Zophie
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On a related note, will new technology make something like this a necessity at some point, I wonder? — Zophie
Likely it wouldn't ruin the dollar. A lot of that would be raise the aggregate demand, so what's the problem?The idea is to give every adult in the US $1000/month. The numbers: 330M people, roughly three quarters of which are adults, times $12,000 equals about $3T dollars. Per year. But how to keep from ruining the dollar? — tim wood
I'm 83...I won't see it. But I have been an advocate for the UBI for over three decades now. — Frank Apisa
It seems to me the "installed base" of safety net programs, tattered and full of holes as they are, will make a UBI difficult to achieve here (if for no other reason that the installed base will serve as an excuse for not doing). — Bitter Crank
You're faster on this track than I am, but it seems to me that investments - subject to risk and loss - and renting, are not strictly passive activities. Perhaps I differ from you in that I do not begrudge Bill Gates, or Warren Buffet, or Jeff Bezos their fortunes. Their worth seems proportional to the scale of their operations and achievements. But it seems to be the case that collectively it's too much for the entire system. Ergo taxation. And maybe because both Gates and Buffet are committed to very large investment into the public welfare, they get a break - that any who make similar divestiture get a break. What is fragile, here, and in my opinion worth protecting, is some reward for entrepreneurial accomplishment. But this a matter for the philosophy of the thing, and tweaking.so basically any income from interest and rents — Pfhorrest
What basically universal income does is that the threshold to take a job increases. This is obvious even more clear with unemployment benefits. In a welfare state like mine one if paid unemployment benefits to perpetuity (as long as one lives) with the social welfare net paying your rent for a small apartment in the capital or a larger house in the countryside. What really can happen is that it alienates some people not to work, but at least they won't be beggars on the streets and homeless (which is a huge advantage, actually). The logic is quite reasonable: if you go to work at McDonalds, basically you are going to be left with a similar amount of money, but you have far less spare time to uhh.... discuss universal basic income in PF. — ssu
The positive attitude towards welfare programs started early in the Nordic countries. I guess here it started with a huge land reform which was put actually through by the winners of the civil war, the whites, in 1918. That was the first sign that the classic liberalism (libertarianism) never was so close to heart even for the right-wing in Finland. The Nordic idea (typically referred to Sweden) of the Folkhemmet (the people's home) emerged at the start of the 20th Century and gained popularity especially in the 1920's.Did Finland install its generous social safety early on? My guess is that it did. — Bitter Crank
It is quite true. Long term unemployment creates social exclusion.This effect is always mentioned and I have never ever seen research into it proving it. — Benkei
(from publication POVERTY AND SOCIAL EXCLUSION IN FINLANDFrom the point of view of poverty, curbing long-term unemployment is the key. The potential for finding jobs for the long-term unemployed is non-existent. The number of long-term unemployed who have had to fall back on labour market assistance after the maximum period of daily unemployment allowance is already over 100,000. Some of them have no working history because there was no such requirement in the previous basic daily allowance system. According to Santamäki-Vuori, the rise of long-term unemployment is introducing 'inherited poverty' into Finland. Deprivation, gloom and lack of prospects are transmitted to the children of the long-term unemployed and a poor class could be making a comeback into Finnish society. Lack of prospects is an integral element in poverty. A new phenomenon which has emerged side by side with traditional rural poverty is urban poverty, a phenomenon which might well propagate a variety of 'poverty sub-cultures' in Finland, as it has elsewhere.
In the end, the trial only involved people (2000 residents) who were already receiving Finland's standard conditional benefits — things like unemployment benefits, housing allowances, social assistance, and illness compensation that are afforded to unemployed residents by law.
A control group of unemployed people (around 5,000 residents) continued to receive these services. The treatment group, meanwhile, received a portion (but not all) of the same conditional benefits they had been getting before, in addition to small basic-income payments of 560 euros ($640) per month.
In 2017, that resulted in the control group receiving 7,300 euros ($8,000) in unemployment benefits and 1,300 euros ($1,400) in social assistance. The treatment group, meanwhile, only received 5,800 euros ($6,400) in unemployment benefits and 940 euros ($1,000) in social assistance that year.
One participant, Sini Marttinen, told the New York Times that her income only rose by 50 euros ($55) per month during the experiment.
"They were interested in the question that basically boiled down to: If you replaced conditional unemployment benefits with unconditional unemployment benefits, do you get increased employment?" Stynes said. By the end of the experiment, the basic-income recipients were no more likely to get a job than those in the control group.
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