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RE: The Cost of Universal Basic Income is the Net Transfer Amount, Not the Gross Price Tag

Thanks for laying this out.

I think UBI is an interesting concept. Its fascinating to ask oneself what they would do if they encountered a panhandler and knew they had received a check that month.

My question is around use cases. I've heard two, and I would like to know people's opinions in terms of whether or not UBI would be best to serve one, or both.

Use Case 1: UBI can help tackle poverty
Use Case 2: UBI can help tackle future joblessness brought on by automation

Obviously, the required payouts for one versus the other would be vastly different, as would the societal/economic implications.

Thoughts? I am a curious guy looking to learn all he can...THANKS!

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The use cases are identical. The issue that seems to block people is thinking of basic income as a replacement for all income. It's not, although it can be if people choose that route. It's primarily an income floor and so it operates as more of a springboard than a traditional safety net where the full universality and lack of conditions better enables people to transition into and out of earned income arrangements.

It's also not something that should exist in a vacuum as the only policy in existence, or in my opinion stay at a poverty level amount forever. I think as automation advances, we should focus on all working fewer hours in order to better share the available work. If there's half as much paid work for humans to do, then we could all work half as much and be just as employed. That also means the entire population could be earning income in addition to their basic income if say 20 hours per week became the norm instead of 40 hours.

In regards to a rising level, I think UBI should be linked to productivity. As we all accomplish more with less thanks to technology, and especially considering the fact that we've as taxpayers paid for the technology replacing us, and trained the algorithms learning to duplicate our work, the amount should increase over time at a higher rate than just inflation.

Here's an article I've written along these lines to get deeper into that.

Thanks for this reply...I'm almost embarrassed to admit it, but I've always seen professional-level employment as sort of a zero-sum thing...one person has a 40-hour job, and one doesn't.

Creates a fun thought exercise. Let's say the average person has UBI in addition to a 20 hour/week job, and with those 2 income streams they have enough to live a perfectly acceptable life.

Would they accept those conditions, or would they look for a second 20-hour/week job?

As an American who has spent time living abroad, one key difference I've found is our general unwillingness to accept complacency...it pushes some of us to greatness, and others of us to an early grave!