Instead of treating this as a dupe like we normally would, let's try leaving it up with the request that people discuss the specifics of this experiment, and perhaps what other sorts of experiments could be run and how one might evaluate them—and leave the more generic for-and-against basic income stuff to the other thread.
I think it's hard for these experiments to yield answers to important questions about basic income because of the fact that participants know it is an experiment.
With a 2 year length, people aren't going to adjust their long term plans regarding the expectation of how much they will have to work. The extra cash is just a windfall. Reaction to a long term political commitment will be different - once people trust that the basic income will "always be there."
Similarly, some local landlords and businesses may raise prices to soak up the extra disposable income, but they know that their actions will be scrutinized and publicized. Is 2 years of marginal extra profit worth the loss of good will? Again, I think the answer is different once there is a long term political commitment.
The answer to this last question is important, because it likely leads to the basic income being adjusted for price inflation, and then an inflationary spiral or price controls. To me, this is the central problem with basic income (I think the "motivation to work" issue is a red herring), and I don't see how basic income experiments can shed light on it.
It's still a worthwhile endeavor, though: an experiment doesn't have to answer all possible questions about a subject in order to provide value.
Right now there are some huge basic unknowns about a basic income. For instance, one prediction is that everyone who receives a basic income will drop out of the working population (not a view I'm ascribing to you, to be clear, but not a straw man either--it's something I've seen explicitly stated here on HN and elsewhere). This experiment will give a rough estimate of the sign and magnitude of any disemployment effect: will it cause some people to drop out of the work force? Or everyone? Or will it cause people to join the workforce?
Seeing how people react to basic incomes offered over different time spans is going to be important, but before the shape of that curve can be characterized (in what's ultimately an empirical question) we've got to get at least some basic information. Before Newton could come up with a solid theory about gravitation, he had access to plenty of information; but as far as a basic income goes, right now it's like we don't know whether gravity pushes or pulls.
And your point about inflation is my biggest area of concern about the basic income as well, but focusing on second order price level effects when people are still in dispute about the basic first order effects is putting the cart before the horse.
> This experiment will give a rough estimate of the sign and magnitude of any disemployment effect: will it cause some people to drop out of the work force? Or everyone? Or will it cause people to join the workforce?
I think the parent's comment is mainly asserting that, because of its experimental nature, the experiment will not be able to actually answer that question. If participants do not drastically alter their work behavior like in previous basic income experiments such as MINCOME[1], that would not necessarily predict how people would act if given a promise of indefinite basic income.
Yes, exactly. Instead of "Economic Perturbations Caused By Basic Income," the experiment will study "Economic Perturbations Caused By Mass Local Windfalls." In my mind, the psychological, sociological and economic responses are very different, and the main result of the experiment will be that supporters and opponents will use different sets of assumptions to map the results to a genuine Basic Income scenario, yielding much heat and little light.
By that standard, there's no possible experiment that would give any valuable information at all, short of doing a full implementation. And even a full implementation of a basic income wouldn't actually give any information on the results of a "true" basic income, because no government can guarantee the delivery of a basic income indefinitely.
The answer to "what are the effects of a basic income" isn't a single scalar value, but more of a function on the size, population, and duration of the income. What you seem to be asserting is that there's a discontinuity or inflection point in that response function, and this experiment probes the wrong side of it. Which is fair enough. But the results with t=2 gives us some information about t=3, just as the results with t=30 give us at least some idea of the results of the minimum income taken for an infinite duration. It's irresponsible and politically impossible to jump in at t=30, though, so we take baby steps, as they say, and gradually build our base of knowledge.
I suppose your argument might be "well, we need to do a test of t=5 to provide any additional information over previous limited rollouts of a basic income," but I'd argue that previous experiments have been pretty different and existed in a different social context. Other interested economics and policymakers certainly agree, hence Finland running this experiment.
My suggestion is that they are different sets of curves. We're interested in the properties of ice, and they are going to study the properties of tap water that has been put in the refrigerator for half an hour. You and I will have delightful conversations attempting to divine the properties of ice from chilled water, but political activists will declare ice fully characterized and of low viscosity while denouncing the "phase change" theory as a bourgeois boogieman.
Inflationary spirals are no joke. Some degree of caution is in order before deliberately engineering one.
Well, since phase changes are just discontinuities in some thermodynamic variable, I think it's fair to say we're in violent agreement =) I take your point that political activists will misuse any information that comes from this, but they'll misuse anything, even--or especially--the lack of evidence, so I'm not sure that's compelling one choice or another.
I guess I'm wondering if there is something clever we can do to get good information about the key questions - get closer to actually studying "ice" - but perhaps it isn't possible.
Can you briefly run through how this will engineer an inflationary spiral? With no information on the replacement ratio this offers vs existing social security costs, and no indication of how it would be funded in a full implementation I can't see the inevitability.
The basics are that the price of inelastic goods (housing, food) will rise to absorb any disposable portion of basic income, resulting in calls for increased basic income (using "living wage" rhetoric) and a positive feedback loop.
I'm assuming inelastic goods aren't price controlled (creates intolerable shortages) and that basic income does increase disposable income. There are revenue neutral versions of basic income sometimes proposed by conservatives - dismantle social security and distribute the proceeds - but I don't think those versions are what most advocates have in mind when they call for basic income.
>Reaction to a long term political commitment will be different - once people trust that the basic income will "always be there."
That might take a generation or two. I don't think I'd ever allow myself to be in a position of depending on an income stream that itself depended on the whims of legislators and their ability to budget. But I can see someone who grew up never knowing life without a basic income scheme might make the assumption he didn't have to worry about developing and maintaining a career.
A huge benefit to BI in the long term is it allows people to move to cheaper areas. Subsidized housing on the other hand creates lot's of perverse incentives. So, ideally you don't want to adjust for regional cost of living.
Remember, if a store in NYC can't find anyone willing to work at X$/hour they must raise wages and prices. This sends really important signals up and down the economy.
I completely agree that regional adjustments should not be made. A single and uniform monetary amount should be given to all. Otherwise a runaway effect is bound to happen. The places people most want to live (say Hawaii), are more expensive-- if you get to live there AND get more $$ to do it, you will get more people there. Of course then, it gets even more expensive and so on.
> A huge benefit to BI in the long term is it allows people to move to cheaper areas.
And do what? Abide?
One thing that people want to test is whether this would disincentivize work. People choosing to move to where there may well be no jobs sounds as if it is disincentivizing work.
Why not? Not everyone is ambitious. Heck, I doubt more than about 25% of any generation would work if they didn't have to. It's one thing to be pulling down $100+/hr in a rewarding job building the digital future, but if you're working a fry vat you're gonna quit the first time the boss pisses you off.
Unless you want any money beyond a basic standard of living to save up for travel, furniture, drinks, or whatever you want. If there's a job with a better boss, the basic income will help you transition, though.
Sure. I just think there are a whole lot of people who will be perfectly happy spending all day smoking pot and playing CoD. Assuming they eventually get tired of that lifestyle, it's still hard to imagine a 30 year old guy who's done his own thing for fifteen years actually getting up and going to work every day.
There are other possibilities. Maybe they'd still work, but at a lower paying job than they'd be willing to take before. Or perhaps a couple might get by on one income.
An income with no strings attached increases freedom. It's not easy to predict what people will do with it, but if you believe that people can generally make sensible choices, they're likely better off than before.
Who says that there's no useful work to be done in jobless areas? "Jobless" just means there's no work in the area that makes a profit for a private capitalist.
I realize that the thread of the conversation risks becoming a bit meander-ey through multiple authors, but if I follow the line of reasoning...
So far, we seem to be positing that: with some sort of UBI, people can move to more remote or less costly locales and do things that aren't valuable enough to be paid for by evil capitalists, but are valuable enough for them to ... satisfy whatever psychological need they may have to tell themselves that they are useful or worthwhile human beings?
Gosh, IDK, that's a thin stretch. I think that if society needs a UBI as a better (more effective and/or efficient) form of social safety net, we will need to convince people that it's OK if 25% or more of the entire adult population is really doing nothing more with their lives than consuming air/food/water and watching Jerry Springer.
By which I mean - it might still be the best safety net scheme we can come up with to get us to/through an age of automation, but we'd best not try to sell it on the idea that it will lead to a flowering of the a new age of the human spirit or some such. Rather, it's just a social safety net that doesn't disincentivize any particular incremental unit of work at the margin. Policy-wise, that may be good enough to make it worthwhile.
I'd actually typed out an elaborate reply, but HN told me not to post that fast.
The thing about both poor and rural locations is... they don't have the public funding or private companies for a lot of stuff we take for granted in rich urban cores. Stuff like:
* Medical clinics
* Firefighting
* Policing
* Maintenance on buildings
* Broadband internet infrastructure
* Plumbing and sewage infrastructure
* Electrical infrastructure
* Roads and bridges
It's not so much that UBI would end up paying the rural poor to satisfy their psychological need to feel useful, as it would send them money they can spend on pressing material needs that the rest of society have decided don't deserve to be filled if it doesn't benefit "evil capitalists".
I mean, come on, do you really want to object that rural electrification or sewage should starve for lack of funding? Because that's what's already happening with the lack of infrastructure funding in many places. Hell, there's a lot of rich urban areas which have let their basic infrastructure go to crap (looking at you, MBTA!) due to immature political slap-fights.
If UBI means that people have money to spend, which they can pump through their local economy, which generates a little bit more tax revenue to improve crumbling infrastructure and address basic needs, then it's a good idea.
(Sure, we could spend the same state money on direct infrastructure spending, but that would be industrial policy, and thus horrific, evil Communism.)
Some people scrape by making 12.50$ / hour in LA/NYC/etc. BI would enable them to have a higher standard of living making 7.50$/hour somewhere else. This creates upward wage pressure in LA, but some people still leave LA which is good for traffic, and rents etc.
Instead, we subsidize housing in LA this creates a perverse downward wage pressure, distorts the housing market, etc.
Further, when people move to low cost of living there brining this BI income which creates jobs in that area, increases property values etc.
There are also hidden advantages. People get away with more crap in low population areas, because you have lower impact on other people.
There's nothing concrete decided yet for this, only a preliminary study has been started [0]. According to this press release, the next steps in the plan are
1. The preliminary study was launched at the end of October 2015.
2. A review of existing information and experiences [...] will be presented [...] in spring 2016.
3. Following on from this, an analysis [...] will be produced in the second half of 2016.
4. The universal basic income experiment is planned to be launched in 2017.
That's kind of funny, but it's not really that small. I haven't been all over finland (but a bit of it, helsinki & area, turku, lahti, tampere, and up to oulu.) Still haven't seen the Northern Half of the country. New Zealand is definitely smaller, but it feels easier to visit both islands than the northern half of finland.
Yes, speaking of experiments, I don't see why the U.S. doesn't run a large scale experiment to see what the effects of a basic income are. Select a small but not insignificant demographic. Pay them a not-means-tested monthly stipend. Since this is only a test, you should be able to pay for it with a modest tax on paychecks for the rest of the citizens. Then wait a while, and see what happens. We would want to make sure it cuts across a broad swath of society, so that special interests don't wreck havoc when interpreting the results. So we'd want rich and poor, of all races, etc.. We should then be able to look at the recipients, and tell if they were more likely or less likely to be employed. And we should be able to see if they spending their time creating cutting-edge art, and new innovative music, while writing inspiring novels, and discovering new scientific facts and mathematical theorems. To be doubly sure that we aren't merely papering over any medical insurance issues (what with medical inflation and all), we might also create a separate medical payment system to cover their medical expenses. Of course, this should be a long running experiment, so that any short term economic and societal effects will have time to average out. Let's propose to run this experiment, for, I don't know, maybe 80 years.
In a country as rich as the US, with wealth so heavily stacked to the top 1/3, I'd have to argue in favor of dropping the rich out of any basic income testing or implementation. For the same reason that they shouldn't be participating in any other traditional welfare programs currently. The only way a full implementation of a basic income can work - and be enough to matter - in a country with as large of a population as the US, is by dropping the top economic tiers out of it; make over $X, you don't qualify.
The US could afford to give the poorest 50 million adults a $2,000 per month basic income. Federal + State + Local welfare spending total, is a bit over $1 trillion annually (including Medicaid). You could parse that $2k down to $1k across 100 million adults, but at that level it won't be enough to replace all the benefits people are deriving from welfare today (the health coverage alone would severely drain that $1k level).
The downside is, giving the bottom 50 million adults a $2,000 check every month, would enrage the middle class. One of the benefits of current welfare programs, is you don't see it the way you do cash being spent, and I believe most people think of cash payments entirely differently than they do eg free healthcare.
Want to give all adults enough money? You can't do it. There is no math that will ever get you there, unless you plan to abolish the US military, part of Social Security and Medicare, and raise taxes simultaneously. 230 million adults * $1,000 per month = $2.76 trillion per year (almost the whole federal budget), it's obviously laughable.
The problem with a hard cutoff is that people just below the limit end up better off than those just above it. One problem with a soft cutoff is how often/when you adjust for changes.
Basic Income is only a simple solution if it's universal.
Additionally, part of the benefit of a universal basic income is that it covers the ground of programs like Social Security, so at least in theory you can get rid of it. (though I sure wouldn't want to be responsible for orchestrating the transition)
Getting rid of Social Security is certainly a lot more viable today, now that politicians can't steal from its inbound surplus.
The basic income concept also collapses when you consider Social Security - that system is designed specifically to only give people at a certain age those benefits. As has been pointed out in the case of Finland, plenty of people will find they are worse off. In the US case, if you spread that Social Security money out across 230 million adults, it would become tiny per person (~$300x per month), which is exactly what you don't want to do (unless the plan is to shift back to a system in which people are expected more so to take care of their own retirement needs, but I don't see how that is going to work out with the median paying vastly higher taxes).
> if you spread that Social Security money out across 230 million adults
Clearly that isn't the idea though. The idea would be more like multiplying SS such that all of those 230 million adults get the same payout as what the current recipients get now.
And obviously it isn't as simple as that, not least because that's about 4 times as many people as SS covers currently, and it's already about 1/4 of the total US budget. In addition, the idea is that we shouldn't be required to work, and thus there should be basic income such that you can live comfortably, and arguably SS is already not enough for that. (the total SS budget/# of recipients = ~14k)
If BI is treated as income, this (through taxes) limits the net cost of benefits to the rich (or even middle class), while avoiding the perverse incentives that come with a hard cutoff, or even a dollar-for-dollar phase-out of benefits at some point.
Today someone making $40,000 per year is not paying anything near eg $12,000 per year in income taxes (more like half that). The middle class would not come even remotely close to paying back enough of the basic income that they'd be taking out to off-set the vast cost in the bottom third. Taxes would have to go up dramatically on the middle and upper classes.
If you don't have a cut-off, basic income can never work in America. There is no math that can ever get you there. It takes a few minutes to run the numbers, they do not work - unless you raise taxes a lot and reduce the other major federal programs a lot.
> If you don't have a cut-off, basic income can never work in America.
If it has a cut off, its not basic income, its a means-tested welfare program. We've got those already.
And there's absolutely no validity to the "in America" here. There's nothing inherent about America that makes it different here. A low level BI that doesn't replace all means-tested programs (particularly not Medicaid) or retirement and disability programs, but maybe displaces GA and SNAP is more plausible in the near term.
I wonder if data from lottery winners with "lifetime" stipends in the right range could be useful? Or perhaps a basic income experiment lottery could be sanctioned to gather the data. It might even be self-funding.
I'm going to go out on a limb and suggest that studies of direct cash grants to the extreme poor in developing countries have essentially zero applicability to a welfare/welfare replacement system in Finland...
Mincome was an experimental Canadian basic income project that was held in Dauphin, Manitoba, during the 1970s. It was only half "unconditional", the rest income-dependant, but it did seem to have good effects.
I'm all for this experiment, but please, can we get rid of the Basic 'Income' _doublespeak_? Income is earned. Call it Basic ['benifits', 'welfare', 'necessities', 'coverage'].sample. Anything but the Income misnomer.
I really like the simplicity and efficiency of Guaranteed Income. Social welfare is one of the 'costs of doing business' in a modern civilization. Cut the crap and just give everyone basic resources without reservations.
The way I see it if someone really does not want to work, they'll go to great lengths to cheat the system and the government will spend a great deal combating these people. Just giving the bum money will be cheaper for everyone.
More importantly a basic income will free up people who will take jobs just because they have to. This will actually open up jobs for people who want to work hard to rise above the basic level.
It will give people freedom to explore things that would not be feasible otherwise. This will generate more art, more music, new science and philosophies.
Perhaps my thoughts are too idealistic but I think its more reasonable than trying to police welfare or telling everyone to just be more bootstrappy.
> I really like the simplicity and efficiency of Guaranteed Income. Social welfare is one of the 'costs of doing business' in a modern civilization. Cut the crap and just give everyone basic resources without reservations.
The problem is it simply is not possible or feasible.
This leaves a $0 budget for literally anything else. To be reasonable, we'd probably need to raise another ~$1 trillion in taxes to sustain something vaguely resembling current government functions [remember, the existing expenditure is already over $3.8 trillion]. Even then, it'd be really iffy.
You would just need to increase the tax rates to pay for it. The us economy is ~$18 trillion so even if you need to raise an extra $2.9 trillion it would be possible. Of course I think it has zero chance of ever being implemented because of politics.
You can't raise 3 trillion in taxes on the US economy to support that kind of program. People would see their taxes double and they'd flip the fuck out.
Most people would not see any net increase in taxes, but the wealthy would certainly see a massive rise - hence why I suggested it is impossible politically.
> There is no dispute that income inequality has been on the rise in the United States for the past four decades. The share of total income earned by the top 1 percent of families was less than 10 percent in the late 1970s but now exceeds 20 percent as of the end of 2012.
Sure you would have to tax everyone, but once you discount out the actual base income (pay $10,000 or less in tax, get $10,000 in base income) then most people would be ahead.
There are many people here who spend their day job writing algorithms to monitor people's responses to certain stimuli -even down to the individual level - in order profile users and tailor services to ensure that a few advertising cents per person are spent efficiently.
I'm genuinely unable to fathom why when it comes to solving the diverse, expensive and very real problems a social safety net is designed to capture, that "give everyone a fixed large chunk of cash each year" is so widely perceived as the "most efficient" solution on here.
The separate ideal world argument that BI would ensure that people don't "have to" work (unless they're foreign, obviously) obviously flies a little in the face of the efficiency argument too.
> I'm genuinely unable to fathom why when it comes to solving the diverse, expensive and very real problems a social safety net is designed to capture, that "give everyone a fixed large chunk of cash each year" is so widely perceived as the "most efficient" solution on here.
Economists widely agree that cash transfers are more efficient at improving welfare for the poor than transfers-in-kind. It's one of the less controversial statements in the field. "Give everyone a chunk of cash once a year" is probably not the most efficient manifestation of the concept just because peoples' behaviors tend to be different if they receive regular reliable income vs irregular income (see the permanent income hypothesis), but when it comes to the choice of giving the poor cash or services, just giving them cash is widely preferred.
>Economists widely agree that cash transfers are more efficient at improving welfare for the poor than transfers-in-kind. It's one of the less controversial statements in the field.
I find that baffling based on San Francisco's experience. When the city replaced its "in kind" services with cash, for the most part the homeless people went out and spent the cash on booze and drugs.
The cash system was such an obvious failure Gavin Newsom was able to build his political career on converting the system back to the "in kind" type.
The US is in the bottom half[1] of the education rankings which might impair good decisions. The rest of the world* has a much better functioning health care structure for lower income people as well, medical conditions that may impair their ability to make good decisions.
>>I'm genuinely unable to fathom why when it comes to solving the diverse, expensive and very real problems a social safety net is designed to capture, that "give everyone a fixed large chunk of cash each year" is so widely perceived as the "most efficient" solution on here.
I don't know if it's the absolute most efficient, but I suspect it's a lot more efficient than the current collection of social safety nets - especially assuming the tax agency is already decent at doing it's job, giving everyone a few hundred dollars a week is pretty easy to administer, and can be taxed back from higher earners easily. If instead you have multiple decision trees about who gets particular benefits and who doesn't, you suddenly need a bureaucracy, and those are always expensive.
Fundamentally I want my society to feed, clothe, and house people who can't manage to do it themselves for whatever reason. At that level it's not that diverse; does it matter if someone is disabled, drug addicted, chronically unemployable, a single mother with no support, a refugee, whatever? They can't come up with rent and food money, let's give it to them.
Bureaucracies cost a lot. Paying a subsistence level income to everyone who is economically inactive would cost a lot more. I mean, in the UK there's currently around 9 million economically inactive working age people who pay no tax, are not registered as looking for work and yet could theoretically claim BI, vs less than 2 million people who've to registered as unemployed and looking for work that actually get out-of-work benefits. That difference pays for a lot of bureaucrats, at least some of whom are supposed to do useful things in finding people work or training as well.
And yes, it matters hugely whether someone is disabled, a single mother or a whatever, because their rent and food money needs are likely to be quite different.
That's the traditional wisdom, and why it took so long for direct cash payments to become popular in philanthropy. The result is a little counterintuitive, depending on your intuition. The data show that free money works extraordinarily well at elevating the poor: http://www.npr.org/sections/money/2013/10/25/240590433/what-...
I'd support including children in a basic income scheme at a reduced level (so $400/month for a child, $900/month for an adult, as a very rough example). Aside from extra kids, I don't see it as necessary to adjust the benefit amount
Also, my idea of a basic income would be for everyone in the country (every citizen and permanent resident at least) to receive it, non-optionally. No applying, no means test, nothing. You get $X direct deposited every week or two. For high income people it get taxed back (and more), of course. So it's not just to those who are economically inactive, it's to everyone.
And sure, we should help people find useful work and all that. But it can be separate than giving them money for basic living expenses.
I'm not sure all those advertising cents per person are really effectively spent, either. I'd say the expertise is mostly into getting the advertisers to spend that money.
Oh, that's the easy question. It's the most efficient solution because of politics. Anything with complex rules will be (or better: is) gamed and the money will disappear (to varying degrees, depending on the host country).
Basic income is neither a necessary nor a sufficient criteria for eliminating welfare cliffs though.
Welfare cliffs can be eliminated quite effectively by tapering welfare payments, and can remain (and potentially be made worse) after a BI is introduced if there are still some [household] income-linked subsidies or tax breaks available.
It's most efficient under the constraint that we probably don't want to force citizens to submit to advertising-style pervasive monitoring by the government welfare authorities just to eat.
Surely there's a happy medium between assuming that every minute difference in an individual's clickstream is valuable data to which can be mined for insights to optimise for certain behavioural responses on the one hand, and assuming that any effort spent setting parameters for giving people free money is bound to be a futile and wasteful endeavour on the other?
Though frankly, $xxxxx from the government for signing up to pervasive monitoring would still be a better deal than anything I've ever been offered as a result of interacting with an ad tracker or promised by the brave new world of the IoT.
You're the one who started with the advertising analogy. I just combined that kickoff with the tendency of government to ratchet power and control once granted. You may think it's a slippery slope, I just see a logical basis for assumption.
I'm infinitely curious about these kind of projects. As you and other said, current systems are so full of waste and people investing so much efforts into tricking it. I can envision a lot of good outcomes. That said I really don't know how the culture will align. So much in human history was defined by your role, your work etc etc. Now if you're not contributing to others in a market will you be seen as valuable ? how will people relate to each others now that there will be less "classes".
I also believe survival pressure is mostly needed for people to exist fully; todays system pressure is too chaotic and suboptimal, but removing too much pressure may lead to muddy waters.
How do you think that this would translate to less "classes"? I know some number of humans, and based on this limited experience, I'd be surprised if there wasn't some sort of "makers" and "takers" class dynamics emerge.
Less pyramidal schemes in people relationships. Also less need to earn money, to feel rich.
Usually things had a tendancy to increase differences, if you were in need, someone who had a headstart could use you and make profit. You earned a little while he gained too. Increasing it's position in the same way, more capital, more opportunities to hire, create business.
If someone really doesn't want to work, then they're probably not going to make a very good worker. Why force them to get a job if they're going to be a drag? I think the vast majority of people want to work just to keep busy and make their lives interesting. At least, that's what people tell me.
1) Even if you spent the entire $2T annual federal budget on a basic income, it would come to about $500 per person per month. The cost is simply gargantuan.
2) It would not replace welfare, it would come on top of it. This is because welfare isn't about helping the poor, it's about giving political power to the lawmakers. This power comes in the form of large administrative bodies, where political allies can be given cushy jobs, and in the form of an electoral clientele. Basic income doesn't have these two features, so from a public choice theory, it will not replace the welfare state. Case in point, when the Reagan administration tried to apply Milton Friedman's negative income tax, he distanced himself from it as they wanted to do it on top of other welfare programs. This is exactly what public choice theory dictates.
Lets start with simple facts, current government is formed by rightwing parties. [Not so rightwing by american standards].
~1000€ is what ultra leftwing party's youth group proposes.
~600€ is what the Green leftist party proposes
The right wing parties talks about creating motivation for people to get to work with the basic income. A newspaper supporting prime minister party's talk about either partial basic income of 550€ with it replacing most benefits or full basic income of 800€ with absolute cutting of other benefits.
What I'd like to see most is basic income combined with true flat tax. No tax deductions, minimal bureaucracy.
If we are going to pay certain minimal support to everyone to keep them from going too desperate, we could as well pay it to everyone and then start taxing from first euro earned with the flat percentage.
Instead of current system in which people send lots of separate applications for different benefits and then people paid by government has to work. And when you get raise you probably need to get new tax form from tax office to give your employer.
What well made basic income should give is instead of having long plateau after the minimum everyone is guaranteed to get one way or other, is a way for everyone to get that minimal guaranteed all the time and any marginal employment would increase income over that. And most of the cost would be got from reducing number of government employees required to handle it.
Everyone doing the math should consider that only real cost of basic income is when someone earns less than (1/taxrate)*basic income and more than what government currently gives to poor. And it eliminates cost of MANY government jobs handling papers for benefits, and makes easier to take a job for a day or two or week or two because you cannot loose benefits for it. Or loose benefits for starting your own business.
There is another social factor to basic income, and State-based welfare, that I'm not sure is being mentioned: it allows people to become more isolated because they can be less dependent on friends, family, and neighbors. I'm not sure if that's a positive for society in the long run.
I'm sure he's wrong with that particular phrasing.
If a real problem does arise with a non-working majority perpetually voting to increase their BI, a more flexible answer would be to make the vote conditional on having paid a certain amount of tax, either in that year or over their lifetime to date or some combination of the two. But let's not roll back the clock a few decades on universal suffrage until we're absolutely sure we need to.
EDIT TO ADD: a core principle behind BI is that paid employment is not the only socially valuable form of activity. I believe that. Taking away the vote from people who aren't making a contribution in $$$ form would fly in the face of it.
Instead of treating this as a dupe like we normally would, let's try leaving it up with the request that people discuss the specifics of this experiment, and perhaps what other sorts of experiments could be run and how one might evaluate them—and leave the more generic for-and-against basic income stuff to the other thread.