Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Government The Almighty Buck

Germany Begins Universal Basic Income Trial With People Getting $1,400 a Month For 3 Years (businessinsider.com) 380

Starting this week, 120 Germans will receive a form of universal basic income every month for three years. Business Insider reports: Germany is about to become the latest country to trial a universal basic income, starting a three-year study of how it affects the economy and recipients' well-being. As part of the study, 120 people will receive 1,200 euros, or about $1,430, each month for three years -- an amount just above Germany's poverty line -- and researchers will compare their experiences with another group of 1,380 people who will not receive the payments.

The study, conducted by the German Institute for Economic Research, has been funded by 140,000 private donations. All participants will be asked to complete questionnaires about their lives, work, and emotional state to see whether a basic income has had a significant impact. A pro-basic-income lobbying group called Mein Grundeinkommen is funding the experiment. The group has used donations from its supporters to fund monthly 1,000-euro payments for 668 people since 2014.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Germany Begins Universal Basic Income Trial With People Getting $1,400 a Month For 3 Years

Comments Filter:
  • Experimental setup (Score:4, Insightful)

    by poity ( 465672 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @07:03PM (#60420599)

    I would think that the only way to get honest results is to pick people randomly from the general population, give them money without announcing the experiment, and track them via nonvoluntary methods, ie no surveys just observation. Any publicly announced experiment with a voluntary setup would get tainted by the Hawthorne Effect [wikipedia.org]

  • by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @07:09PM (#60420619)
    how the hell do they expect to measure the effect on the economy with only 120 people in the study? yet another half arsed study that will produce useless data.
    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      I question the information they will gain by tracking 1,380 people that get no benefit for three years.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      They aren't measuring the effect on the economy, they are measuring the effect on people.

      It's a well designed study that focuses on specific things, not a massive economic experiment that will produce largely useless results due to the pandemic and ever changing economic landscape.

  • That the most it will go before they run outta $ to pay for the program and have to shut it down. Its about how long other places have run it before realizing its unsustainable.
  • That's cool (Score:5, Interesting)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @07:12PM (#60420633) Journal
    It's their money, so I am happy to see people pursue any kind of knowledge with their money rather than mine. I'm not going to complain about this.

    So what are they hoping to learn from this? One of the ideas behind UBI is that when people aren't burdened by the heavy weight of work, they are more willing to go out and improve themselves. That is, it's hard to take welding classes if you are already working 8 hours and then need to cook, and btw your car broke down, etc, etc. So if people have that burden lifted, will they improve themselves? Knowing the answer to that will help design the details of future UBI programs, so these kinds of studies are important.

    What can't they learn from this? There are a lot of things they can't learn, but someone who only gets UBI for 3 years is in a different situation than someone who is guaranteed it for the rest of their lives. If you know that your income will run out in 3 years, you have a motivation to prepare for that time.
    • What can't they learn from this? There are a lot of things they can't learn, but someone who only gets UBI for 3 years is in a different situation than someone who is guaranteed it for the rest of their lives. If you know that your income will run out in 3 years, you have a motivation to prepare for that time.

      Even 10 years would give much better data than three. 10 years is long enough that you can plan to get a degree then get a job after the degree -- or decide to sit on the couch for five years and then get a degree just in time to get a job before the UBI ends. 20 or more years would probably be roughly equivalent to an entire working life in terms of how people would respond for the first half, even three quarters. To find out how people would behave differently with respect to, say, retirement planning, yo

    • by CRC'99 ( 96526 )

      Or, you know - even being able to live without turning to crime....

      When various reports are saying that 30% of Americans won't be able to feed themselves in a months time, what do you think happens to those people?

      The reality is, we're going to find out what happens when a government turns its back on the people during a crisis like this - and I'm not sure it'll be all roses...

  • By this I mean the study probably won't shed any light on the effect of UBI on voting habits. Intuitively, UBI is a drug and the politician that promises more will have an advantage at election time. Or rather, the financially responsible politician will be at a disadvantage if they ever say the government can't afford XX amount so we have to decrease the payments.

    Nothing good can ever come from a free lunch.

    I would be more interested in what the subjects in the study group would do if after a year or two

    • by Ryzilynt ( 3492885 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @07:32PM (#60420705)

      By this I mean the study probably won't shed any light on the effect of UBI on voting habits. Intuitively, UBI is a drug and the politician that promises more will have an advantage at election time. Or rather, the financially responsible politician will be at a disadvantage if they ever say the government can't afford XX amount so we have to decrease the payments.

      Nothing good can ever come from a free lunch.

      I would be more interested in what the subjects in the study group would do if after a year or two of free money they were suddenly cut off.

      Except it's not a "free lunch"

      Look at the wealth distribution .. the top 1% control over half the worlds wealth.

      https://www.cnbc.com/2017/11/1... [cnbc.com].

      Let that burn in , do some critical thinking before you start flipping your fucking fingers. "We" as in most of the worlds population are ALREADY funding this, except it isn't going to feed hungry people , it's going to the bank accounts of 1% of the fucking population.

      They didn't get there because they worked hard , or because they are smart, or any other fucking fantasy you want to imagine. They were sinply born into the right body at the right time.

      Now understand this - YOU will never be one of the 1% no matter what you do , EVER. So stop bucking for them and wake the fuck up.

      • Now understand this - YOU will never be one of the 1% no matter what you do

        If you're a programmer in a big city with a decent salary, chances are you're already in the world top 1%. Literally one out of every hundred people you see is in the top 1%, and many more if you live in a developed country like the US.

        So stop acting as though you weren't privileged.

        • by Ryzilynt ( 3492885 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @08:25PM (#60420861)

          Now understand this - YOU will never be one of the 1% no matter what you do

          If you're a programmer in a big city with a decent salary, chances are you're already in the world top 1%. Literally one out of every hundred people you see is in the top 1%, and many more if you live in a developed country like the US.

          So stop acting as though you weren't privileged.

          Except for the fact that you are wrong. Not every 100 people are created equal in terms of the worlds top 1%. If you make 1 or 2 or 3 hundred thousand dollars a year you are not in the worlds top 1%. if you make $400,000 a year you are NOT in the worlds top 1%. Read.

          • A net worth of just under $900K puts you in the top 1% of wealth in the world. That covers about 6% of Americans. To be in the top 10%, you need about $94K in net worth. That's about 50% of American households. If you have a net worth of $4,300 or more, you're in the top half of the world, or >80% of Americans.

            • A net worth of just under $900K puts you in the top 1% of wealth in the world. That covers about 6% of Americans. To be in the top 10%, you need about $94K in net worth. That's about 50% of American households. If you have a net worth of $4,300 or more, you're in the top half of the world, or >80% of Americans.

              What value does humanity hold?

          • If you make 1 or 2 or 3 hundred thousand dollars a year you are not in the worlds top 1%. if you make $400,000 a year you are NOT in the worlds top 1%.

            Like, I can't tell if you're lying, or you actually believe that and you're just wrong.

            Either way stop talking and start reading.

            • If you make 1 or 2 or 3 hundred thousand dollars a year you are not in the worlds top 1%. if you make $400,000 a year you are NOT in the worlds top 1%.

              Like, I can't tell if you're lying, or you actually believe that and you're just wrong.

              Either way stop talking and start reading.

              https://www.investopedia.com/a... [investopedia.com].

              read

              • The income required to be in the top 1% varies greatly based on what country you live in.

                They're lying with statistics. You were tricked because you didn't turn your brain on.

          • "So stop acting as though you weren't privileged."

            I should add that i am fully (mostly?) aware of how privileged I am. I will not pretend that by some miraculous feat ( or a whole bunch of hard work and ingenuity) i have climbed my way to near the top half of billions of people. Yeah I consider myself smart and hard working , so do many others

  • The results have not been thrilling. Not total chaos either, but a massive rollout would bring in inflationary effects that are almost entirely absent from these small scale tests. As far as I know, the two primary knocks against the idea are inflation and encouraging laizness.

    Welfare is a close proxy for a lot of how UBI is likely to play out. So, interpret that as you will.

    • people fear trying a REAL test.

      It's NOT universal so you can't realistically know how it would work unless you stick them all on an island for 3 years.

      It's LIMITED TIME for only 3 years which might be ok for some people but most Germans can plan ahead beyond 3 years. They will not act normally when they know it's just a 3 year experiment.

      Finally, they know it's a study and they are lab rats.

      The only real way is to just jump into it and have the whole nation permanently do it. If it turns out a massive failu

      • he doesn't mean inflation to fund UBI through printing money, UBI knockon effect IS INFLATION. when people have more money to spend certain items or services rise in cost as you need to pay people more money to do those things and costs of production rise. e.g. a litre of milk might go from $2 -$2.50 as the feed and labour involved become more expensive.
  • by misnohmer ( 1636461 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @07:17PM (#60420659)

    How is it that everyone out there seems to be focusing on studying the benefits of UBI, rather than how to pay for it? Are there people out there claiming UBI will harm the people receiving it? The real problems are:
    * at what level the UBI should be provided (the definition of "poor" is constantly evolving)
    * how to pay for it
    I think we can stipulate that UBI will benefit the recipients and society, so how about focusing on the hard problem of how to sustainably pay for it?

    • "I think we can stipulate that UBI will benefit the recipients and society"

      We? But you do have a point about how to pay being the big problem?
    • how to sustainably pay for it?

      If you do the math (involving a recurrence relation) you will find that though taxes, every penny of welfare returns to the government after enough time. If I recall, about 99.95% returns to the government after the money changes hands 100 or so times (assuming USA-NV level taxes). The real issue is: How do we convince plumbers and burger flippers to go to work when they are paid for existing?

      • by elohssa ( 317266 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @08:00PM (#60420785)

        Unlike most welfare programs, they can make more money if they still go to work. Most people want more money. Most people will still go to work.

        Some people may go to school, or stay home to raise the kids. I'm fine with that, it's still good for society and worth paying for.

        The kind of person who is able to work, but instead chooses to live on only 12 grand a year is probably a drain on society no mater what. I'd bet we're all better off paying 'em to stay home. Hospitalization and incarceration cost a whole lot more.

        • Another alternative is that instead of chasing a higher paying job/career they don't really like/enjoy doing (but they do because of the pay rate involved) then they can take a lower paying job that pays more in satisfaction, etc.

      • The real issue is: How do we convince plumbers and burger flippers to go to work when they are paid for existing?

        The primary answer to this question is: By not paying them very much just for existing. Any job income directly increases net income, so even a small amount of effort improves one's lifestyle.

        There are some people are willing to accept bare subsistence (well, they'll complain about it), and UBI may remove their incentive to work entirely. It's questionable how much those people really contribute to the economy anyway, however.

    • How is it that everyone out there seems to be focusing on studying the benefits of UBI, rather than how to pay for it? Are there people out there claiming UBI will harm the people receiving it?

      Take 30% of the income from everyone, divide the total equally among the citizens. Based on the GDP, that will give everyone ~$20k USD in the US, although richer people will pay more into it.

  • How to do UBI test (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cygnusvis ( 6168614 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @07:26PM (#60420685)
    For a UBI test to mean anything, it has to be FOREVER. When people know the money will dry up, they will act very different then when the money is forever.
    • actually it doesn't because humanity as a whole is notoriously bad at long term planning. The last 6 months to a year the average person may start thinking about after UBI but the first 2 to 2.5 years you'll get a pretty accurate representation.
  • by cygnusvis ( 6168614 ) on Wednesday August 19, 2020 @07:33PM (#60420709)
    Lets pretend that UBI can be paid for. I am a firmware developer, and I will go to work even if I dont need the money. Most people though, like plumbers and burger flippers wont. They will turn to drugs, alcohol, and breeding to fend off the depression that comes with no having a purpose and being bored for too long. The hard question with UBI is how do we make plumbers, burger flippers, and truck drivers go to work when they dont need to earn money.
    • by elohssa ( 317266 )

      Do you have a link to a study that suggests this outcome?

      Here's a link to the largest study I could find so far. It looks to suggest no change in employment. IE: People who receive basic income are about as likely to work as people in the control group.

      https://www.theguardian.com/society/2020/may/07/finnish-basic-income-pilot-improved-wellbeing-study-finds-coronavirus

      • bogus study, paid about half UBI level, so proves nothing

        • by elohssa ( 317266 )

          True, 1/2 poverty level and only 2K people is far from proof. I only said the Finland study suggested a negligible impact on employment.

          No study I know of has proven UBI will or will not work. That's why it needs more study. One giant study would be prohibitively expensive, so we'll get a few smaller ones and draw our conclusions from that.

    • I'm just curious why you look down on plumbers? Average around here is $60K which is way more than burger flipping, and those that run business with assistants make six figures. My plumber friend makes more than I do, $200K.

      • Yeah, it's sort of pissing me off when he puts skilled craftsmen like plumbers in the realm of burger flipping. Maybe it's because I come from a blue-collar background. I'll be charitable and just put it to ignorance.

        My parents owned a light construction/manufacturing business. And as a very small business, my dad did a lot of grunt work himself. He was digging in a ditch with some of his workers, and he saw some young guys in business suits walking by who apparently had a rather snooty attitude, while

    • I think you have a rather warped view of what a plumber does or earns if you are lumping them in with Burger flippers. I work in IT on around $250k a year, Couple of mates working as plumbers are on the same if not more. admittedly it isn't an easy job and I wouldn't want to do it, but no way in hell would I give up a plumbers income to go onto subsistence living. In fact I would happily take up plumbing or electrician as a fall back should the bottom ever drop out of my IT work.
    • I'm not sure why people always act as if paying for a UBI would require some kind of advanced physics math or fairy dust to work out. You simply implement a progressive income tax, on all income regardless of source. The base line for the tax is whatever the annual UBI is. The tax then scales up as income increases. At some point you end up paying just as much back in taxes as you get from the UBI. At income levels above that you pay in more than you get back as UBI. UBI would in theory be replacing most ot

  • I mean, if you are trying to show that it can't be done on a large scale, well then kudos, but ...
  • I wish them good luck. We really need to run some experiments to see UBI in actual life.

    That being said, the article was light on details. They want to see whether there would be an impact on their "life", "work", or "emotional state". However their main method seems to be "questionnaires" but that might be less than ideal.

    The "control" group will be biased. They know the other group is receiving compensation for those surveys (a big one at that), and if they really include people from all economic groups,

  • yet another UBI "trial" that has none of the things that people argue would make UBI helpful

    it's good to know that the United States isn't the only country keeping poor people down with obvious propaganda

  • by indytx ( 825419 ) on Thursday August 20, 2020 @06:13AM (#60421905)

    I am always amazed at how many comments appear each time a story like this is posted anywhere which are made by seemingly rational people who then argue about running any of these economic experiments before they can get started. What ever happened to the scientific method? These commenters want to argue AGAINST experiments because of what they believe. Supply-side economics is not the most efficient way to deliver prosperity to an economy, but it is a very efficient way to deliver winners and losers. The whole point of supply side economics is to create losers.

    Rather than arguing about a small, three-year experiment which has yet to get off the ground, we can all observe the massive experiment that happened three years ago. In the U.S.A., a massive $1T+ tax cut and corporate giveaway was passed. The tax cuts did not raise income levels. The benefits did not "trickle down." Companies did not invest in their workers or increase R&D. That money all went to the companies' owners. There were even layoffs at some companies whose CEOs had campaigned for the cuts. Does anyone talk about the failure of the tax cuts? No!

    The endless scandals at the White House, the sheer incompetence and lying, have sucked up all of the oxygen and prevented a real discussion about supply-side economics. With every new outrage, rational, detached debate becomes more unlikely. An argument can be made that Trump's outrageous behavior is a feature of his presidency and not just a failure of the man. Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain . . .

    We are now to the point that the opposition to wanting to help elevate poor people and protect people when they are down through no fault of their own is a faith in and of itself.

  • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Thursday August 20, 2020 @07:04AM (#60421985)
    Americans are among the unhappiest first worlders on the earth. None of you are qualified to enter this conversation. What you think about life is only what the wealthy have told you so that they can keep their "rewards".
  • This is not an UBI trial. UBI will trigger enormous behavioral changes, but only if one can trust it to last and to be reliable for the foreseeable future. Otherwise, it's just a simple alternative for social benefits that has nothing to do with UBI and everybody will nicely stay put in their low-value low-paying but relatively secure job and contribute the absolute minimum to the economy because any extra value will never reach them. Just like it is now.

    Such trust can only arise if UBI were introduced slowly.

    Note that I have great confidence that Universal Basic Income can be a huge success, not only for human wellbeing but especially for the economy. However, it will only work with sound financing in the style of a VASTLY expanded Alaska Permanent Fund or Government Pension Fund of Norway. I also believe it to be inevitable; it's either some kind of UBI or something alike a feudal system will take over. We can already slowly see that approaching now with the ever increasing income disparity. There's not much time left.

  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Thursday August 20, 2020 @10:15AM (#60422619)

    I've seen too many such experiments "fail" because of the study designers failing to get key details right, looking more like deliberate denigration than anything else.

    (Hint: Adding libertarian ideas is a recipe for disaster. Unless your target society is one of simulated ideal lizards. ;)

  • by Livius ( 318358 ) on Thursday August 20, 2020 @11:34AM (#60422845)

    This isn't a trial of UBI for many reasons already cited. But the main problem is it's unnecessary. There are people who effectively already have a UBI - people with trust funds or lotteries that gave the winners annuities. Just track those people down and interview them.

Business is a good game -- lots of competition and minimum of rules. You keep score with money. -- Nolan Bushnell, founder of Atari

Working...