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Government

More Small Tests Are Happening For Universal Basic Incomes (yahoo.com) 285

DevNull127 writes: A video report from NBC News profiles "Springboard to Opportunities," an advocacy group for affordable housing residents that's now also testing $1,000-a-month payments (privately-funded) for 20 women in Mississsippi chosen at random. One senior-living aid making $10.31 an hour says the grants represent "a little freedom". She's using the money to pay down debt — and to visit the father in Pennsylvania who she hasn't seen in 20 years.

Meanwhile, CBS MoneyWatch checked in on one of the 14 people picked to receive $1,000 a month for an entire year in the "Freedom Dividend Pilot Program" of U.S. presidential candidate Andrew Yang. "Sure, there's going to be outliers that take advantage of any situation," says Chad Dzizek. "But most people are just trying to get by. Having extra money in hand would only help move that process along. And I don't see myself slacking off anymore. If anything, I'm going to be more aggressive in tackling my goals because it's that much more available."

That article adds that Yang, a former tech entrepreneur, "sees this as a way to reduce poverty and income inequality, especially as computers increasingly replace people in the workplace." Although the program has already run into at least one hitch.

Following the program's announcement in September, the former chairman of the Federal Elections Commission told CBS News that the program appears to violate "personal use" campaign finance laws since the funds come from Yang's campaign and not his own pocket. Others, however, have argued that the program could be classified as an advertisement for the campaign. The Yang campaign declined to comment.

Business Insider also has an update on the Basic Income plan of Michael Tubbs, the 28-year-old mayor of Stockton, California, where 125 people making less than $46,000 a year are now being given $500 a month. "In October, Stockton released the first set of data about how the program was faring. Most participants, initial results showed, were using their stipends to buy groceries and pay their bills.

"Tubbs told Business Insider that these preliminary findings gave him even more confidence that basic income would benefit his city -- and could even serve as a national solution to income inequality... Stockton's basic-income experiment is designed to last for 18 months, so there are still about eight to go. If the pilot is successful, Tubbs said, the city will consider expanding the program."
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More Small Tests Are Happening For Universal Basic Incomes

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  • by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Saturday December 14, 2019 @11:52PM (#59519986)

    Isn't this like estimating the impact of a highway system, by building a small walking trail?

    A 20 person test? A 14-person test? Sounds like hunting for excuses find ways to talk about or slime the idea, rather than a real method of testing. Like the low-cost 'tests' the tobacco industries did to test if smoking was bad for you, testing how confident people felt in tasks after smoking various brands.

    The idea of the plan is to replace lots of other social programs with potentially less overhead, offering a floor that you can't fall below, without means testing. To rich folks, it means nothing, to some, it means the ability to take risks if they need - to most, it means security to change if they need.

    The bigger questions are more like - what does that mean, if every landlord decides to shift charges to basically eat that system for lunch? To me, that means you've got to regulate rents to some extent too, if you want to make it work - but that and a thousand other aspects don't get any kind of test without going large scale.

    If you want to test giving folks $1,000 a month, there's bunches of low-value annuities out there folks have gotten for lots of reasons. Those results aren't the important bits of how a system would work and society would adapt to deal with expenses, freedom and time.

    Ryan Fenton

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      Isn't this like estimating the impact of a highway system, by building a small walking trail?

      Not entirely. It's more like estimating it by building a stretch of highway between two small towns. People affected are likely to behave much like they would if it were real, but it fails to factor in the impact on taxes for everyone else, so it isn't a complete picture.

      The bigger questions are more like - what does that mean, if every landlord decides to shift charges to basically eat that system for lunch?

      They'll have no customers. Any UBI implementations that might actually have a prayer of working is almost guaranteed to tax back the UBI for anyone making at or above the median income, which means although rent probably will go up becau

      • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @01:10AM (#59520108)

        The bigger questions are more like - what does that mean, if every landlord decides to shift charges to basically eat that system for lunch?

        They'll have no customers. Any UBI implementations that might actually have a prayer of working is almost guaranteed to tax back the UBI for anyone making at or above the median income, which means although rent probably will go up because of people who couldn't afford to rent who now can, it won't go up by anywhere near as much as the actual UBI amount.

        What will actually happen are landlords refusing to rent to UBI dependents - that’s what largely happened here in the UK when the government switched housing benefit from a benefit paid directly to landlords to a benefit paid to the claimant, who was then supposed to pay the landlord.

        It was done so as to “empower” benefit claimants, give them some feeling of worth. What actually happened is private landlords saw a huge rise in people falling behind on rent payments and subsequently a lot more evictions (which are a costly and time consuming process). At the same time, sales of luxury goods went up...

        So now, most private landlords don’t rent to benefits claimants. And the politician who promised to force private landlords to rent to benefit claimants just lost a general election by the worst amount for his party in nearly 100 years.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          It was done so as to “empower” benefit claimants, give them some feeling of worth. What actually happened is private landlords saw a huge rise in people falling behind on rent payments and subsequently a lot more evictions (which are a costly and time consuming process). At the same time, sales of luxury goods went up...

          Which unfortunately points out a fairly significant flaw in the concept of UBI, which is that there is a certain subset of people who are poor because they lack self-discipline a

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by Gavagai80 ( 1275204 )

            Once UBI is in place, it should be very easy to identify and divert the irresponsible. Anyone found being homeless can be automatically recorded by police for immediate diversion from UBI into a managed system where a social worker pays for rent (and maybe some other basic needs like food and heat) on their behalf (attempting to involve the individual in as much of the decision making as is practical, of course). Anyone who isn't homeless yet can be allowed to squander their money unless they volunteer for

            • Are these fabled “they” who are overseeing all of this as you suggest going to pay that late rent or eviction costs to the landlords, or are the landlords going to be the ones to suffer the burden of risk renting to UBI dependents? If the latter, then expect UBI dependents to find it hard to find housing.

            • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @09:25AM (#59520774) Homepage

              Anyone found being homeless can be automatically recorded by police for immediate diversion from UBI into a managed system where a social worker pays for rent

              We already have that system in Norway, rent itself is rarely the problem or at least not the only problem. It's also destruction of property, noise, stench, littering, theft, threats, drug dealing, drug use, prostitution and so on. Even with the relatively few landlords I know I've heard several horror stories of tenants that have left places stripped and trashed or forced them to go through an eviction process because they made life unbearable for the other tenants, the landlord or neighbors. If all they had to do was set up a rent deposit the same day the UBI came and they failed to do that it's probably not your only problem.

          • My uncle was lived on the street because he didn't want to be responsible. He also liked his habits. When he was poor that limited his fun money, within two weeks of qualifying for social security disability he had OD'd because he could suddenly afford his habits.

      • It's more like estimating it by building a stretch of highway between two small towns.

        Actually, it is more like a contractor who happens to be the mayor's brother-in-law building a test road and then assuring everyone it was effective, and it is okay to give him the money for the full system.

        The people running these tests are advocates pushing an agenda, not unbiased investigators seeking the truth.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

      These small scale tests are completely pointless, because they overlook the fact that if you give everyone the same amount of money, you've simply caused inflation.

      Give 10 people a million dollars and you've created 10 new millionaires. Give everyone a million dollars, and you've collapsed your currency. Don't know why some people fail to grasp this concept if you make the numbers smaller.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      The bigger questions are more like - what does that mean, if every landlord decides to shift charges to basically eat that system for lunch? To me, that means you've got to regulate rents to some extent too

      You can't squeeze people for money they don't have, if you're raising rent beyond what people on UBI can afford then the first effect would be displacement to cheaper housing. Even if every person has money doesn't mean every unit will get rented, it's not until there's a shortage of landlords willing to rent out at those prices you have a problem. Then you'd see if new landlords would come into the market because it's profitable. If neither it true then it's probably actually not enough money to be worth p

  • How many people would see a letter in their mail "Hi, you have randomly selected to receive $1000 per month" and toss it in the trash along with the rest of the Pre approved credit card offers etc.

  • Inevitability. (Score:5, Informative)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @12:01AM (#59520004)

    Governments providing the most basic needs of people has been an inevitable outcome. It's not a question of if but merely when and how. Automation is reducing the cost of providing for everyone's necessities while the avarice of the ultra-rich is once again causing unrest. I don't claim it will happen anytime soon (i.e. this century), only that it will happen eventually.

    • If you rely on the government to take care of you, the government has all power over you. If you step out of line in the slightest way, they can revoke their support. We should be raising and training people to be self sufficient and be giving them the knowledge they need to grow up and take care of themselves and a family. Raising a generation of kids that require the government to take care of their basic needs is an incredibly scary thing.

      • Re:Inevitability. (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @01:22AM (#59520136)

        You write as if that couldn't happen already. Do you really think it's so hard for them to freeze all your electronic assets and leave you with no recourse because you don't use cash for everything?

        • You need court orders to take something away from someone. The threshold is much more lenient for whether you give to someone or not. Imagine a social credit score, like China has. Uh oh, you haven't said enough good things about the government this month. Looks like you're only going to get half of your allotment of government support. You said bad things about the president? No money at all for you. If you want to be in this program, you have to install government approved spyware on your computer

        • When you suck from the government's teet, you have to live by their rules, and those rules can change at any time.

          • Everyone black already has to live by the government's rules. At any time the police can march into their home, shoot them dead and then go home and have dinner. You don't even have to break the rules. Unless being black is against the unwritten rules.

      • How exactly do you propose to achieve this self-sufficiency? It's hardly practical for everyone to own their own plot of land and farm it in the modern era. That's why we have the concept of employment - few people can realistically be self-sufficient, but by trading their time for money and that money for goods, they have a means to acquire the things they need. It works to an extend, but it's still creating dependencies, and it's a way of life that may be threatened by changing technological and economic

      • The government has atomic weapons with a president who has the will to use them against his fellow countrymen. The government already has all the power. Your still stuck in the 18th century where owning a gun actually helped protect you from the government.

    • > Governments providing the most basic needs of people has been an inevitable outcome.

      Just as the communist revolution as the workers become educated to the ideals of Communism is inevitable. I'm afraid that we've seen enthusiasm for "inevitable outcomes" lead to tremendous social disasters before, so please, excuse our skepticism about this attempt to redistribute wealth equitably among those who do not or cannot compete successfully for that wealth. It may e a reasonable approach in an increasingly lar

    • by ABEND ( 15913 )

      Governments providing the most basic needs of people has been an inevitable outcome. It's not a question of if but merely when and how. Automation is reducing the cost of providing for everyone's necessities while the avarice of the ultra-rich is once again causing unrest. I don't claim it will happen anytime soon (i.e. this century), only that it will happen eventually.

      Institutionalized "charity" from a theoretically bottomless pit: how do we prevent "Idiocracy" from ensuing from this? That is, assuming we do not want our civilization to descend into "Idiocracy."

  • by Rip!ey ( 599235 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @12:04AM (#59520014)
    I'm still scratching my head as to how you can test a Universal Basic Income without it being universal. A Selective Basic Income test cannot hope to give comparative data. Besides, any country with a progressive tax system and welfare already does that.
    • Means testing isn't going to be the only problem. There's an emotional element to consider as well: A lot of people are already angry knowing that part of their tax money is going to 'undeserving' people, and UBI would make it a lot worse. Politicians will win elections easily by promising to restrict the UBI so it doesn't go to whichever group of society is the pariah of the year. Can you imagine a platform of "No more spending YOUR money on sex offenders" not winning an election?

  • Tell me (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @12:16AM (#59520032)

    If you do this on a large scale where does the money come from? Flat out, whose pocket does this come out of?

    • If you do this on a large scale where does the money come from?

      Alaska pays for it by selling oil. Another option is to tax everyone 30%, then divide it among everyone equally.

      • So 30% on top of the other 30% I currently pay?

        • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

          by aussie_a ( 778472 )

          And the greed comes out. "I have mine so why should I give a shit if poor people die and starve. They're just too lazy. They deserve to die."

          • Now the Marxist comes out: Lie about people's motives instead of providing convincing argument.
            • except that maybe it's too blunt. But what he's getting at is called prosperity gospel [youtube.com]. It often comes with the tinge of religion but it doesn't have to. [npr.org]

              And as I pointed out elsewhere on this thread, unless you're willing to be far, far more brutal than Stalin and Mao ever were then it's cheaper to take care of the lower class. The only question is what ratio of brutality to cost will you tolerate.

              Right now 500,000 go into medical bankruptcy every year and 35,000 die of treatable illness (down from
    • You just print the money. It is then a tax on wealth, in effect...

      • Bonus points for forcing a large amount of the worlds markets to trade in dollars, then you siphon their wealth through the same dilution.
    • Here in Finland, we already have a heavy system of unemployment benefits, student financial aid and so on. Basic income is intended to replace these, in turn _saving_ the money that was spent on bureaucracy. On the other hand, working people will also get their basic income, but tax rates will be increased so that typical middle-class people will see no change in their net income.

      Given such numbers, the only opposition to BI is mostly ideological, i.e. you shouldn't give people free money. But Finland (N

      • That only works if you are willing to just let the people who don't manage their UBI wisely die in the streets. Otherwise you will still need all of the other assistance bureaucracies and will just be burning money on both.

    • Generally a very heavy but progressive taxation scheme. If it's run as envisioned (big if), it'll be heavily taxing the upper income brackets to support the poor. After all, someone who is earning a million dollars a year isn't going to be driven into poverty if they lose half of it, but a thousand people being paid five hundred dollars a month might very well be able to keep out of poverty with the money.

    • Getting all corporations to actually pay a fair share of taxes is a good start.
  • by Hrrrg ( 565259 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @12:18AM (#59520036)

    One big problem i see with all of these tests is that they are temporary. The people receiving the money know they're only going to be getting it for a year and, therefore, these tests don't reflect how people would live and act if they knew they would be receiving this money for a lifetime. However, there is already at least one such project in existence (and probably a lot more that I don't know about) - the Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation. This program has been providing income for Alaskan residents since 1982. However, it is much less than in this test (~$300-$2000 per year) and Alaskan residents are already receiving it so you can't go back and study how people's lives change when they first started receiving it.

    Now, aside from how the studies are conducted, the two biggest issues I have with UBI (universal basic income):

    - currently unemployment in the US is very low, so it is unclear if this "great job loss due to computers replacing people in the workplace" will ever materialize. People have been wringing their hands about this very issue for at least a hundred years. Is this time different? Maybe, maybe not... I'll believe it when i see it.
    - it is extremely expensive. Let's say you give 200 million people n the US each $20,000 per year. You're talking about $4 trillion dollars of goods and services that someone has to generate to fund this program...

    For the foreseeable future, in my opinion, UBI just seems the me to be a retelling of the utopian dream...

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      - it is extremely expensive. Let's say you give 200 million people n the US each $20,000 per year. You're talking about $4 trillion dollars of goods and services that someone has to generate to fund this program...

      Nobody in their right minds would give that much money to almost two-thirds of the U.S. population. A more plausible number would be the bottom 10% or 15%, i.e. 33 to 49 million people. Let's call it an even 50 million to make the math easy. Now you're at only a trillion dollars. And you'd eli

      • No, they would give money to everyone. And adjust the tax rates accordingly.

        For example, everyone gets $15k per year from the government, and pays a 40% tax on all their income. If your income is zero, you get $15k from the government. If your income is $37.5k, you break even (15k taxes vs 15k UBI). If your income is $100k, you pay the government a net of $25k (40k taxes minus 15k UBI). If you're super rich, your effective tax rate approaches 40% (the 15k you get is insignificant).

        So the effective tax rates

      • by Corbets ( 169101 )

        Nobody in their right minds would give that much money to almost two-thirds of the U.S. population. A more plausible number would be the bottom 10% or 15%, i.e. 33 to 49 million people.

        I don’t think you understand the core concept of a UBI.

    • by Tom ( 822 )

      - it is extremely expensive. Let's say you give 200 million people n the US each $20,000 per year. You're talking about $4 trillion dollars of goods and services that someone has to generate to fund this program...

      UBI is meant to replace other transfers and social programs, so you have to subtract that. That's about a trillion dollars right there, probably more if you count in indirect transfers (housing support, etc.) from other federal budget positions. And probably a LOT more if you count in state budgets.

      Second, the vast majority of UBI would go to low and middle income households, simply because they are the majority by numbers. They are proven to spend almost every $ that comes in, so that UBI dollars are turne

  • it Is not universal if only some people are getting it. Not a valid test.

  • The acquisition of wealth is no longer the driving force in our lives. We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity.
  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @02:09AM (#59520202)
    To be a test of a UBI, the $1000/mo or whatever you're giving to each person in the test, has to come entirely from the people in the test. Not from people outside the test.
  • Get all the income you want.

    Bunch of lazy entitled socialists.

  • A true "universal basic income" as I understand it means everyone gets given an amount of money that is enough to live off but not enough to live comfortably off (i.e. low enough that few, if any will actually not want work on top of it). Then you set a minumum wage such that when combined with the UBI payment, people have a fairly decent income to live off (creating an incentive for everyone to seek work)

    All these schemes out there are nothing like a "universal basic income".

    • Actually with UBI you don't need minimum wage. Employers could get away with paying people something far below the current minimum wage. Let's say something really silly like $9 an hour and if someone is willing to work an extra 6 hours a week (or even 40 hours a week) to supplement their UBI then that's a win/win. If someone isn't willing to work for such a low amount of money, then the employer has to increase the amount they're offering.

  • Most people are fiscally responsible by nature. The primary issue is whether a person can make ends meet given their income. People who are able to earn enough money to cover their cost of living and be able to afford approximately a 10% recreational budget generally stay out of debt and even often contribute to the system as a net positive.

    When a person is dependent on welfare and/or food stamps, is able to be fired from their jobs for frivolous claims, and can not afford to take a vacation in a structured
  • These small tests are completely pointless as they do not show the effects on the local economy, inflation, services, housing etc etc. People are also aware they are only temporary so they know they will have to go back to normal when it is done. Not sure how to successfully test this, but these little tests certainly aint it.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @10:19AM (#59520926)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      Capitalism, even with its flaws, is the only real-world solution to this problem that seems to work within the flaws and limits of human existence. If we eliminate crony-capitalism and rent-seeking - it's a pretty equitable system. You get what you earn, and what you earn is yours to keep.

      Every capitalistic society in the world has taxes so no, everything you earn is not your to keep.

      "UBI, Socialism, Communism all suffer from the same problem - someone or a group of someones have to decide who gets what. We're all equal - but some of us are more equal than others...."

      The "U" in UBI stands for "Universal" by the way. We also live in a Democracy so in essence it would be the people deciding via elected representatives.

      "UBI is doomed to fail for one inherent economic principle - the cost curve of supply and demand. When everyone has $1000 a month more this has the same effect as devaluing the currency. It's exactly the same as printing money. Inflation and market mechanisms will simply make EVERYTHING $1000 more expensive."

      You really need to take an economics class. While inflation is a worry when the money supply is increased there have been quite a few economic booms around the world (which significantly increased money supply) where inflation stayed modest. By your thinking, a c

  • by Oligonicella ( 659917 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @10:25AM (#59520940)
    Universal Basic Job program. You want to find out who's just in it for a money grab? Guarantee them work instead of just money.
  • by BobC ( 101861 ) on Sunday December 15, 2019 @01:13PM (#59521404)

    Military reserve retirements don't kick in until after 60, and they happen to start around $1000/month. (For those who don't know the details, if you server under 20 years active duty, but then serve long enough in the reserves to bring the total over 20, you will have earned a reserve retirement. In my case, with 6 years active and 15 reserve, mine started at almost exactly $1000/month. What a coincidence...)

    While I've made decent money as an engineer for the past 30+ years, I've been slaving and saving for the past decade to make up the 35% of my 401K that evaporated in 2009. When my US Navy Reserve retirement started, it pretty much solved that problem.

    And did far more. I've always planned to work until I became unemployable (I *love* my work), and I always assumed it would be as an engineer. But this extra income makes another path possible: I've always wanted to become a high school STEM teacher, to try to help make new engineers instead of being an old engineer. But there was no way I could afford the 50% pay cut.

    Now I can. Teacher openings for Fall 2020 will be posted in the Spring, and I'm scrambling to get all my prerequisites finished by then.

    That's one example of the kind of life-change $1000/month can enable: Helping get career professionals into the classroom.

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