-than-average salary.
Do you think we'd have less homeless people if the incentives for not being homeless were made stronger? "The beatings will continue until morale improves". You make it sound like people choose to be poor because it's awesome. You know what? Poor people already have plenty of incentives not to be poor, nobody wants to be in that boat.
This is the exact line of nonsense that was used to sell the original transition to welfare statism. Literally the exact words - "It will be just enough to survive but not enough for anyone to ever be satisfied with".

History proved them wrong. This isn't "a tired argument", as if it were some speculation based on beliefs. It's a recounting of what actually happened and continues to happen with welfare/handout programs.

C.H. Douglas and the Social Credit movement were absolutely immense during the Depression period and slightly afterwards (especially in Canada). His philosophy was a syncretic mix of positive economic theory, Christian philosophy and policy proposals that amounted to a UBI among other things. Today, it is nearly dead and largely unknown.

The MMT people have made their strides on the blogosphere, and did get Stephanie Kelton into the Senate Budget Committee. They loathe the UBI, however. They want to go straight for a job guarantee, as advocated in e.g. Hyman Minsky's writings. Assuming a Sanders presidency, their vulgar Keynesianism might pass.

These things tend to come and go, especially after crises. Sometimes they succeed. The Townsend Plan was a major impetus for Social Security. But I wonder if in some years we'll still be debating this.

Why are people on HN supporting basic income so much? Do you support 'Guaranteed Basic Sex' as well? You know, there are guys like Elliot Rodgers who would be thrilled with something like that.
The reason that folks on HN are so in favor of UBI is that large numbers of us are employed as software engineers. We automate things that were previously done by humans. We make our money by destroying jobs. From a gods-eye perspective, this is actually a good thing, as it brings down the costs of serving peoples' needs. From the perspective of someone who loses their job, it sucks because that person now has no way to feed themselves. So, we want to get around that by being able to say to someone: "Here is a free $700/month. Move to rural Maine and spend 6 months learning to code and eating food delivered by the driverless truck which stole your job. Then join us in automating more people's jobs away."

Why not Universal Basic Sex? Very few people think that sex is a basic right or think that the existence of sexually frustrated folks indicates a flaw on the part of society. Most people don't put sex and food/shelter/medicine/etc in the same categories. Also, HN readers aren't doing things to make sex harder to find, so we feel no responsibility for people's sexual frustration. Also, we can't really automate the production of sex. If someone wants to seriously argue that we should give everyone a free Autoblow 2...well I would be interested in reading that argument.

"From a gods-eye perspective, this is actually a good thing, as it brings down the costs of serving peoples' needs."

Why do you define 'good' as servicing needs of members of homo sapiens species? What if a good thing(objectively) is actually servicing members of 'fire ant' species? You attitude smells like speciesism.

"From the perspective of someone who loses their job, it sucks because that person now has no way to feed themselves."

Yep, just like a lot of other animals. You look at some of those animals in the jungle - maybe you'll eat if you're lucky and survive long enough to reproduce. It's a struggle for them. When a zebra is killed by a lion, it ain't nice for the zebra.

"So, we want to get around that by being able to say to someone: "Here is a free $700/month. Move to rural Maine and spend 6 months learning to code and eating food delivered by the driverless truck which stole your job. Then join us in automating more people's jobs away."

Again, this smells like speciesism. Why do you want to spend your time helping members of homo sapiens species? Was that the result of brainwashing during your childhood or did you independantly discover that it is your duty to help members of homo sapiens species?

"Very few people think that sex is a basic right or think that the existence of sexually frustrated folks indicates a flaw on the part of society."

You forgot to add 'today' or 'these days'. Why is what majority thinks an indicator of truth?

"Most people don't put sex and food/shelter/medicine/etc in the same categories."

Again, you're going by what majority thinks. Do you care about truth or what majority thinks?

"Also, we can't really automate the production of sex."

Modern tech can certainly help. For example, you spy on people to see who is attractive and having lots of sex. Then, you sexually tax those people. You locate, kidnapp and take them to someone who is unattractive. From the perspective of the receiver, it will be automated, 'cause they'll be getting women frequantly with no effort.

> Why is what the majority thinks an indicator of truth.

I'm not arguing about The Great Objective Truth That Pervades The Universe or whatever. I'm arguing about why HN readers are in favor of one thing but not another.

> You attitude smells like speciesism

Yep, I am explicitly speciesist. I value the lives and experiences of humans more than I value those of non-humans animals.

> kidnap someone...'cause they'll be getting women frequantly with no effort

I assert without evidence that for most people, sexually assaulting someone would be a very unpleasant experience. I certainly find the idea utterly repugnant.

In fact, this point I'm going to say its pretty likely you're just playing with utterly repugnant concepts for either the joy of saying repugnant things on the off-chance that it will result in us finding some interesting and useful way of explaining a part of the world. Just to let you know, I don't think most people here want to join you in this exploration. I certainly don't. Seriously.

Also, examine your gender assumptions.

I was looking at the start of this comment, which I found merely wrong, and then I got to the end.

Wat.

An approximately rational truth seeking community can reasonably be expected to come to a reasonably good approximation of the truth, compared to what they have access to. As such, such a community can be used as an (approximate) indicator of the truth.

Moral relativism can fall down a well. (emphasis on the ism. I don't mean ists. It is a rhetorical statement, not a literal one.)

"An approximately rational truth seeking community can reasonably be expected to come to a reasonably good approximation of the truth, compared to what they have access to. As such, such a community can be used as an (approximate) indicator of the truth."

- You're writing about a rational truth seeking community when the user @afarrell is writing about majority of people. Do you see the difference? People (members of homo sapiens sapiens species) have not evolved to seek truth, but to survive and reproduce.

"Moral relativism can fall down a well."

- How can moral relativism fall down? What does that even look like? Fall according to what standard? Is the standard relative or not?

see: "It is a rhetorical statement, not a literal one."

I was expressing [distaste/dislike/disapproval] [for/of] moral relativism. Was this somehow not obvious to you? Are you merely feigning incomprehension? If you are, to what end? (Would you think that I would think that it benefits your reproductive fitness?)

> You're writing about a rational truth seeking community

I included the word "approximately". Do you think that if I was asked if I included it for no reason, that I would answer "yes"?

Which would occur more, with nothing else changed arbitrarily: A collection which is more capable of achieving ends, or one which is less capable of achieving ends, becoming more prevalent than the other over time, if both have being prevalent as an end?

Would a correct understanding of decision theory predict that having more or less true information, all else being equal, would result in an entity being more or less successful in achieving its ends?

What do you mean when you use the word "to"? Do you mean "such that ___ occurs"? Is that what the word is commonly used to mean? (What about in the question immediately preceding this one?)

Lets turn it around, do you support "euthanasia of economically useless people"? If you don't have a job for whatever reason, should you just be left on the streets to die?

(And if you argue: "we have social safety nets". Well duh. This would be one too. Except that it would be so much easier to administrate compared to something like welfare or food stamps, which has very high administrative overhead, so it would be cheaper than those systems.)

"do you support "euthanasia of economically useless people"? If you don't have a job for whatever reason, should you just be left on the streets to die?"

YES. Old & incompetent people are 'all cost, no benefit' proposition. Children are cost in the beginning, but benefit later on. Saving lives of old and incompetent(lazy, mentally/physically challenged) people is a total waste of resources.

P.S. Just because you don't have a job now, doesn't mean you can't get one in the future or get new skills and work in a different field.

I admire your bluntness, but I have to wonder, do you assume you're not going to grow old and incompetent? Presumably, if we're fortunate enough to live that long, we are all in that boat.
No, because I will kill myself when I get there. I'm doing all the things I want to do before I grow old and incompetent. All the activities you would do when you're old + much more, you can do when you're younger and healthier.

For example, let's say you plan to visit location X when you're old. Well, why not do it when you're younger with the money you would have saved for retirement?

As optimistic as they seem on the surface, calling for GBI is, in a way, a call for throwing in of the towel by the human race. It's a hasty concession that continued human well-being is no longer compatible with nature or morality. Oddly, such defeatist calls invariably ignore a raft of dreadful and immediate societal effects: the end of meaningful work and self-esteem as both an option and a goal for the masses; the justifiable resentment of productive people whose living standard will be forcibly degraded; and the institutional bifurcation of the human race into producers and parasites, with the reduction of the whole to a sort of government-managed bi-pedal livestock.
Basic income will not work when fiat currency drops and devalues our dollar to be worth almost nothing. Everyone surviving off of it will have to fend for themselves. National debt continues to skyrocket and quantitative easing cannot continue to happen without severe inflation coming. This crap is just a nice idea but will not work in reality when our economy goes into the dumpster.
If society values innovation (questionable!), UBI totally makes sense. How many skilled, capable people are working bad jobs or are afraid to start a venture because they're concerned about ending up on the street? Safety nets encourage risk taking, and risk taking is necessary for innovation. This always gets characterized as subsidizing free-loaders, but perhaps naively, I think most people want to have an impact on the world, and you don't need to threaten them with starvation to get them to do important work. You only need to threaten them with starvation if you're asking them to work against their interests.
$12,000/year per American adult who is not already on welfare or social security would cost about $2 Trillion per year. To put that into perspective, Social Security cost $1.3 Trillion in 2013. The cost of all social welfare programs was $529 Billion. The GDP came in at around 17 Trillion.

The US could afford it if we really wanted to.

- Is it inflationary? Prima facia, it has to be. But then it would also increase the flow of money and put more people to work in places that the $1,000 gets spent.

- Is it fair? If every American receives it, regardless of their wealth, then I don't see how it would be unfair.

- Is it realistic politically? It seems that the US was pretty close to something along these lines in the 60's[0] and Obama finally got universal health care through. Perhaps it is realistic enough to at least put a true, modern pilot program in place and convince ourselves one way or the other. It really seems better than the alternative: Status quo for the homeless and the poor.

A real value is that lower financial stress across the entire country would free parents to focus more on raising their kids. Many, many social problems subside when families do better.

So my question is, how can we construct a valid experiment to convince ourselves one way or the other that this will benefit society overall, and provide enough value to actually do it?

http://www.remappingdebate.org/article/guaranteed-income%E2%...

>$12,000/year per American adult who is not already on welfare or social security...

Is not what's being proposed by pretty much anyone.

$12,000/year per American adult who isn't already earning $X/year is how I understand it. A negative income tax, effectively.

Even if it's not administered that way (i.e., everyone gets a $1k check every month), then you raise taxes in such a way that every dollar earned means you earn more, but that by, say, $48k/year you're paying at least $12k/year in taxes.

The proposal is to pay all citizens the same amount. No means testing, no qualification except perhaps an age limit.

Individuals are not the only tax payers, and the wealthy do pay far more than $12,000 per year already.

Everyone does get the $12k, but you can effectively raise taxes to "cancel out" those $12k for the rich, maintaining the same effective tax rate for them.
My point is that you can adjust the tax code so that people over some threshold are paying $12k more than they used to, cancelling out the $12k of income. And counting people who are going to have their taxes raised by $12k in the overall cost is disingenuous. Below that threshold taxes will also likely go up, eating up some of the $12k there as well.
Also, the money used as basic income is not lost but will (mostly) stay in the economic system and stimulate growth. In most developed countries, introducing a universal basic income would require us to raise the tax rate to about 70 %, which does not sound ridiculously high given that it already is at 50 % in many countries (e.g. Germany). Also, the net effect on income would probably be positive for most people at the low end of the income distribution. People with higher incomes would lose money though.

The most interesting question (to me at least) therefore is how this new tax progression would change the incentives for people at the high end of the income distribution. Theoretically it should lead people that earn a lot of money to value their free time more, which in turn would make them want to work less. Another positive effect would be the reduction of economic inequality through the higher redistribution of money from high to low incomes. In Europe there are some countries that are a good example for this. Sweden notably has a very steep tax progression for people with large incomes, such that some people reportedly even reach marginal tax rates > 100 % (e.g. Astrid Lindgren https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astrid_Lindgren). As a result, Sweden has one of the smallest income inequalities among countries in the developed world (the Gini coefficient there is 25 % vs. 46 % for the USA). Higher taxation of large incomes reduces income inequality, which I think is (mostly) a good thing.

The question is therefore not if it's possible (it probably is), but if people actually want it and think it's fair.

"fuck you, got mine"
Yeah, that's what I'm saying, champ.
you didn't have to use so many words
(comment deleted)
Please don't post like this here. Even when you think someone is expressing a bad point of view, it's important not to degrade the environment with hostility.

We detached this subthread from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10959436 and marked it off-topic.

Do we need this story over and over? Nothing new is ever said, and the comments are just as predictable. I get that some segment of HN thinks this is super important and should be constantly flogged but I question the purpose.
Can anyone here recommend any good books on the topic of UBI?
The incentives aren't quite aligned to make this happen, but I wonder if a private entity could jump-start this.

Lets take an organization engaged in a massively profitable activity that is unpopular because it eliminates large numbers of peoples' jobs. As an example, lets assume that Alphabet has a company working on driverless long-haul trucking. Suppose they take a pile of capital and start an endowment that then pays a small monthly amount to everyone in the political entity that could possibly stop them. To whom do they cut a cheque? Voters. They only need to get access to a voter database with names and mailing addresses. So now everyone who votes is getting a cheque from that entity every month, however small. Their marketing department comes up with some way to brand it so as to make those voters now feel warm and fuzzy about this scheme.

They then structure their company in such a way that the profits from their job-killing activity add to the monthly amount paid. In effect, they give every voter a stake in them continuing to do this. Then, when any law comes up which threatens their activity, they defend it as strongly as they would defend social security. Over time, this activity has generated enough profit that what was once a tiny cheque is actually large enough for people to pay a few bills.

The problems with this are:

1) I'm pretty sure the math wouldn't ever work out to paying anyone anything significant. 140 million voters is a lot of people to pay. The cost of postage alone would eat up the payout in the beginning.

2) There isn't enough incentive for an organization to do this just for the sake of profit. It would be cheaper to maintain a skilled team of lobbyists.

3) I suspect that people would be suspicious of cashing a random cheque that purports to be from a well-known company.

4) It might make voter fraud a non-trivial problem.