• @Farnswirth@lemmy.world
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    -13
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    9 months ago

    There are two major concerns I have with UBI.

    1. It’s highly inflationary.

    2. It fosters dependency, and it’s an economic-political death spiral. People on UBI vote for those who support higher UBI. Inflation increases due to increased monetary velocity. People demand higher UBI due to cost of living increases. Votes go to those who promise higher UBI, etc. The cycle continues until you’re wiping your ass with currency or some form of CBDC is implemented to stop the bleeding.

    • @PeleSpirit@lemmy.world
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      409 months ago

      It fosters dependency

      You’re going to have to source that. There is no cycle of dependency, lol. Everyone making it above survival level probably won’t even spur them to vote. These aren’t people rolling in money, it’s 12k per year.

      • @Chunk@lemmy.world
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        -19 months ago

        Giving everyone 12k/year doesn’t foster dependency? Dude I make enough to not be homeless but if I had an extra 12k I’d spend it and my lifestyle would inflate. That’s dependency. I depend on it to live a nicer life.

      • @Peaty@sh.itjust.works
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        -109 months ago

        And giving every person in America 12k/year would cost over 50% of the budget and produce almost no growth unless it was entirely funded by debt.

        It might not foster dependency but it would be incredibly expensive.

        • @PeleSpirit@lemmy.world
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          69 months ago

          You would have to start at the most vulnerable. Then eventually, you would have to target the adults who make 70k or less which is about 70% of the adult population. Then, taper it down up to 100k. This would be app. 2 trillion. I think what a lot of people are missing is, we may not have a choice to not have some kind of UBI with robots taking over quite a few jobs in the next 50 years. We have to get corporations and billionaires to pay more taxes as well. The bottom 80% are paying most of the taxes. Don’t forget that trump paid $0-$700 in taxes for quite a few years and I’m sure that’s more common than not.

          The benefits of UBI would be:

          • More people living in rural areas because they don’t have to go to the city to get jobs. They could work in a grocery store and live a decent life.
          • Have the opportunity to develop new businesses.
          • More people going to school because they could afford it.
          • More money being spent and more taxes received from that.

          Right now, our money is being funneled up to the rich shareholders of these huge companies instead of going to Americans who aren’t even getting by.

          • @Peaty@sh.itjust.works
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            -59 months ago

            It’s over 3.5 trillion if given to everyone.

            Source on the bottom 80% paying most of the taxes please?

            Don’t forget redirecting over half the budget to fund a UBI significantly alters the US economy.

          • @Peaty@sh.itjust.works
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            -49 months ago

            Because it is taken from the same economy. If I tax Bill $1 to give Bob $1 we didn’t see any net growth. The only way it produces growth is if we gave Bob $1 but never collected $1 from anyone which becomes unsustainable in the long term.

          • @Peaty@sh.itjust.works
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            -49 months ago

            We cannot afford to ditch over 50% of the budget to replace it with a UBI that won’t produce much if any benefit?

              • @Peaty@sh.itjust.works
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                -29 months ago

                No Im saying it will provide little to no net benefit to the larger economy whereas redirecting over 50% of the budget to give $12k/yr to everyone would be catastrophic to the larger economy. I suspect the economy tanking would end up hurting more than the 12k helps.

                The only way UBI doesn’t significantly harm the US economy, and to be clear Im talking about only the USA right now, is if the payments are either so small they don’t help, the payments are not universal and are targeted towards those that need money, or if the entire thing is financed by increasing the national debt which is unsustainable over the long run. None of these are as beneficial as they seem.

                • @grff@lemmy.world
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                  -19 months ago

                  Unfortunately I think you’re arguing with idiots. You’re right it wouldn’t be able to be universal because it wouldn’t change anything if it was, it would just be made up for somewhere else and the problem would be a can getting kicked down the road for someone else to deal with

    • @Eheran@lemmy.world
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      129 months ago

      Do we have any sort of previous example of this happening? Was this ever tested? If no: a test is seemingly well worth it.

      • @PeleSpirit@lemmy.world
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        199 months ago

        This isn’t directed at you, this is for the other dude, but also answers your question a little. The entire US was given checks during the pandemic, did it make you lazy?

          • @cricket97@lemmy.world
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            -39 months ago

            Not really. There is a big difference when the free money is guaranteed over a long period of time. I don’t think it takes any extraordinary leaps in logic that people would stop working if they were given a bunch of money every month.

        • @cricket97@lemmy.world
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          -19 months ago

          There’s a big difference when its guaranteed over a period of time. Then you can actually feel justified in quitting whatever job you have since you know the money will keep coming in.

        • Bob Robertson IX
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          -39 months ago

          The entire US was given checks during the pandemic, did it make you lazy?

          I mean, I spent a year wearing sweat pants and hardly leaving my house.

          • @PeleSpirit@lemmy.world
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            89 months ago

            Because you were rolling in checks or because it was unhealthy to do so? Having worked full-time and part time as a freelancer, job burnout and needing recovery isn’t laziness.

            • Bob Robertson IX
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              39 months ago

              It was a joke… I was still working full time, just from home. And I didn’t go anywhere because there was a pandemic going on and I didn’t want to be around people. But the fact that I was 100% in sweatpants and lounging around the house for a year did feel lazy, but had nothing to do with the checks coming in from the government.

        • @Gigan@lemmy.world
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          -79 months ago

          Fuck yeah it did. I was making the same on unemployment as I would have being at work. I wanted to stay laid off.

          • @PeleSpirit@lemmy.world
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            49 months ago

            What you wanted to do and what you did are 2 different things. You’re overworked and probably not doing a job that you want to do. That isn’t laziness, that’s job unsatisfaction.

            • @Gigan@lemmy.world
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              -19 months ago

              Yeah, but that probably applies to a lot of people. Why would anyone choose to do all the bullshit (but necessary) jobs if they can get paid the same for sitting at home?

      • @Peaty@sh.itjust.works
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        19 months ago

        Do you have a link to the original source or the name of the authors? Neither is in your article only a statement that it was sourced from another site.

    • @centof@lemm.ee
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      59 months ago
      1. It’s highly inflationary.
      1. False. It is only inflationary if the the government prints money to fund it. If instead the government funds it by cutting unnecessary spending or increasing tax revenue in some way than it is not inflationary. There is the same amount of money in circulation but it is just moving between hands instead of staying in a bank account.
    • snooggums
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      49 months ago

      So to summarize other people’s points, evidence shows that those concerns are not outcomes of UBI so there is no need to be worried.

    • I'm back on my BS 🤪
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      19 months ago
      1. It’s highly inflationary.

      I think this is a great example of what rich people think of us. This user would prefer that people stay homeless rather than cut back on their own luxuries so that others could have a more decent basic standard of living. Those with stable basic housing feel like they’re living the normal life they have earned, while a homeless person is someone that doesn’t want to put in the work to carry themselves. The wealthy think the same way about the middle class: we want vacation days, adequate healthcare, a proper justice system, and decent wages/fair business market without earning it. However, a person with a 1 bedroom apartment they can call home is a king to a homeless person.

      1. It fosters dependency, and it’s an economic-political death spiral. People on UBI vote for those who support higher UBI.

      Here, we see the privilege. They argue that it would foster dependency because the poor would vote for better standards of living rather than contribute to society. To think this way, we have to ignore that someone cannot meaningfully contribute to society without adequate housing and stability. We would also have to ignore our own hypocrisy in that we argue that our standard of living is dependent on the exploitation of the homeless.

      These are the very same arguments that the wealthy elite use. If they pay more taxes, then the poor will slippery slope the vote by electing politicians that continue to increase taxes on the rich, while also becoming dependent on that revenue.

      I am in no way attacking this user. It’s a common mentality across the world. Instead, I’m using their comment to point out how this mentality works regardless of social class: 1) my efforts have created my wealth, while everyone else that is poorer just doesn’t work to earn it, and 2) helping the lazy poorer people makes them dependent on my work. Repeat these arguments in some fashion all the way down to the poorest person on Earth 🔁