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Government

Finland's Basic Income Experiment Shows Recipients Are Happier and More Secure (yahoo.com) 439

An anonymous reader quotes Bloomberg: Unemployed people derive significant psychological benefits from receiving a fixed amount of financial support from the state, according to a landmark experiment into basic income in Finland that highlights the disadvantages of the country's existing means-tested system.

Initial results of the two-year study had already shown that its 2,000 participants were no more and no less likely to work than their counterparts receiving traditional unemployment benefit. Thursday's set of additional results from the social insurance institution Kela showed that those getting a basic income described their financial situation more positively than respondents in the control group. They also experienced less stress and fewer financial worries than the control group, Kela said in a statement... They had more trust in other people and social institutions, and showed more faith in their ability to have influence over their own lives, in their personal finances and in their prospects of finding employment

Finland is the first country in the world to test universal basic incomes at national level.
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Finland's Basic Income Experiment Shows Recipients Are Happier and More Secure

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  • Study proves... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    financial security makes people feel financially secure.

    • Re:Study proves... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ChatHuant ( 801522 ) on Saturday April 06, 2019 @04:58PM (#58395616)

      financial security makes people feel financially secure.

      But the study also shows UBI doesn't make people stop working. This, IMHO, is the most important result of this study because it removes one of the biggest objections to UBI. As an added bonus, if UBI is work neutral but increases happiness and reduces stress, it will also improve general health (hence reducing load on health services) and reduce criminality - with the corresponding savings in social and police work.

      It seems to me the case for UBI is becoming stronger by the day.

      • by Chas ( 5144 )

        Right but if you read the whole paper, it didn't make the people getting it more likely to get a job.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        The biggest objection to UBI is that it makes people dependent on their government for a living. It exploits a well known bug in democracy by giving people an incentive to vote for the party that promises free money from the public treasury. Down this path lies tyranny.
      • Re:Study proves... (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Saturday April 06, 2019 @08:19PM (#58396366) Homepage

        But the study also shows UBI doesn't make people stop working. This, IMHO, is the most important result of this study because it removes one of the biggest objections to UBI.

        Honestly, I think this comparison is a sham until you agree to provide for them for life. I mean I could do things for one or three or five or ten years. But if that'd totally fuck my chances of ever getting back in a job as an old geezer with a ten year gap in his CV, well... I'd not do it. Until you say it's a gravy train all the way in, no need to actually do something I'll consider it a temporary reprieve. You got though the basic messaging, but as data it's junk.

  • 10 Years... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by corezz ( 1603659 ) on Saturday April 06, 2019 @03:40PM (#58395310) Homepage
    It's a fascinating study and i applaud Finland for this experiment. But i wonder if the psychology of these people will change as they get use to this basic income, and then, over time, they take it for granted and even forget it is there. In other words, will they return to a state of depression over time?
    • I wonder if the problem is cultural. Go with me on this... I'm American, work hard, and worry frequently. If I became secure without work, would I quit? My current job, if I didn't like it, certainly, but then I'd be trying to find a different job if that were the case. Some would, some wouldn't. However, our culture here measures money as a success bar, not sure if Finnish culture does the same. And maybe that's the problem... But is it our end that has the problem, or the Finns? I sincerely don't know the
  • by Keruo ( 771880 ) on Saturday April 06, 2019 @03:43PM (#58395318)
    2k participants from a cherry-picked sample set is not a national level test.
  • The only representative experiment would be if they would offer:
    - a living wage,
    - until the end of their lives,
    - for minimum wage workers.

    The amount of people who quit their jobs should tell you if UBI is feasible at all, or not.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    As automation improves and less work is needed, we need to get over this ancient idea that one must work to make a living. Work is necessary for our mental health, but meaningful work - work that we find interesting and engaging - is what makes us happy.

    And it funny how many people have a problem with lower class people not having to work, but a someone who inherited billions and site back and does nothing and collects dividends from their investments in say student loan lenders is A-OK: they still aren't

  • But.... (Score:2, Redundant)

    by Rick Zeman ( 15628 )

    ...how do the taxpayers feel about it?

  • "free" money is fine...until you keep TAKING money away from the people who EARN it, the corporations that EARN it. In the latter, they can LEAVE the country, but most people cannot.
  • Just giving a couple of people some money called UBI instead of a similar amount of money as "unemployment benefit" is not "a test of UBI at the national level". UBI in different incarnations has many implications, and without adding it all together the test doesn't really test UBI...

    • Most UBIs I've seen replace other forms of welfare, with a set amount. Thus, to fully test it paid sick leave, paid maternity leave, disability pensions etc. should go away - not just unemployment benefits/social welfare.
    • If
  • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Saturday April 06, 2019 @05:58PM (#58395830)
    Why are people always so concerned with what 'others' are getting. It doesn't matter to you.
    • That's just how people work. They assess their lives relative to their peers. If you earn $100,000 a year, but all your friends are earning $1,000,000, you are still going to feel like an underachiever. If you work sixty hours a week, and you see someone else who is just as well-off working zero hours, then you are going to see a bastard who doesn't deserve anything.

    • Bottom line that is the interesting question.
      Under real UBI everyone gets UBI. Surprisingly the "working" ones are worried that the non working get UBI and neglect completely that they themselves (and their kids) receive it too.

  • What are the strings attached to "traditional" unemployment benefit in Finland?

  • Participants were no more and NO LESS likely to look for work than those receiving traditional unemployment benefits. So the incentivisation designed into traditional welfare systems has zero effect, but has a high cost to administer. So we should remove it, because it makes no difference and society would be just as productive, plus happier, without it.

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