An Honest Discussion About A Universal Basic Income

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In this video we go over the pros and cons of a universal basic income. The US government spent over $5 trillion of economic stimulus and relief payments during the pandemic of 2020 and 2021. This is enough money to give every adult in the country $1,000 per month during this 2 year period. Would the money have been better spent just giving it directly to the people?
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The Economic Explained team uses Statista for conducting our research. Check out their KZread channel: / @statistaofficial
0:00 - 1:48 intro
1:49 - 2:45 Public.com
2:46 - 4:14 What is UBI?
4:15 - 5:19 Existing welfare systems
5:20 - 6:42 Cost of UBI
6:43 - 11:44 Taxes
11:45 - 14:20 Inflation
14:21 - 15:40 Starting the conversation
15:41 Public.com
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  • @GriftyMcPants
    @GriftyMcPants Жыл бұрын

    The 70% marginal tax does not apply to a person's entire income. It starts taking effect after an amount, $10 million for example. So your $10,000,001st dollar is taxed at 70%. This is a very important detail.

  • @callous21

    @callous21

    Жыл бұрын

    So someone that makes $20M would only get to keep $13M. That guy's not gonna be too happy with that deal

  • @johnsamuel1999

    @johnsamuel1999

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes , but it would suck for people earning above that limit . I would hate to pay 70% over 10 million, even if i was earning 30 million.

  • @johnsamuel1999

    @johnsamuel1999

    Жыл бұрын

    70% above any limit is too much

  • @speedracer9132

    @speedracer9132

    Жыл бұрын

    LoL John and callous here talking like they’ll ever make over 10 million, these blokes will be lucky to make half of ONE million

  • @benlubbers4943

    @benlubbers4943

    Жыл бұрын

    @@callous21 Oh no. You can only afford a villa and two Masaratis while dining out the entire month. Truly horrid. How will you live without a yacht on top of all of that.

  • @klankungen7794
    @klankungen7794 Жыл бұрын

    I read about the finish experiment where some people (I think it was 10000 people) got an UBI for a few years. The experiment was intresting. The wellfare system in place basically makes it so that if you get a job or start a bussines you will start paying taxes at about the same rate you lose your unemployment benefits making it hard for some to see any reason to put an effort in it. With the money being unconditional the people in the experiment were able to start bussineses and get jobs and get the full benefit imediatly and the most drivven entrepreneurs were able to re use all the money they had earned to keep the bussines growing since they didn't lose their benefits and had to give them self a salary imediatly. Some of them stated that it would be imposible for them to get to that point in the traditional wellfare system in place, even though it is more generous than most.

  • @katm9877

    @katm9877

    Жыл бұрын

    There were also some more experiments like that, in different countries and places. I was surprised to learn that apparently, someplace in my native Poland also did such an experiment for IIRC 2 years, with similar results (more likely to find work than in traditional welfare systems)

  • @angelillypethe387

    @angelillypethe387

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly

  • @CardboardArm

    @CardboardArm

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, this video is missing a lot of stuff about how UBI is suppose to work. There is the fact that traditional welfare always has this income zone where working more hours doesn't result in more pay. Welfare, to put it bluntly, incentivises staying poor unless you can make a big leap in income. And although EE mentioned how UBI reduces bureaucracy, it fails to mention that this effects the people on welfare even more. Most welfare systems have recuirements, like a minimal number of job applications to send out, and many forms and mandated appointments. Being poor is a part time job. And there is the psychological effect of living in constant fear of being unable to feed yourself and your family which has a scientifically proven effect that it makes people make worse financial decisisions. So the big economic question about UBI is: how much more productive will this make the poor compared to traditional welfare? And what are the secondary effects, like reduction in crime etc. Every discussion about UBI should also mention that many countries already HAVE UBI, just for senior citizens. Every fundamental argument against UBI fails when you realize people already pay taxes for UBI, there hasn't been a massive exodus of people to countries that don't have UBI for senior citizens, it hasn't made people stop saving for their additional pensions either. Ultimately it's a cost-benefit question, but a lot of people already have a politically motivated preference and don't want to know the science.

  • @graye2799

    @graye2799

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@CardboardArmUBI for seniors only works when you have a larger pool of younger people working and paying taxes. As the birth rates shrink and more older people exist in these nations, we are starting to see the issues.

  • @t95kush27

    @t95kush27

    3 ай бұрын

    Hence why we have immigration, because the wealthier the nation the lower the birth rate it seems ​@graye2799

  • @oscarhuzell4662
    @oscarhuzell4662 Жыл бұрын

    "no one can predict the future, least of all economists" is a perfect catchphrase!

  • @richarddecker9515

    @richarddecker9515

    3 ай бұрын

    Insurance companies use statistics to determine the odds on risk. They are trying to predict the likelihood of the future

  • @Robert-xs2mv

    @Robert-xs2mv

    3 ай бұрын

    @@richarddecker9515trying, being the pertinent word, they often fail, but that is fine, just increase the premium, therefore excluding those most likely to have a claim.

  • @matthewgentzel2004

    @matthewgentzel2004

    3 ай бұрын

    But it's also obviously untrue. Even though they are often very wrong, economists are better at prediction than most academic specialties.

  • @Robert-xs2mv

    @Robert-xs2mv

    3 ай бұрын

    @@matthewgentzel2004 economics are not “predicting” they are pulling the levers in order to direct where the future goes!

  • @matthewgentzel2004

    @matthewgentzel2004

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Robert-xs2mv Out of all the trained economists, very few are pulling big levers in the economy. Academic economists largely don't pull levers, nor do gov economists that provide advice and run cost benefit analyses. Advice is built on predictions about what will happen under different courses of action.

  • @StuartChignell
    @StuartChignell Жыл бұрын

    One of the challenges with a ubi is that you either do it or you don't. "Toned down alternatives" definitely won't work. For a ubi to work it has to hold people at or just over thr poverty line and it has to be UNIVERSAL. Anything less won't work. So the the alternative can't be a toned version it has to be something completely different. More likely a raft of alternatives from improved welfare systems to addressing the power imbalance between employees and employers and way more besides.

  • @MWhaleK

    @MWhaleK

    Жыл бұрын

    "Do or do not, there is no try" - Master Yoda.

  • @mikeroagreschen5350

    @mikeroagreschen5350

    Жыл бұрын

    So you're saying nobody can opt out?

  • @StuartChignell

    @StuartChignell

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mikeroagreschen5350 Why would anyone opt out?

  • @DickCheneyXX

    @DickCheneyXX

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mikeroagreschen5350 It will probably take a civil war to fix that one if it ever comes to pass.

  • @rileynicholson2322

    @rileynicholson2322

    10 ай бұрын

    What are you talking about? You can easily do a "toned down" universal basic/supplemental income of like $100/month instead of $1000/month, for example. Neither really removes the need for some means tested welfare for people with higher needs and you're not going to achieve with any universal income that is basic for the average person anyways. Heck, you could even start at $0.10/year if you wanted to ramp up really slowly and measure the effect on inflation. Doesn't get much more toned down than that.

  • @JHZech
    @JHZech Жыл бұрын

    What's missing from the conversation is one good idea from UBI, just reducing bureaucracy. Welfare doesn't have to be universal, but it also doesn't have to be split among a hundred different programs that make it difficult to use and costly to operate. Giving people a single check that gradually phases out to a certain income threshold wouldn't require trillions in spending while making it cheaper to operate (so more money for the program itself) and much easier to use for those who need it.

  • @jhfdhgvnbjm75

    @jhfdhgvnbjm75

    Жыл бұрын

    Tried that in the UK with Universal Credit taking over from about 7 different benefits like unemployment etc, its been a lot of problems to implement but might be working.

  • @dudono1744

    @dudono1744

    Жыл бұрын

    If i got the thing right the amount of money given only depends of the money you earn. Not so hard to implement on paper.

  • @jeffrey.a.hanson

    @jeffrey.a.hanson

    Жыл бұрын

    Over time it will split into the same number of programs as any other institution. Lower class will blow up over the millionaire who does take it. Politicians will run based on this vote. Now it’s no longer a UBI. Never forget. Once something becomes standardized, it becomes the baseline as well. It’s a bonus year one…it’s an expectation year 2.

  • @vicgamesvt9682

    @vicgamesvt9682

    Жыл бұрын

    What your describing sounds like the Guranteed Minimum Income. I think this could work as long as the clawback is low.

  • @redwolfexr

    @redwolfexr

    Жыл бұрын

    The people who would get screwed (although its the way to "sell" this to Conservatives) are those that paid into Social Security -- if $1000 flat payments replaced the current SS payment. (which is much higher than $1000) You get rid of SS, UI, ect... but you actually make it worse for the lower class. (the UBI becomes the minimum income level and its very minimum) People who planned for a $2200 SS payment in retirement suddenly lose over half their "equity" in the old system. And lets face it.. if the "Liberals" managed to get a UBI then the "Conservatives" would use the excuse to kill every other program they could next time they were in power. And then once they were done it would be just like Minimum Wage.. they would fight increasing it with inflation tooth and nail so it would go down and down versus inflation. You might catch up 3-4 times in your lifetime before you lose ground again. Just for reference a full time person on MW makes about $1250/mo. And its not go up since 2009... and not likely to go up anytime soon.

  • @FirstRisingSouI
    @FirstRisingSouI Жыл бұрын

    If we implemented a UBI, I'd suggest we set it as a percentage of the GDP per capita, not a fixed dollar amount. That way, it would function as a share every citizen holds in the success of their country, and as a bonus the GDP per capita would actually mean something. It would also save politicians from wasting their time on debates about raising the amount as the economy grows, like we see for the minimum wage. For that matter, we should probably tie the value of minimum wage to inflation, rather than having a set amount. But alas, these ideas are common sense solutions to make life better for the people, and that does no good for politicians and business owners' careers, so I don't see much hope for them.

  • @ShiftE21

    @ShiftE21

    Жыл бұрын

    Just remember that in our consumer economy, helping lots of people buy things by giving them money will make everything cost more.

  • @MrMarker8050

    @MrMarker8050

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ShiftE21 The only reason that would happen would be if we didn't have enough of whatever product. Which i don't think we have too much scarcity for anything essential that would make the prices rise like water or food. The only thing that could go up would be non essential items like iPhones, Androids, etc.

  • @ShiftE21

    @ShiftE21

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MrMarker8050 tell this to the people who say that a UBI/minimum wage will cause runaway inflation. To them, putting money in the hands of the poor is a surefire way to raise prices across the board. Effectively admitting that the economic systems they support require a struggling underclass.

  • @Xxcyclonexx44

    @Xxcyclonexx44

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ShiftE21 if everyone was rich who would serve you burgerking

  • @ShiftE21

    @ShiftE21

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Xxcyclonexx44 Admitting that the economic systems you support require a struggling underclass.

  • @LoserEater303
    @LoserEater303 Жыл бұрын

    I think one of the biggest benefits of UBI is a better upbringing for children of poor households who are heavily affected by a stressful family life, and who may perform better in school, be less incentivized to do criminal activity, get better a education, and contribute more to the economy than they would otherwise. Early UBI-studies have shown signs of this effect.

  • @meibing4912

    @meibing4912

    2 ай бұрын

    Stats in Denmark show that's its life-damaging for a child's future to grow up in family where no-one is working. One reason the Government is doing everything it can to push poor families into the work force. I guess you may find the same in many other countries.

  • @LoserEater303

    @LoserEater303

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@meibing4912That's interesting. Where can I find those stats? Doesn't have to be in English.

  • @benjaminr8961

    @benjaminr8961

    2 ай бұрын

    We should just make it illegal to abandon your kids.

  • @LokiBeckonswow

    @LokiBeckonswow

    2 ай бұрын

    well said, please keep talking about it

  • @BillTrowbridge

    @BillTrowbridge

    Ай бұрын

    @@meibing4912 UBI results in people working more, not less.

  • @MrAnarchocapitalist
    @MrAnarchocapitalist Жыл бұрын

    The problem with a high tax rate vs a low tax rate when starting a business isn't that the entrepreneur might have to pay more taxes. The issue is that the higher tax rate reduces the margin of error for that business to succeed at all, which makes it less likely that the business will be started.

  • @chraman169

    @chraman169

    Жыл бұрын

    yes

  • @love2scoobysnack

    @love2scoobysnack

    Ай бұрын

    Don't forget that a business tax must be passed to the end consumer. Business tax interferes with a proper supply and demand curve and ultimately suppresses market competition because of decreased demand at the inflated price. This also goes to the issue of funding. Taxes just like pay raises are always inflationary.

  • @winnieid2727

    @winnieid2727

    Ай бұрын

    Yup, it makes the business harder to grow. The big company can hide behind tax heaven places, the middle one is the one that suffers.

  • @0Clewi0

    @0Clewi0

    29 күн бұрын

    Besides sales taxes that are not mentioned to change it's profit what would be taxed, not income, it only affects after it's successful

  • @wilsonli5642
    @wilsonli5642 Жыл бұрын

    Two thoughts about the inflationary effects of UBI: 1) If the system is designed in a way that middle-income earners roughly break even, then the inflationary impact should be minimal. I think there have been surveys that showed that, if given more money, most people on the lower end of the income scale would use it to pay off debt. If that is wrong, and there are indications that inflationary pressures would be high, you could design it such that the payments phase in over a period of a few years. Also, once you reach a steady state (supply catches up with demand), inflation will return to normal. 2) Let's think about what it means morally if inflation is expected to increase a lot in an economy upon the implementation of UBI. From what I remember of my college econ classes, there's a term for the kinds of goods and services that low-income people buy - necessities. Wikipedia defines it as "product(s) and services that consumers will buy regardless of the changes in their income levels, therefore making these products less sensitive to income change." If merely bringing lower incomes to a lower-middle income results in a significant changes to the consumption of necessities, doesn't that mean that previously, your economy wasn't allowing people to get what they need, either to survive or to keep pace with change? Now linguistically, we can quibble over different definitions of "need" and "necessity", but IMO there's a good reason we use these words, and they really illustrate the problem here.

  • @ps.2

    @ps.2

    Жыл бұрын

    "Once you reach a steady state" is a hidden assumption. Why do you think we would ever reach one? In particular, perhaps you are assuming the UBI would be a fixed amount over time. But given its purpose, it would obviously have to be indexed to cost of living. Which means the UBI and inflation could well just chase each other upward indefinitely.

  • @cablefeed3738

    @cablefeed3738

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ps.2 Inflation already does that on its own. At this point the argument just sounds like the same ones for being against increasing minimum wage.

  • @ps.2

    @ps.2

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cablefeed3738 Inflation's not a binary. It's not like the only two states are "we have inflation" vs. "we do not have inflation." The _degree_ of inflation matters. Think of it like pollution. It'd be nice if there were none, but that's not practical; we accept that there will be some. But that doesn't mean that every polluter should get a free pass because some amount of pollution was already inevitable. Likewise inflation. A policy shouldn't get a free pass on inflationary effects just because there was always gonna be some amount of inflation from other causes.

  • @cablefeed3738

    @cablefeed3738

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ps.2 Actually economics believes slightinflation is good it's good and it's the same with pollution if there were no greenhouse gasses on Earth would be negative 38゚ Celsius That or negative 18゚C I can't remember. But my main argument was these same arguments get brought up about minimum wage increases and yet overtime minimum wage still increases which means there are benefits to giving more money to poor people and requiring rich people to give up more money AKA to pay poor people More.

  • @ps.2

    @ps.2

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cablefeed3738 You're getting it. A little inflation is fine, maybe even good (I'm not convinced it's better than zero: my understanding is that the Fed tries to target 2% not because it's thought to actually be optimal, but because it's safely above 0%, and they are perhaps a little more afraid than they have to be about what might happen if it ever dips below 0%). Doesn't mean that we should ignore any inflationary effects, no matter how great or small, of any policy proposal. Inflation is a tax on people who get a salary and have savings and carry cash. It doesn't have much effect on people whose wealth and income is mostly in stonks and real estate, as those tend to self-index to inflation. That's not to say all taxes are bad. But they aren't all good or neutral, either.

  • @donovanmarks1865
    @donovanmarks1865 Жыл бұрын

    I think the proposals for UBI are the middle ground in the "what if automation" thought experiment. They are the middle ground between just letting the extra people starve and completely socializing all the benefits of automation.

  • @A.Martin

    @A.Martin

    Жыл бұрын

    Automation is already part of why wage stagnation is happening at least at the lower end of earnings, as companies can get higher productivity out of less employees and so demand for employees is lower, or More people want less jobs, and so they can pay people less as if you don't accept a low pay, someone else will.

  • @colinhobbs7265

    @colinhobbs7265

    Жыл бұрын

    @@A.Martin We're not seeing anything like that though, at least right now. Demand for labor is still very high.

  • @FakeAssHandsomeMcGee_

    @FakeAssHandsomeMcGee_

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah the world will go communist the moment automation replaces everyone.

  • @catalindeluxus8545

    @catalindeluxus8545

    3 ай бұрын

    So we should we talking about socializing the benefits of automation

  • @Byssbod

    @Byssbod

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@colinhobbs7265 not really. If demand was high, then wages would have kept pace with inflation.

  • @nonesomanynone
    @nonesomanynone Жыл бұрын

    In the case of UBI I think that the problem really comes down to how it is conceptualized since the whole thing is predicated on our current economic model. Current, of course, means an economic model that hasn't changed substantially for hundreds of years. My observation is that, especially in the common parlance, economics is nearly entirely focused on the concept of currency - fiat currency to be exact. The problem is that economics is actually about the distribution of resources and currency, fiat or otherwise, isn't a resource in and of itself, but rather a measure of the ability to acquire arbitrary resources. Put another way, much like saying that "I want 10 feet" doesn't make any sense unless it is followed by "of X", saying "I want 10 dollars" only makes sense if one has an idea of the resources they intend to acquire. Acquiring money for the sake of acquiring money is a pointless endeavor. The real question shouldn't be whether there is enough currency to meet people's needs, but rather whether or not there are enough resources. More specifically we have to ask what are the basic physical and psychological needs of an individual and do we have the resources to meet those needs. Insofar as the absolute basics are concerned (food, water, shelter, etc.) I believe the answer is, unequivocally, yes. Medicine is a bit stickier of an issue, although I refuse to believe that it, or any other issue, is inherently unsolvable if you put some effort into re-conceptualizing the problem. If we were to establish a minimum quality of life and build our economic system on that moral imperative we could remove a large chunk of the abject suffering that exists in the world. With every passing day we move closer to a post-scarcity world and, while this generally though of as a positive, it will be disruptive and dangerous. Our current economic system is ill-prepared to handle that reality without the world turning dystopian. We talk a lot about the individual's responsibility towards society, but rarely in my experience do we talk about society's responsibility to the individual. "Ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country," is a fine sentiment in certain contexts. One can ask what the individual can do for their community, but framing it to exclude community's responsibility to the individual is absolutely reprehensible.

  • @DickCheneyXX

    @DickCheneyXX

    Жыл бұрын

    The community is not responsible for you or anyone else. The moment there is no threat of financial ruin, there is no incentive to do the right thing for far too many people. We cannot afford that kind of hubris.

  • @BillTrowbridge

    @BillTrowbridge

    Ай бұрын

    > "Acquiring money for the sake of acquiring money is a pointless endeavor." It is not. Because money is fungible -- easily converted to resources.

  • @0Clewi0

    @0Clewi0

    29 күн бұрын

    The realistic problem when talking about having a different economic system is that those who try it end up having a visit from freedomTM

  • @cainebez3318
    @cainebez3318 Жыл бұрын

    I think if we implemented a system akin to UBI, it'd be better off to go for a negative income tax bracket ala Milton Friedman's proposal. Starting from $0 taxable income up to a set amount, the negative rate dictates how much money a person gets as a % of the difference between their taxable income and the bracket's cap. For example, say we had a negative tax bracket from $0 - $40k at 30%, for simplicity. In affect, this would mean that for every dollar you earned through taxable income (up to $40k), you'd receive 30c less from government: Someone earning no taxable income would receive (40k-0)*.3 = $12,000 p/a Someone earning $20k would receive (40k-20k)*.3 = $6,000 p/a which in addition to what they earned would total $26k income that year. Depending on size of the bracket and the rate this could be manipulated to improve incentive to work at low income or lower costs to government. For comparison, imagine this bracket is instead up to $24k at 50% to minimise government costs. So up to $24k, every taxable dollar earned would only net you 50c: Someone earning $0 would receive (24k-0)*.5 = $12,000 p/a Someone earning $20k would receive (24k-20k)*.5= $2,000 p/a, which in addition to what they earned would total $22k income that year. --- One advantage of this system over UBI is that it avoids giving money to people earning large amounts of taxable income who do not need it. Another use is that this can be used to replace welfare for unemployment, as it avoids creating a system where a person can be better off financially by not working at all versus working part-time or full-time (though it lacks the advantage UBI has in not affecting incentives at all). If desirable, one may also consider it worthwhile to have things like disability and single-parenthood increase the size of the bracket, in effect targeting vulnerable welfare groups to get more money due to higher costs of living/less opportunity to earn income. One potential issue though, is the need to review people's income more frequently in order to provide the negative tax benefits more frequently rather than an annual lump sum. How much this might impact the economy (for good or bad) is uncertain, but given how automated the tax process is in advanced economies, this could prove fairly simple.

  • @adrienwatson2179

    @adrienwatson2179

    Жыл бұрын

    Thats a nice model The issue is the tax revenue requirements, not the math behind who gets what unfortunately

  • @rhubarb2301

    @rhubarb2301

    Жыл бұрын

    In practice, the net income effect of a UBI and negative income tax are identical. The only different is that negative income taxes have better PR and they take longer to actually hit your bank account (at the end of a taxation period, rather than monthly)

  • @scifirealism5943

    @scifirealism5943

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@rhubarb2301wow

  • @JSilb

    @JSilb

    2 ай бұрын

    That model incentivises non-productivity. When the government makes it easier for people to consume without producing, there is simply less of everything for everyone. We already have a low workforce participation rate. Taking from those who work to pay those who don't would just further exacerbate that issue. You also have the 'off the books' labor market. Cash jobs, drug dealers. They currently qualify for welfare, and would receive payout under your system as well.

  • @KDiaz-hy1xx
    @KDiaz-hy1xx Жыл бұрын

    My interest in UBI is in balancing the labor economy. There is no "free" labor market in the U.S. Too people often have to take the job that they can get at whatever the pay may be, and it's not often tied to true demand. I would like to see flexibility in being able to leave a job (even temporarily) without it being financially disastrous. It's not like you can fall back on self sufficiency farming in a modern economy, if the labor market doesn't suit you. One truly does not have a choice! And because there is no choice, capitalist squeeze the working class by paying as little as possible while charging as much as possible for living essentials (also in part to poor infrastructure--like, you often can't opt out of owning a car in this country). UBI--in theory--does offer some relief there atleast.

  • @yeetyeet7070

    @yeetyeet7070

    Жыл бұрын

    this

  • @BennieVredestein

    @BennieVredestein

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting points man, i never looked at it that way, do you have some more?

  • @rightwingsafetysquad9872

    @rightwingsafetysquad9872

    Жыл бұрын

    That's all well and good, but having good reasons to want something doesn't make it viable.

  • @jonathanbeauregard5438

    @jonathanbeauregard5438

    Жыл бұрын

    Very well said

  • @mjkittredge

    @mjkittredge

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rightwingsafetysquad9872 why are you suggesting it's not viable?

  • @brandon520
    @brandon520 Жыл бұрын

    The only way this sort of thing would actually work is if it was done in combination with incentivizing low-income housing builds HEAVILY because if not good old supply and demand would kick in and low-income apartments would go up 700$ and we're almost as bad off as we were before. I think a video talking about options when AI takes over x% of jobs would be an interesting topic, definitely something I've thought about a few times. edit: this comment really blew up, so I'd like to clarify a few things. First of all I do agree with the point many people made that affordable housing is a more important priority than UBI, making housing affordable could allow for a far far lower payout as it's a significant portion of many peoples expenses. Also I'm not by any means anti-working, I think this amount should be the minimum to have food and a leaky roof over your head while also working a reasonable part time job. Also "low-income housing" doesn't have to be an undesirable place to live, skip the hardwood floors, marble countertops and have one bedroom, it doesn't have to be expensive but still can look nice. Also empty homes are a huge issue that needs to be solved in someway too, and so is people's tendency to want to live in a city those issues aren't removed by offering affordable housing. I'm not an economist I'm just a normal guy weighing in my OPINION on this topic.

  • @theBear89451

    @theBear89451

    Жыл бұрын

    It takes about 20 years for a luxury apartment to become a low income apartment, so the pain would be temporary.

  • @recarras

    @recarras

    Жыл бұрын

    the AI topic is interesting but will go along with a world population decrease so i suspect everything will balance somewhat in long term.

  • @mjkittredge

    @mjkittredge

    Жыл бұрын

    exactly, housing is the big one. If UBI passed and tens of millions of low income people suddenly had way more spending money, first thing that would happen would be landlords & investment groups that own apartments jacking up the prices by hundreds of dollars. They did it during the pandemic and they're still doing it. In the mid aughts I thought 700 a month was too much. Now it would be half what I'm paying for an apartment. 100% increase in 20 years is a bit much, especially when income for the poor and middle class has not increased even a fraction of that much. We're all expected to do more with less somehow as we hurtle towards a breaking point. I've often suggested that there needs to be a 50 state affordable housing program. Since the private sector doesn't want to be bothered building it, have the government step in and fund adequate housing so prices go down across the board and those who need low income housing aren't reliant on the market which is predatory & price gouging them.

  • @Vid_Master

    @Vid_Master

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep!! I have said this about any free money initiative. Money is how we divide the available resources between members of our society. If you increase the amount of money available to the average member of the system, it just causes inflation. We need to increase PRODUCTION OF RESOURCES if we have any hope of giving impoverished people more resources to help them.

  • @Vid_Master

    @Vid_Master

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mjkittredge I agree 100%, the government needs to force affordable housing to be built in areas where the rent is unacceptably high. Unfortunately, every area is different, so this will be perfect for some areas and cause major problems in other areas, for many reasons. But hey - thats what we are paying politicians for, to figure this stuff out for us!!!!!!

  • @futeramonfuturamet4830
    @futeramonfuturamet4830 Жыл бұрын

    Theoretically, a UBI is meant to be a stepping stone to a post-scarcity system. A post-scarcity economy is a theoretical economic system in which basic necessities (like food) can be produced in such abundance that they become almost free. Though this post scarcity would require replicators, infinite resources, etc.

  • @scifirealism5943

    @scifirealism5943

    5 ай бұрын

    Yep.

  • @cackjasey1492

    @cackjasey1492

    3 ай бұрын

    I see what u mean but I’m highly skeptical of the claim that a post-scarcity system will require infinite resources. It’s often estimated that there’s enough food produced to feed 10 billion people, even though close to a billion of them are hungry each year

  • @scifirealism5943

    @scifirealism5943

    3 ай бұрын

    @@cackjasey1492 wow

  • @scifirealism5943

    @scifirealism5943

    3 ай бұрын

    You need matter replicators

  • @robupsidedown

    @robupsidedown

    3 ай бұрын

    Precision fermentation is coming...

  • @chrisg8995
    @chrisg8995 Жыл бұрын

    Great video as always. Surprised though that there was zero mention of having a potential UBI program coincide with the implementation of a financial literacy/ education program. That would make the biggest impact of anything else by far. I received expensive private education throughout my childhood and adolescence, and never learned more than how to balance a checkbook. Even if I had just learned what compound interest was in high school my life would be completely different. Teach a man to fish….

  • @BusinessWolf1

    @BusinessWolf1

    Жыл бұрын

    No need lol. Poor people have necessities they can't afford and debts they can't pay. The money would instantly go there. Nothing to save if you're trying to survive.

  • @alfonzom6

    @alfonzom6

    Жыл бұрын

    They were teaching it in my high-school but lots didn't care

  • @Sam-jk5dw

    @Sam-jk5dw

    Жыл бұрын

    DUDE! You learned how to balance a checkbook in school?!

  • @rileynicholson2322

    @rileynicholson2322

    10 ай бұрын

    The thing about compound interest/financial literacy education is that it doesn't actually scale to the entire economy. The only way to increase average prosperity is to increase actual production. Compound interest is just a redistribution of existing resources from one place in an economy to another. That means the prudent investor lives a better life while many workers live a slightly worse one. In fact, one of the main purposes of taxation and proposals like UBI is to do exactly redistribute the gains from compounding inequality in exactly the opposite direction. This is easy to understand when you think about bonds. Every bond is someone else's debt. The interest is a long term transfer of wealth from the borrower to the lender. If your wealth is increasing without you doing work directly to create that wealth, it's coming from someone else in the economy.

  • @chrisg8995

    @chrisg8995

    9 ай бұрын

    @@rileynicholson2322 Greatly appreciate you taking the time for a thoughtful and mature response Riley. Well done and thank you.

  • @Bern_il_Cinq
    @Bern_il_Cinq Жыл бұрын

    For the record the $5 trillion excess COVID spending was just the directly COVID-related spending. The budget introduced authorized up to $14 trillion in excess spending, over 90% of which has been used if I’m not mistaken. Let’s never do this again please.

  • @harbl2479
    @harbl2479 Жыл бұрын

    I think the fact that most lower income households in the US don't have any savings when compared to the rest of the world they would be considered very wealthy tells you a lot. In my country $12k per year is a good salary, but in the US it's below the poverty line. Most people in the world would be happy to have the standard of living that even the bottom class of society in high income countries enjoys. You need to take this into perspective, because if you don't, you are missing the point of UBI. UBI should guarantee that each individual can survive, buy food and have a roof over their head, in essence to provide them with basic existence. It should NOT be used to increase the living standards beyond this point, which, as the author pointed out, will cause inflation and so forth. Equal opportunties, not equal outcome.

  • @VitalVampyr

    @VitalVampyr

    Жыл бұрын

    The cost of living is probably much lower in your country. In the US it's common for people in poverty to spend almost 100% of their income on just housing and transportation.

  • @akshatrai9007

    @akshatrai9007

    Жыл бұрын

    In India, daily wage labourers get like $3 a day or less

  • @Zei33

    @Zei33

    Жыл бұрын

    If you live in a country where $12k a year is a good salary, then you’re probably also not spending $200-300 a week on groceries. You eat the same amount of food but pay 15x less for it.

  • @Zei33

    @Zei33

    Жыл бұрын

    @@akshatrai9007 there are many rich Indians though. Australia is chock full of wealthy Indians. My suburb is pretty much 20% Indians and 20% East Asians and it’s not a cheap suburb. If they have the skills, they just leave India.

  • @jaybee4577

    @jaybee4577

    Жыл бұрын

    That false, a poor person in the USA will have the same standard of living as a poor person from a developing country. I hate how people claim poor people in developed countries have it better than poor people in developing countries without taking into account the cost of living between these countries.

  • @thealohamu808
    @thealohamu808 Жыл бұрын

    Can we have a video on the results of UBI research experiments rather than speculation of what we think can be or could be?

  • @StuartChignell

    @StuartChignell

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem is the more recent experiments and trials were not of UBIs. They were toned down versions which the early experiments showed didn't work. Therefore all the recent experiments haven't delivered the results promised by a ubi.

  • @thealohamu808

    @thealohamu808

    Жыл бұрын

    @@StuartChignell well that was very general. Can you give specifics because the research papers I have read does not show that. Which research are you comparing. And if UBI beginning experiments did not work then why in scientific method would they keep retesting it? Even Einstein would call that insanity. How about the practice of refinement and narrowing down which variable was the factor that provided success because as a society I imagine we want a successful society where needs are met and not economical tyranny like we had with royalty and slavery.

  • @eugenenlk7174

    @eugenenlk7174

    Жыл бұрын

    The UBI should be planned in multiple countries at once. And together with implementation of 8 principles of Creative Society. Only in such case it will work well for sure.

  • @cassiecaradoc2070

    @cassiecaradoc2070

    Жыл бұрын

    My understanding is that the only thing Universal about Universal Basic Incomes is that it increases the frequency and duration of unemployment, presumably because there is less drive to get a job immediately when you've been laid off, and the barrier to exit an employment agreement (for both employer and employee, but primarily for the employee) is much lower. Basically, people are more likely to quit when they feel their job is too whatever... too stressful, too boring, too demanding, too dangerous, too not-at-home-playing-video-games, whatever. This was shown in the Indiana experiment by the department of labor, San Francisco's now several attempts at a UBI, Denmark and Sweden's attempts at something approaching a UBI, etc. The only ones that haven't had this problem, theoretically, are the Communist countries where you didn't get to "quit" your job, and even then, they had different problems... much lower worker efficiency, for example.

  • @thealohamu808

    @thealohamu808

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cassiecaradoc2070 I have not seen it increase unemployment. I have seen it increase entrepreneurship. And considering there are less than 10 nations that are communist and those nations have not done any UBI experiments, makes me go hmmmm. Since I have lived in San Francisco, I have never once seen any attempt at UBI where it is a universal Basic Income meaning there is no means test. I have seen reduce drug and alcoholism, increase health and mental health, decrease unemployment, increase entrepreneurship, decrease.suicide.

  • @hehxP
    @hehxP3 ай бұрын

    It's easy to forget that people with least money may and do actually generate costs for the society thats non neglible. The cost is probably bigger for countries with proper welfare, lesser for ones without it - but it's a cost nevertheless. I'm highly impressed how in modern times with modern tools we still tend to use simplified models that fail to catch overall pictures and are easy to manipulate. But an actual deep dive analysis is not something easy, nor probably cheap to do, that could be neatly and easilly shown with trivial iconographics. It's not a direct accusation here, as it's seen everywhere and the channel is pretty nice in bringing the topics in generall and doesnt seem too biased. I just would love to see a deeper dive than just that.

  • @caseyarmstrong7113
    @caseyarmstrong7113 Жыл бұрын

    I highly recommend reaching out to Scott Santens (One of the foremost experts on UBI), talking with him, and making a follow-up video after. It would make for much richer content with more nuance. The largest thing missing is the "social vaccine" sort of effect that UBI could have. For example, what costs would be reduced in health care if everyone had a UBI. What burdens of society are being unloaded in other places that would not even exist if there was a UBI, etc. Love your stuff. Please consider!

  • @ashwinbhat95

    @ashwinbhat95

    Жыл бұрын

    My problem with this idea is the concept of lifestyle creep. All of this is assuming that the people who get UBI now have some leeway for healthcare or emergencies cause they save up that money. But aren't they likely to just get accustomed to the new 12K/year soon enough, and just end up buying (mostly useless) stuff? And then we are back to square one again. Just my thoughts on this.

  • @caseyarmstrong7113

    @caseyarmstrong7113

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ashwinbhat95 with healthcare, I was referring more to what universal basic income studies have shown about how having a UBI prevents people from needing the medical services in the first place. If you look up an article called universal basic income as a vaccine for the 21st century, it lists the examples as well as gives an overview of the concept.

  • @broti705

    @broti705

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ashwinbhat95 I find it highly unlikely that people below the poverty line and low-income households would rather buy useless figurines instead of, well, food, education for their kids and a place to sleep in.

  • @GoldenSunAlex

    @GoldenSunAlex

    Жыл бұрын

    It wouldn't do anything. When everyone is $12,000 richer, costs just go up to match. (Or of course, you could just have free healthcare like the civilised world)

  • @intermediate212

    @intermediate212

    Жыл бұрын

    @@broti705 as someone thats worked in retail banking for 15 years, I'd say you're partially incorrect. A lot of clients who had incomes at or below the poverty line were not good with their money, and they prioritized material possessions instead of smart spending. It's very common.

  • @Banana_Split_Cream_Buns
    @Banana_Split_Cream_Buns Жыл бұрын

    I think a UBI can be great, but like a lot of proposals, the detail is what matters. A fairly cheap UBI could be coupled with Negative Income Taxation. What's interesting about a UBI is that Richard Nixon almost implemented one.

  • @theBear89451

    @theBear89451

    Жыл бұрын

    The video talks about a marginal tax rate of 100%, but fails to mention there actually are people in the US with a 100% marginal rate, when you calculate base tax along with welfare phase out. This is the double edged sword of charity, which your suggestion avoids.

  • @yeetyeet7070

    @yeetyeet7070

    Жыл бұрын

    @@theBear89451 lol, please do elaborate

  • @rightwingsafetysquad9872

    @rightwingsafetysquad9872

    Жыл бұрын

    For single mothers of 3 children receiving receiving WIC, medicaid, rent assistance, and food stamps, the total phase out of benefits as income increases is more than the income increase from about $24,000 until about $80,000 per year. That is the extreme, but that extreme includes an amazingly large number of people. There are other cases with similar negative income results, but they aren't as common or as wide of an income gulf.

  • @jokerpilled2535

    @jokerpilled2535

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rightwingsafetysquad9872 the only single mothers who deserve welfare are widows.

  • @aynrandfan7454

    @aynrandfan7454

    Жыл бұрын

    no it will never work just lead to more inflation...stop looking for handouts and work harder

  • @BrendanKOD
    @BrendanKOD Жыл бұрын

    Of course beyond the economic aspects of UBI, one of the other elements is to look through the society at all the people making not so intelligent decisions and asking "How much of that is the result of mental impairment due to excessive stress? And would removing some of the stress of trying to survive while being underpaid improve things?"

  • @ghostratsarah

    @ghostratsarah

    2 ай бұрын

    Not just mental impairment, but stunted education. They don't have the time or energy to learn about economics or efficient living. You can probably walk into the home of the average impoverished person and find their living space is a disorganized mess, because they have no idea how to clean. Their parents didn't have time to teach them and they didn't have the time or energy to teach, let alone discipline, themselves. When they try, they blow their money on "life hacks" they find in their hunt for advice, which will just lead to more clutter, less money, and self loathing. They're also less likely to understand nutrition, leadibg to then thinking it's easier and cheaper to get prepared meals and packaged foods, rather than understanding many healthy meals are quick to prepare and they can freeze ingredients without losing nutritional value- or even what nutritional value is as a concept. Those are just a couple tiny examples, but the list of handicaps stress of poverty puts on people, and how it sets children up to fail at becoming functional adults, is endless

  • @Luredreier
    @Luredreier Жыл бұрын

    6:24 Basic universal income wouldn't remove the need for other welfare systems and their bureaucracy, but it would allow said bureaucracyto operate with lower funding and fewer rules and still provide something for those that would otherwise fall between the cracks of the system, and it would make getting a application handled less urgent.

  • @bodaciouschad
    @bodaciouschad Жыл бұрын

    11:11 "for alot of wealthy people who are already paying alot of tax" No, they don't pay their taxes. They use rightoffs, tax havens and loopholes to pay next to nothing. Raising the base tax rate across the board would force them to ACTUALLY pay some amount of taxes because theres no way to come up with enough acceptably fraudulent write offs .

  • @dontmindme8709
    @dontmindme8709 Жыл бұрын

    I'm in support for some form of basic income, but know that its success would be greatly affected by its implementation and how other economic policies are formed. Thank you for highlighting some of the difficulties in such a program! It's important discussions to be had

  • @DruNature

    @DruNature

    Жыл бұрын

    me too, we need more smart people to focus on this idea to address and solve the major problems. our world needs solutions asap before we are all fucked.

  • @86Corvus

    @86Corvus

    Жыл бұрын

    Smart people already solved it decades ago, dont do it.

  • @adrienwatson2179

    @adrienwatson2179

    Жыл бұрын

    I would love UBI as well But we live in the real world We will need to raise taxes If you raise taxes, companies will leave and the economy will get smaller Tax revenue will be lowered (This is a statistical fact, not an opinion) We will then run out of money and any entitlements you have will be gone. Let them eat cake, doesnt work

  • @cancelled_user

    @cancelled_user

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adrienwatson2179 Companies need to realise it's in their own interest too if all people have enough money, so they can buy their products. They can pay more taxes because they will save a huge amount of money after they get rid of employees, thanks to automation.

  • @jabel6434

    @jabel6434

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@86Corvus, You say smart people say don't do it. But other smart people ( starting with Thomas Paine onwards to Yanis Varoufakis say that it is a necessity in a fully developed economic democracy. Start with economic realities and do some independent thinking: Economic activity by people all the wealth that people in society need. this continuously generated wealth in the best way is the next phase. Careful or shoddy thinking here determines whether our understanding is sound or faulty. Running to "experts" instead thinking things out for ourselves is one reason why there is such confusion when basic income is being discussed. Economics is the simplest of the social sciences and it's sound principles can be understood by any interested person of average education. And a good society needs an economically literate population.

  • @T33K3SS3LCH3N
    @T33K3SS3LCH3N Жыл бұрын

    This leaves out a large number of important considerations: 1. Tax flight - there is plenty of research on this and we have a pretty good idea of how it scales. While it lowers the expected income of larger tax raises on top earners somewhat, it still leaves plenty of net gain up to around 70% top tax rate. 2. Further cost savings resulting from UBI. Especially factors like public health, crime, and education greatly benefit from financial safety. The whole country becomes more efficient, beyond the immediate benefit of saving on the (often excessively large and expensive) means-testing bureaucracy. 3. The far more complicated nature of inflation, which more often does not behave according to the simplified ideal of "supply and demand of money". In reality it is more often driven by other external influences, such as the Ukraine war, or driven by financial decisions of the wealthy far moreso than by the finances of low income earners. Industries that cater to low incomes are also extremely price competitive and tend to have far lower inflation, so general inflation figures represent its dynamics very poorly - unless it is influenced by external factors like the labour and shipping situation during Covid or the supply issues caused by the Russian invasion.

  • @mjk9388
    @mjk9388 Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic job on this video. Very well thought out and very well balanced. Kudos for tackling a difficult job and covering most (if not all) the angles.

  • @rileynicholson2322

    @rileynicholson2322

    10 ай бұрын

    How is it balanced to discuss all the negatives of a program without discussing any of the positive or any of the empirical evidence from the numerous experiments that have been done on the subject. Aside from "Government spending is inflationary" and "Taxes call the boogeyman of capital flight" there was nothing of substance presented in this video.

  • @madmike159
    @madmike159 Жыл бұрын

    There is another economic effect I've wondered about with UBI that I've not seen discussed much. The pandemic highlighted that there are minimum wage jobs that are crucial to society. They are minimum wage because of the lack of “qualifications” needed. If people no longer had to work to avoid going hungry/becoming homeless, we could see jobs that society can’t go without that aren’t the most fun/pleasant (e.g. rubbish collection) start to become better paid. As a software engineer I’ve never had to put up with bad work environments or bosses if I don’t want to. I don’t know about the economic effects, but the social effects of everyone having more of an option to leave a bad job could see major improvements to pay and conditions for a lot of people.

  • @edumazieri

    @edumazieri

    Жыл бұрын

    That's a really good one. Taking the desperation out of the equation, "unpleasant jobs" might need to offer more than "pleasant jobs". There can be a lot of debate on whether that's a good or bad thing (why be a doctor if I can just collect rubbish?), but it does seem fair to properly reward jobs that can be physically and psychologically demanding.

  • @markaberer

    @markaberer

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly what I was thinking about!

  • @bengoacher4455

    @bengoacher4455

    Жыл бұрын

    Most of the low income jobs that are "critical" don't generate enough economic output to be anything more than minimum wage jobs. For example delivery drivers. How much premium are people prepared to pay for delivery? Take away the cost of vans, warehouses, fuel, taxes and other expenditure. The result is how much a delivery driver is worth. It may be deemed essential for people who have no choice but to get delivery, the old and inform, the people who work long hours and have no time to go shopping. But if they have a value of 50c per delivery, and they can only manage one delivery every 5 minutes that's $6 an hour in value. So either things must get more expensive generally to pay for them to have more money, which makes their additional money go less far. Or delivery must get more expensive which will disproportionately hit those who have no option to pay. You could try a UBI which gives everyone more money to pay for the more expensive things and thus allow everyone to get delivery and the delivery drivers get a "fair" salary. Or you could specifically target those who have no choice through illness, or childcare or work commitments and give them extra funds to cover the premium of delivery. Alternatively, you could do nothing and force delivery companies to innovate with their logistics to get more deliveries in a certain timeframe, reduce fixed overheads like fuel and truck maintenance etc, giving more money to the drivers.

  • @E3ECO

    @E3ECO

    Жыл бұрын

    That might be a problem if the UBI was large enough to live on, but it seems to be proposed more as a supplement. An unqualified person is still an unqualified person. If the only job he can get is garbage collector, the UBI might make his life more comfortable, but he still wouldn't be able to get a better job.

  • @XDarkGreyX

    @XDarkGreyX

    Жыл бұрын

    "Bullshit Jobs" by David Graeber, for example, does bring up the paradoxical status of low skill professions and jobs that are crucial to society yet paid close to nothing, doesn't it. I am also of the opinion that, aside from the group of people who really don't feel like working because of the UBI, the majority would do so in some way nonetheless, and the decreased personal impact of those low incomes wages could very well improve the status of said jobs on top of making them much less of a pit to work in. Some folks could also get creative by choosing to live in poverty, so to speak, to save a larger portion of the UBI and bet on making it big some time in the future with those savings. In general, though, having none or close to no troubles due to a lack of income and getting to work one's body and brain in an environment that is not shitty while making even more varying amounts of money... that is the dream. Btw, I am a junior web developer.

  • @simonyu8838
    @simonyu8838 Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact: My home state passed a "Millionaire's tax" during the Financial Crisis years. After its passage, the state collected less tax from those intended targets than it had in prior years. Some of that was due to the crisis making some people no longer in the income bracket the tax was aimed at, but a lot was due to those people just moving or changing their state of residence. Additionally, there were some taxes proposed/passed on certain services designed to get money mostly from the upper middle income class and above but my home county, an extremely blue county normally happy to support tax increases to fund government programs and services, is the wealthiest in the state and suddenly started protesting new taxes vehemently as its population and representatives realized the "wealthy" in the state was no longer some nebulous other but themselves

  • @jasonkoroma4323

    @jasonkoroma4323

    Жыл бұрын

    So basically rules for thee and not for me. And people wonder why government support is at all time lows.

  • @guitarguync

    @guitarguync

    Жыл бұрын

    Great example! Could be said about virtually every political issue, it's easy to support something until it affects you directly.

  • @cyzcyt

    @cyzcyt

    Жыл бұрын

    When the rich dunno they are rich. Lol

  • @Ushio01

    @Ushio01

    Жыл бұрын

    Millionaires tax should only apply if you're earning that kind of money yearly not based on assets you own like homes, stocks and shares etc (selling them is not the same as being taxed on owning them). To many millionaire taxes are based on assets owned rather than straight income. Making capital gains equal to income taxes would be a simple way of doing it.

  • @rishz7857

    @rishz7857

    Жыл бұрын

    Good for those who left to preserve THEIR hard earned income. Greed, jealousy of corrupt politics drives it.

  • @johnatchason6506
    @johnatchason6506 Жыл бұрын

    I only believe in ubi IF you remove the perverse incentives. Means-testing creates the perverse incentive for people to stay below a certain income level/ remain under-employed/ work "under the table", etc. "universal" should imply everyone gets it no matter how much money they earn but that seems to get lost in the pilot programs, (and most welfare programs in general tbh) I also like the Negative Income Tax idea, as this also seems to eliminate the perverse incentive to remain unemployed/ under-employed.

  • @BillTrowbridge

    @BillTrowbridge

    Ай бұрын

    Technically, anything with means-testing is not a UBI. It doesn't qualify on universality. Negative Income Tax is nothing like UBI because it's not universal, it requires a lot of bureaucracy, and it requires filing/applying for it. There is no perverse incentive to remain unemployed/under-employed with a UBI.

  • @captquark13
    @captquark13 Жыл бұрын

    A few important points about UBI that I think this video missed: Removing overhead costs for welfare is still a good thing even if it can't offset a sudden expansion of welfare expenditures. UBI is usually floated as an idea for a country to do more for its people, not the same amount but through different means; it's intended to be a way to redistribute wealth from the incredibly wealthy to the other 99%. UBI is more resistant against means testing and legislative negligence. When the benefits are universal, it's harder for a political party to argue against stripping it away from needy people because of quibbling over "where the line is" for the welfare. If you index it to inflation/GDP, it also doesn't need to be consistently reviewed and updated to stay relevant over decades of support. As far as price of living goes, extending UBI to the state/provincial level could help make sure that people receive equitable payouts through the program. As far as capital flight goes, a vast amount of wealth is already squirreled away into shell accounts in tax havens. There's only so much we can do to reign in tax avoidance without international action. The bottom line is that the more developed nations that adopt a UBI, the fewer options for "citizenship shopping" wealthy expats have to look for. This is an issue for all tax reform, not just UBI.

  • @asphere8
    @asphere8 Жыл бұрын

    I think it should have been mentioned that a lot of jurisdictions have tested the UBI concept on a small scale over the last fifty-some years, and in general they've been fairly successful on their short-term timescales. In Manitoba, Canada in the 1970s, a program was tested by the tory government with a control group with standard tax practice and a test group that received a basic income and a flat tax rate of 60% on every dollar over the stipend. The result was a 5% reduction in working hours, but also an increase in school test scores in children of participating families, reduced dropout rates, and increased rates of adults in post-secondary education. The expectation, had the experiment not ended, was that the long-term effect would be significantly improved education rates and earning potential.

  • @maxbraddy8003

    @maxbraddy8003

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes but these small scale UBI projects don’t have to worry about the larger effects UBI would have on an economy like tax hikes and inflation. Keeping it at a small scale keeps the figures rosier than they would be if it was nationwide

  • @AZzalor6632

    @AZzalor6632

    Жыл бұрын

    The biggest problem with most of those experiments is that they are often time limited like "we give you UBI for the next 5 or 10 years and see what changes". For an actual proper case study on what the people will do, they would have to say "you get it until the end of your life". Otherwise, they'll just take the money and prepare for when it stops. Also, those experiments don't really solve the question of how the economy itself would change with a UBI.

  • @mjkittredge

    @mjkittredge

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maxbraddy8003 you're assuming it requires tax hikes or that inflation would be inevitable. Most governments, especially the US, could simply cut wasteful spending to pay for it. Inflation, if it happens, is usually limited to certain types of products where the supply chain is weak, as we saw during the pandemic. That increased demand and extra money eventually leads to improvements in the supply chain because businesses hate leaving money on the table.

  • @akira1404

    @akira1404

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mjkittredge What 2 trillion wasteful spending are you talking about?

  • @TDMicrodork

    @TDMicrodork

    Жыл бұрын

    Wait we have a long term. One of the Indian tribes I forget which one has had a ubi since legalization of gambling and it's had the same effects. Alsaka had one for decades at this point. Not a very large one but still

  • @patrickphelps8220
    @patrickphelps8220 Жыл бұрын

    Could you look at Milton Freidman's proposed negative income tax? People often mistake it as synonymous with UBI - they are different. Would be interesting to hear your views/research in a modern context. Cheers, Patrick (I'm from NZ and we can't afford economists so I'm hoping as an educated Australian you may be able to shed some light).

  • @JewTube001

    @JewTube001

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think it is very different from UBI. What would be the main advantages it has over UBI?

  • @SulixD

    @SulixD

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JewTube001 the universality of it. In the case of negative tax ... people with high taxes still pay tax. It is just an easier way of making sure the money goes to those who need it.

  • @AChungusAmongUs

    @AChungusAmongUs

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JewTube001 Like Luis said, there is a poverty threshold. People above the threshold are taxed, people below the threshold receive the negative income tax payments. There is also earning incentive built into the NIT. If the threshold is $30k and the NIT rate is 50%, you would get $15k per year if your income was $0. If you make $15k, you would receive $7.5k. If you make $29,999, you would receive $0.50. This contrasts with how conventional welfare systems often unintentionally incentivize people not to take low paying jobs. They could end up with less money than if they had stayed at home. With the NIT, taking work always means that you take home more money at the end of the day. You could also write a work requirement into the NIT. So the advantages of NIT: - Inherent work incentive. - Not wasting payments on people who don't need it - Higher payments are possible for the people who DO need it. - More suitable as a replacement for existing entitlement programs than UBI.

  • @heartflame503

    @heartflame503

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AChungusAmongUs LOL technically its the same thing.. UBI is cheaper to implement but NIT is easier to wrap your head around :-)

  • @user-cc7vx7sw4z

    @user-cc7vx7sw4z

    Жыл бұрын

    @@heartflame503 NIT would have a lower headline cost. If the government gives everyone $12,000 it’s going to cost more than if the give everyone enough to get up to $12,000.

  • @mjk9388
    @mjk9388 Жыл бұрын

    It would be really interesting if you could cover the pros and cons of Milton Friedman's proposal of a Negative Income Tax.

  • @auto_revolt

    @auto_revolt

    Жыл бұрын

    Hasn't the last 40 years of experience debunked Friedman's policies?

  • @SerErryk

    @SerErryk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@auto_revolt No, they've supported them.

  • @auto_revolt

    @auto_revolt

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SerErryk I think you might need to re-read "capitalist and freedom" ;) Personally I think the only thing Friedman has ever said that stands today is that the military should not be privatised. Literally everything else is questionable, to the point that even the IMF has abandoned their policies like MF's.

  • @rileynicholson2322

    @rileynicholson2322

    10 ай бұрын

    UBI and NIT are essentially the same policy. EE's criticism of NIT should be exactly the same, but EE's criticisms are weak because he presents no evidence whatsoever that inflation or capital flight will be enough to counteract the numerous observed (in actual studies/experiments) and expected positive effects of UBI on either the overall economy of the jurisdiction or people with low incomes. You could literally replace UBI with the public school system, which allowed the US to become a dominant global superpower with a relatively educated workforce, in this video and you would be forced to conclude public education would somehow hurt the economy based on EE's arguments.

  • @mjk9388

    @mjk9388

    10 ай бұрын

    @@rileynicholson2322 I’m actually a big fan of the idea of UBI. While I’ve seen some studies performed that resulted in net benefits, sometimes those studies leave out whether the overall number of work hours dropped or not. But let’s assume that people worked the same number or hours or just didn’t have to carry 2 jobs, the question is how do we pay for it all? If you tax the rich, they’ll just leave. If we raise taxes on everyone, then theoretically it’d be the same amount of money going in as going out. I haven’t seen a version of UBI that can realistically pay for itself. If you have any studies though, please send them my way. Again, I’m a big fan of the idea, I just haven’t seen an action plan for implementation that gets down to the nitty gritty of who pays for what with the exception of Milton Friedman’s negative income tax idea.

  • @nemoLx
    @nemoLx Жыл бұрын

    Have you ever considered the negative income tax model proposed by Milton Friedman? Seems like the only thing that is being talked about nowadays is flat rate payments.

  • @somethinglikethat2176

    @somethinglikethat2176

    Жыл бұрын

    A couple of advantages of a falt rate payment is the low overhead and broad social support is can enjoy. Both models are better most current systems imo, and maybe using both could work in tandem.

  • @dudono1744

    @dudono1744

    Жыл бұрын

    so you would give money for earning money ? Also a reduction of low income taxes can basically be a flat payment depending on how taxes work.

  • @vicgamesvt9682

    @vicgamesvt9682

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dudono1744 No. Negative income tax is the same thing as a Guranteed Minimum Income. If the GMI is $12k and has a clawback of 10% than someone earning $0 would get the full $12k, someone earning $60k/year would recieve $6k/year. It's not literally a negative income tax.

  • @michaelspence2508

    @michaelspence2508

    Жыл бұрын

    frankly I think negative income tax deserves more attention than flat rate UBI since it's a lot more affortable and the overhead for running the system is small. How that would influence inflation and CPI is something that would require detailed analysis though.

  • @vicgamesvt9682

    @vicgamesvt9682

    Жыл бұрын

    @@michaelspence2508 also a negative income tax would still benifit the middle class if the clawback is low enough which it should be to avoid 70% tax rates on the poorest citizens.

  • @ranthria
    @ranthria Жыл бұрын

    Great video! I have a few follow-up questions: 1. In the Great Depression, the high water mark for economic armageddon, unemployment nearly reached 25%. Once general AI reaches and surpasses the level of humans, something that could quite conceivably happen this century, even conservative estimates of the unemployment (and unemployability) that would follow far outstrip that 25% figure. What would a non-UBI economic structure look like in that scenario? You mentioned a sliding scale from "let them starve" to "free money" UBI, but it's pretty clear that "let them starve" isn't a realistic solution. 2. You mentioned that even if a UBI proposal is 100% offset by tax increases, increasing the velocity of money would lead to more inflation, but isn't that a cost we as societies have to face sooner or later? After all, there are obscene amounts of wealth sitting inactive in Scrooge McDuck-like vaults (possibly an exaggeration); any effort to re-introduce those reserves to the economy would necessarily constitute either an increase in the money supply or an increase in velocity. 3. On a similar note to 2, we have many people living under the poverty line. As noted, if they received UBI, they have needs they would then spend that money on, applying upward inflationary pressure through an increase in aggregate demand. But doesn't the very fact that they have needs they're not currently able to afford to meet mean that aggregate demand is, in a way, artificially depressed? Am I missing something? 4. If (and this is a real "I don't know" if, not a rhetorical one) lifting people currently living under the poverty line out of poverty DOES necessarily exert upwards inflationary pressure, what can governments do in tandem with welfare programs and/or UBI to mitigate the damage from that inflation? 5. You used yourself as an example when discussing capital flight. I really appreciate the frank honesty in admitting you'd likely shop for alternatives; I think most people would in your situation. However, most people *aren't* making KZread videos for a living. In the corporate world, yes, work from home has gained decent traction, but it's also receiving heavy resistance from leadership structures. Further, many high income earners are entrepreneurs whose businesses are not easily relocated, let alone across international borders. This is to say nothing of the realities that international relocation brings. Sure, being a multimillionaire is great no matter where you are. But, is having $100million in Somalia better than just paying the tax and having $30million in California? I'd wager it's not for most people. So my questions are: How significant/likely is capital flight as a problem in currently wealthy nations? and What can governments or coalitions of governments do to combat/mitigate it? I appreciate any and all insight on these topics; I'll even look forward to hearing you talk more about any of them in future videos! Cheers, mate! :)

  • @sten260

    @sten260

    Жыл бұрын

    the AI only exists if it's profitable, nobody would develop AI if we didn't need to work. If we had UBI we would probably go back 100 years

  • @ranthria

    @ranthria

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sten260 But once AI is better at any given job, why would any company pay more to keep flesh and blood employees that are less effective than their AI counterparts? And once every human is unemployable, through no fault of their own, how do we structure the economy? Does it even make sense to call that kind of system an economy?

  • @jaborl

    @jaborl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ranthria general intelligence is a lot farther than you may think and most of the best models in development only do a specific task like text completion (GPT-3) or image generation (DALLE 2).

  • @ranthria

    @ranthria

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jaborl Oh I know we're really not close. But we've got 78 years left in this century, and 78 years is a really long time technologically, even before considering that the rate of advancement is generally accelerating.

  • @sten260

    @sten260

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ranthria if we ever get there, we can think about it. But currently AI can do only the most simple jobs

  • @kirstinjw.wilkinson4143
    @kirstinjw.wilkinson4143 Жыл бұрын

    Please keep in mind that no welfare system is perfect, and speaking as an American who was below the poverty line my whole life and did not qualify for all the support we needed, there are people who fall in the cracks. My family ended up with nearly $50k in credit card debt, to us clothed and fed. We did not dare get sick enough to need a doctor... at least my parents didn't. They were able to get me on Kid's Care, but that still meant the sliding scale (which was still generally more than we could afford). Because my mother was a substitute teacher working in multiple districts, they required her to provide stubs monthly to determine our eligibility for the next month... so we qualified sometimes, but the months we needed it the most, we did not qualify. I like the idea of a UBI, but we need other things with it... namely, tax incentives to businesses that provide a living wage, a ceiling on inflation levels, rent caps or relief, Universal Healthcare, Proper funding for public works.

  • @MrLanceDBrown
    @MrLanceDBrown Жыл бұрын

    UBI payment amounts should be linked to GPD so there is a feedback loop linking the payment, productivity and the number of people choosing to work. It should also ramp up slowly over 10 to 20 years to allow the economy to adjust organically

  • @adrienwatson2179

    @adrienwatson2179

    Жыл бұрын

    The end game is the same The government goes broke and takes back even what entitlement you currently have even before UBI

  • @calebromo1

    @calebromo1

    Жыл бұрын

    @Lance your right and the math backs you up. @Adrien your wrong and the math does not back up your idea.

  • @adrienwatson2179

    @adrienwatson2179

    Жыл бұрын

    @@calebromo1 Incorrect Its only been tried once and only once. Finland What happened? You obviously are unaware of the singular only relevant piece of data. Which makes me wonder why you comment with no data or math to backup your opinion?

  • @adrienwatson2179

    @adrienwatson2179

    Жыл бұрын

    @@calebromo1 Well, i wasnt 100% correct TECHNICALLY it was tried on Canada for 2 years but called CERB as opposed to UBI The result was even more extreme than the Finland experiment The resultsnt loss in government revenue was exorbitant to the point where Canada is now the worst performing Civilized Economy on the planet due to inflation, skyrocketed interwst payments and the resulting government cuts to remain solvent. Although not called UBI, the description and reasoning behind the payments checka all the UBI boxes. So i digress, 2 exampmes

  • @calebromo1

    @calebromo1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adrienwatson2179 Do more research into the math behind the economic. Quoting single points of situational attempts, is not the same as doing the math on. Your argument is using typical political logic to back your bias. I don't care about red or blues pathetic claims to economics using none repeatable data. Again, do more homework. I'm not your teacher, do your own work and check your bias at the door if you want the truth.

  • @Mr_M_History
    @Mr_M_History Жыл бұрын

    I've been waiting so long for Economics Explained to finally make a video on UBI!

  • @jackmiller1561

    @jackmiller1561

    Жыл бұрын

    When an Aussie educational king comments on another Aussie educational king!

  • @telotawa

    @telotawa

    Жыл бұрын

    still waiting for him to do lvt

  • @Michael_Chater

    @Michael_Chater

    Жыл бұрын

    I love your Aussie series

  • @yeetyeet7070

    @yeetyeet7070

    Жыл бұрын

    and the video was bad

  • @correctionguy7632

    @correctionguy7632

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yeetyeet7070 no it was a good video.

  • @Mansplainer249
    @Mansplainer249 Жыл бұрын

    Alaska has a UBI that is working out pretty well. It is not like the ones usually proposed, but I like the idea of instituting a carbon tax and dividing the proceeds up equally amongst the people that have to live with the externalities … UBI.

  • @TechDeals

    @TechDeals

    6 ай бұрын

    Alaska works because it is a tiny percentage of the people. Scale it up, tax carbon, and you're just moving money in a circle. Everything will cost more, then you get some of those higher costs back as a rebate, you end up in the same place.

  • @Mark-cd3vd

    @Mark-cd3vd

    4 ай бұрын

    carbon tax please you understand nothing of how the planet works.........look up willie soon and educate urself

  • @exploringim6191
    @exploringim6191 Жыл бұрын

    When I think of the UBI, I think of that study on how much money a person has affects their happiness. If we took the figures from that and used it as a border. So, for instance, once someone earns more than that figure, half the additions go back to the government? I feel like something like that might help, at least a little bit.

  • @sarysa
    @sarysa3 ай бұрын

    Although I'm ideologically opposed to UBI today, I understand that it makes sense the closer we get to a post-scarcity world. The entire point of an economy is to fairly distribute resources in a scarce world. If machines are mining and manufacturing and distributing far more than people actually need with far fewer people than the number of work capable adults, it would be unethical to not have UBI.

  • @greenleafyman1028
    @greenleafyman1028 Жыл бұрын

    It is worth exploring the Douglas Social Credit Theory. In this theory, the amount of National Dividend ( UBI) must not be in fixed amount to be given to the people so it is not always $1000/month but will be based on the the gap between the rate of cost/price generated and the rate of income distributed. The bigger gap, more national dividends(ubi), smaller gap, smaller national dividends(ubi) , so no gap, no dividends. This makes sense when the automation takes almost all of the jobs, the rate of income distribution will decrease therefore increasing the gap which means that more money to be given to the people to balance the purchasing power and the goods produced.

  • @maximusdecimusmeridius5438
    @maximusdecimusmeridius5438 Жыл бұрын

    UBI is a dream, the amount would be just the new zero or starting point

  • @highbrass3749

    @highbrass3749

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep. The fact that people don’t understand a basic rule of economics like supply and demand is disturbing.

  • @SaintNyx

    @SaintNyx

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep. Negative income tax makes much more sense than UBI.

  • @scifirealism5943

    @scifirealism5943

    3 ай бұрын

    No. The real political problem is it gives too much power to poor people

  • @DBArtsCreators
    @DBArtsCreators Жыл бұрын

    I'd suggest we reduce taxes first before even considering UBI. The less money taken out of your paychecks, the more money you already have (and your average low-income earner is already out almost $10k to $30k by the end of a year due to taxes).

  • @gdragonlord749
    @gdragonlord749 Жыл бұрын

    I think a combination of two things could work. One is reimplementing FDR's New Deal with modern adjustments due to it not being 1933. This will give everyone something they could do for employment and a small wage. On top of this, you implement a degrading subsidy based on current income. The closer you are to the poverty line, the less you get from the subsidy but the amount given will always make raises worth something as the regression is offset a ways from the poverty line. Some 10% above the poverty line the subsidy finally ends.

  • @burntheladder
    @burntheladder Жыл бұрын

    You covered the argument that ubi would disincentivise entrepreneurs, but one of the arguments for ubi is just the opposite. If people didn't need to work gruelling hours just to survive we would be in a much better position to start our own businesses.

  • @Arterexius

    @Arterexius

    Жыл бұрын

    I disagree. If you have a basic income that covers your expenses, you have no need to start your own business. I'm a Dane and although we do get money from the government for studying, we barely get enough to survive, so if we want to earn more, we have to take a job or get creative. With the inflation it's practically get a job or get creative, as massive debt isn't exactly alluring. Furthermore, the money that students and less fortunate citizens (such as the unemployed, elderly and handicapped) actually get from the government, isn't something everyone gets and its set at pretty much the bare minimum deliberately, in order to scare people away from choosing that option. Taking any kind of education, even the lowest paid one, will still yield twice the income of what's obtainable through welfare and most of the time, it's 3-5 times as much. And the ability to go from zero to everything, without everyone getting that tad bit extra (only those who need it the most), has enabled far more to get creative in their attempts to earn more and get a livable life, rather than scraping by. Starting and maintaining a business requires a mindset of its own, as there will be no one handing you money when running that. Wanting a UBI with the excuse of making it easier to start a business, is the wrong mindset. No one will come to you and give you anything. You have to do everything yourself, especially in the beginning, as in the first few years you will have to work all the time, in all your waking hours and never take a day off. A UBI won't make that easier either. The competition doesn't get easier with a UBI. It'll most likely get harder for those who expect someone to come and help them by injecting money into the business. That won't happen. Everything is of ones own accord and it is way, way harder, than scraping by with a 9 to 5 job.

  • @BirdTurdMemes

    @BirdTurdMemes

    Жыл бұрын

    To start a business you must work grueling hours just to survive, for a decent period of time anyways.

  • @CaseyTheBrash

    @CaseyTheBrash

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Arterexius a UBI would not stop all the real entrepreneurs. This would not stop small businesses nor medium sized businesses from being started. I mean YOU may think this way, but others do not. No one survives on 1k a month, and the fact you don't get that is what keys me in to you being out of touch on the subject.

  • @Arterexius

    @Arterexius

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CaseyTheBrash I'm not out of touch on the subject, but it's pretty clear from your comment alone, that you actually don't have a clue about how economics, capitalism and businesses work. A UBI won't benefit entrepreneurs. Especially not if you insist on making classification between "real" and "fake" entrepreneurs, as there is no such thing. You can't be a fake entrepreneur. You're either an entrepreneur or you're not. There is no middle ground in a world where you either make money or you lose money. The entire purpose of starting a business, is to make money. The entire reason a business have for existing, is to make money, regardless of how big or small it is. Throw in a UBI and you remove the reason to start anything. You have no reason to start a business to make money, when you can just take a 9 to 5 job and make whatever extra you need on top of the UBI. Entrepreneurship isn't about making new things or any of that fancy other stuff that's always mentioned. That's all just marketing. The real purpose is to make money. And to say I don't get it, is to miss the point entirely. I'm a Dane. I'm literally from a country that have a welfare system which pays a "UBI" to all the elderly and the sick who can't work, the workers who've lost their jobs, the students who's currently under education and the few who've fallen out of the education system and needs financial support until they can get either an education or a job. If that day never comes, then they'll just remain on the "UBI" But our businesses doesn't get a universal, basic income and the entire country's business owners, large and small, doesn't want it and neither does any of the entrepreneurs. They even use the same reasoning as I wrote. So now you have a problem. You gotta prove that an entire nations business owners, large and small, doesn't understand what it means to run a business. I'll be looking forward to that. As a final note, our businesses can seek loans, grands and tax cuts from the government, if they're in a rough time and needs some leverage. During the Pandemic, our government lent hundreds of businesses money throughout the pandemic, to help them stay afloat and make it through to the other side. There's no need or reason for a UBI in business. If you think so, you simply aren't thinking creatively enough.

  • @CaseyTheBrash

    @CaseyTheBrash

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Arterexius you literally refuted your own talking points. A UBI would not stop entrepreneurs. It was a false statement the first time you made it, it still remains such. The assumption you make is based on internal feelings you hold, biases you promote and subjective reasoning. Sure if all humans reacted the same way to UBI you would, maybe? You comparing any EU country to America makes me give you the side eye on your dismissive statement I know nothing about [INSERT WHATEVER YOU SAID HERE], Because quite frankly, that's laughable. Any and every single business in America takes whatever tax cut they can get. The larger you are in America the more subsidized you are by tax dollars. A UBI would just be one more tax break for them and they would take it. So yeah, forgive me if I ignore 90% of your apples to oranges comparison. I still stand by what I say, the money involved is not enough to dissuade people who would have the drive to enough to found their own businIss. It's absurd to even suggest it. In fact, it would present greater opportunities to people less fortunate. If basic needs are accounted for risk aversion becomes less of an issue and people would be willing to try more ventures. You think you may understand America, but you don't. Our "capitalist" system does more to hold us back than promote us. Side note, right wing people in countries that promote leftist ideals preaching American propaganda to Americans is weird. Let's not.

  • @IslandHermit
    @IslandHermit Жыл бұрын

    The fear of high-earners fleeing the country due to higher taxes is overblown. Up until 1981 the US's top marginal tax rate was 70% and the rich didn't flee the country. This is because they value other things more, such as good roads, stable politics, access to high quality services, decent policing, etc. And a wealth tax which was heavily based on property would avoid much of the concern about flight of the wealthy. A property mogul who owns a dozen office buildings in downtown Manhattan may flee the country but he won't be able to take those buildings with him: they could still be taxed. The cost of UBI is also somewhat misrepresented. Yes, giving $1,000 a month to every adult in the US would cost $2.2 trillion, but that money would be taxed back from the rich and middle classes. If we assume that only a third of Americans are poor enough to see a net benefit that would give a cost closer to $700 billion, which isn't all that far off from the $500 billion that the US already spends on welfare. There are also some countervailing effects which work in UBI's favor. For example, if high earners decide to leave the country to avoid higher taxes then much of their spending would also leave the country helping to counteract any inflationary pressures brought on by the UBI. Countries with significantly lower taxes also tend to be significantly poorer and spreading high earners among those poorer countries would help to address global inequality, though that might be cold comfort for the country they left. Finally, UBI might encourage more people who are currently on welfare to seek employment since they won't risk losing it the way that they do with welfare benefits. Does all of this make UBI feasible? I don't know, but I'm sure there will be plenty of studies in the future for us to chew over.

  • @EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts

    @EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts

    Жыл бұрын

    Low tax countries are poorer? Anddora and Lichtenstein would disagree.

  • @IslandHermit

    @IslandHermit

    Жыл бұрын

    @@EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts You must have missed the part where I said "tend to be", indicating that this is a general trend for which some exceptions may exist.

  • @thejustifier6602

    @thejustifier6602

    Жыл бұрын

    Most wealthy Americans in those days of 70 percent taxes never actually paid that amount. Income taxes were lowered in the 80s and got rid of the loopholes and tax shelters that went with the high percentage.

  • @samfrostinjapan
    @samfrostinjapanАй бұрын

    UBI itself is an amazingly good idea for resolving the biggest problems in modern society right now. Simplifying taxation to a flat % allows for simple and elegant solutions. Giving a flat amount of money to each person would effectively make the % taxation higher for high incomes, lower for people of moderate incomes and negative for low incomes. Also you should absolutely include under 18 in UBI, those are literally the primary people that need financial assistance. As for the 70% taxation and such, I don't see it being much more than just spiteful stupidity. If you earn more you pay more without increasing the percentage taken. By making complicated tax laws you encourage bad actors to utilize loopholes to optimize their personal benefits, such as distributing that income within their family or other underhanded ways to make it appear as if their income is lower. This only serves to hurt the competitive advantage of people who play by the rules as intended.

  • @AsbestosMuffins
    @AsbestosMuffins Жыл бұрын

    part of UBI is you're going to get rid of most of your individual social programs, which would at least make it more efficient to get money to the people who are already on or should be on these programs, but since you're expanding the pools to everybody the overall cost goes up

  • @davidlemmon4603

    @davidlemmon4603

    3 ай бұрын

    This is NOT true.. The libs want UBI to be inlcuded with all of the others free welfare handouts.. People will literally have enough handouts to never have to work.. They can just lay around and smoke pot and opine on their love of Che Guevara and other murderous socialists.

  • @randomthoughts6625
    @randomthoughts6625 Жыл бұрын

    You need a transition time between ubi and how things are normally done. Per year you increase monthly ubi 100$ so in 10 to 13 year you get full ubi

  • @quintessenceSL

    @quintessenceSL

    Жыл бұрын

    I always thought UBI should be a percentage of GDP. Higher GDP, UBI goes up. Lower GDP... You need negative feedback loops and self-correcting mechanisms to mitigate the problems with UBI (and there are problems). The question is if the benefits exceed the costs, which makes implementation key.

  • @randomthoughts6625

    @randomthoughts6625

    Жыл бұрын

    @@quintessenceSL I agree I think it could be easily one 5th of the gdp per capita. In USA it would be around 1100$ per month. But of course he is right doing this immediately causes inflation

  • @quintessenceSL

    @quintessenceSL

    Жыл бұрын

    @@randomthoughts6625 I don't know if I agree with the inflation argument per se. One of the arguments given in defense of UBI is since it isn't earmarked, inflation is spread out against all markets, since everyone has a chance at receiving those money dollars. Also, if there is inflation, how much? The doomsday scenario is that any welfare will immediately lead to Zimbabwe, but that's hard to quantify against existing welfare spending (and if inflation is less than overhead, you've saved money), nevermind any UBI would have to be phased in anyway to give governments time to adjust, let alone markets. There was an economist comparing UBI against traditional means tested welfare, asking what are the affects. He points out, they are essentially the same, the only real difference is where the accounting occurs (before getting benefits or after), but you've streamlined the process with UBI, saving hundreds of millions.

  • @randomthoughts6625

    @randomthoughts6625

    Жыл бұрын

    @@quintessenceSL no I am pretty sure it would lead to inflation. After all from one day to another the lowest income bracket will have substantially more money. But of course this should not be the final word on this topic. After all you can start with ubi of 100$ till you reach 1000$ after 5 to 10 years with almost zero inflation impact

  • @thejquinn

    @thejquinn

    Жыл бұрын

    "Transition times" is to water down good legislation, and keep those at the bottom oppressed.

  • @liasonlee1248
    @liasonlee1248 Жыл бұрын

    Big bosses of corporations calling their prices on the products they didn't even produce is what destroying social security, inflating prices as they think that they could pocket a lot more cash is going to make poverty in societies even worse.

  • @KevinLyda
    @KevinLyda Жыл бұрын

    Markets, left to their own devices, follow a power law. Lots of money accumulate with a few. That's not ideal for loads of reasons. It puts a lot of power in the hands of a few, it puts a few people in gatekeeper positions for larger commercial/communal ideas, etc. A UBI counteracts the power law. It moves money from the few to those with less. It moves power through society. It allows more ideas to get funded and grow. It accelerates progress.

  • @cstephen98
    @cstephen98 Жыл бұрын

    Funny thing is, with a $1000/month UBI payment, workers in the US and Canada would still only be making about half what their parents or grandparents were making back in the 70's before tax policies changed, diverting 100% of productivity increases to the people at the top while clawing back workers saleries, benifits and social programs.

  • @TheTexasorbusted
    @TheTexasorbusted Жыл бұрын

    We kind of had a natural UBI experiment during covid. Most people ended up using their extra money on paying down their debts/credit cards/student loans/etc. That kind of shows us what would have a bigger positive impact on the most people...Cancel people's debts and do a jubilee. Constant debt hanging around people's necks is what prevents early family development. How can people afford children? A world without children is a world without a future.

  • @mf--

    @mf--

    Жыл бұрын

    The correlated inflation means that the 1200 probably has not benefited them. Their rent probably increase by more than 1200 dollars this year and now they do not receive it. I hope it works but I suspect it would mean rent increases to keep homeless from finding housing and the hungry to pay more for basic foods.

  • @willy4170

    @willy4170

    Жыл бұрын

    But that would make access to credit much more difficult, how someone would lend any money knowing that their credit could be canceled at any moment?

  • @Bash70

    @Bash70

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@mf-- Monetary policy has little to no effect on cost of housing, I don't understand why people always bring up monetary inflation when talking about home costs when it's obviously shown time and time again housing cost continuously spike no matter what the inflation rate is. Housing costs are primarily influenced by supply and that supply has always been kept low due to NIMBY landlords influencing zoning policies to artificially inflate their property values. Monetary inflation is just a distraction to ween attention off from the very perpetrators of the problem.

  • @ignaciosenmartin3095

    @ignaciosenmartin3095

    Жыл бұрын

    Isnt that like transfering individuals' debt to the goverment (which in turn is fininced by all of us)?

  • @Vid_Master

    @Vid_Master

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep, and then only reckless / misinformed / stupid people are having kids now. I think thats what the elites want

  • @monsieur1936
    @monsieur1936 Жыл бұрын

    Can you also make a video about the other type of UBI? Universal Basic Insurance, especially from the perspective of a developing country.

  • @sprinkle61

    @sprinkle61

    Жыл бұрын

    So, just like Medicare For All ?

  • @samsawesomeminecraft

    @samsawesomeminecraft

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sprinkle61 fire/homeowners/renters insurance, etc. as well

  • @rightwingsafetysquad9872

    @rightwingsafetysquad9872

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm interested, but it sounds like a massive moral hazard.

  • @monsieur1936

    @monsieur1936

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rightwingsafetysquad9872 still less of a moral hazard than bailing out corporations.

  • @monsieur1936

    @monsieur1936

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sprinkle61 I mean general (life, health, disaster, agriculture, etc) insurance. An insurance which will have a safety net for those who face adverse situations in their life. Corporations can still provide their own insurance schemes as this UBI would cover only the basic level and people will be more than willing to pay more for added security (provided if they have money).

  • @EnriqueTDL
    @EnriqueTDL11 ай бұрын

    Great video on unpacking this subject. It's hard to find level-headed conversations about this and I appreciate the take.

  • @Jim54_
    @Jim54_ Жыл бұрын

    UBI will likely become possible through the increasing automation of labour over the next few decades. By taxing the labour of machines and AI, a lot of money would likely become available UBI should be structured based on your qualifications though. That way we can continue to incentivise education

  • @CattyRayheart
    @CattyRayheart Жыл бұрын

    One of the benefits of UBI that doesn't get enough attention in these discussions is what it would do to the balance of power between employees and employers. On the radical end it's much easier to go in strike if you still get a trickle of income, but on the less radical end it allows people to negotiate for better wages, or when looking for a job to be more choosy about which one they take, leading to better matches and better productivity. Also from the employers side, the laziest prospective employees will choose to live of the UBI perhaps supplemented with family support or something, which means the pool of employees becomes a lot better, making hiring less difficult and stressful on both sides. And I have done both and it sucks to have to hire someone. It also sucks to go through the interview process.

  • @scifirealism5943

    @scifirealism5943

    5 ай бұрын

    Your first point mentioned why nixon family assistance plan failed. I have a law of economics of my own: poor people won't work for slave wages if they have government benefits.

  • @Verthias
    @Verthias Жыл бұрын

    If we ever get to the point of needing a UBI it will be past the point of job lotteries when a significant amount of industry is fully automated and people can't easily find work. It will be much easier to implement a UBI in a command economy where the government has a significant control over what is being produced and can set prices of goods. Otherwise, companies will take advantage of a UBI by raising prices to meet demand. A UBI has a disadvantage of making money less scarce and therefore less valuable.

  • @Doazon
    @Doazon3 ай бұрын

    There's a number which bugs me in this. It's that the US would only spend .5tr $ in "welfare". A UBI wouldn't only replace welfare expenditure. It would replace any form of direct gov payouts and subsidies up to the value of the UBI as well. Meaning most social security and many forms of tax breaks as well. UBI doesn't mean slap a handout ontop of the current system - it means a fairly comprehensive overhaul of social security, welfare and tax system, reducing bureaucracy across the board and reducing the need to use taxation as a bludgeoning tool on the economy.

  • @superkingoftacos2920
    @superkingoftacos2920 Жыл бұрын

    It would have to either change how people are taxed or be targeted guaranteed basic income. It would also be best implemented alongside legislation that revolutionizes how we treat the housing market. Either introducing enough public housing for cheap as to adequately compete with rentals or introducing strict rental price restrictions and easing zoning restrictions to allow better low income housing options.

  • @TheFinalChapters
    @TheFinalChapters Жыл бұрын

    11:00 The solution really isn't that complicated. You do business in the country, you pay taxes to that country. Beef up the IRS to make sure companies don't shuffle their income to "friendly" countries.

  • @theBear89451

    @theBear89451

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not that simple. Products are made in multiple countries. There is no objective way to determine how much profit of a product came from each country.

  • @TheFinalChapters

    @TheFinalChapters

    Жыл бұрын

    @@theBear89451 You take a material out of the country, you pay a tax on it. You sell a product in a country, you pay a tax on it. And I'm not talking about that 6% sales tax some states have.

  • @wertywerrtyson5529
    @wertywerrtyson5529 Жыл бұрын

    You didn’t really mention one of the best things about a UBI replacing current welfare and that is that it doesn’t incentivise people to stay poor. Currently if you get a job then you will lose your benefits but if you have your UBI no matter what then you can take any kind of job and it isn’t just the money the bureaucracy costs that you save but also the time the people on welfare have to spend to apply for it and proof needed to keep getting it etc. I agree that a UBI in addition to the costs we have now isn’t a good thing but replacing traditional welfare would work. Certain individuals can still apply for more if absolutely necessary but saying that cost of living in your region is too expensive isn’t an excuse since you can move anywhere and still get the UBI. There also would be no need for a minimum wage as people have the basics covered. Businesses would only need to pay enough to make it worth working.

  • @Diabolic_
    @Diabolic_ Жыл бұрын

    The reason why many people would like and support the idea of a universal basic income is that most people agree that a basic human dignity should be granted to everyone and that everyone should have the opportunity to live their life freely with lots of options instead of being forced to work in low-wage jobs just to survive. Thus, my very simple and direct idea as a counter argument to the inflation problem you raised regarding the UBI, is to just make the basic needs of everyone as close to free as possible, while also giving incentives to be productive. If everyone had a simple home (maybe 30-60 m² for single households?) available if they needed or wanted it (without huge amounts of bureaucracy and income or property proof) as well as free healthy food and water (luxurious food would not be included, like alcohol, caviar and a lot that isn't basic), I believe it would be just as good as a UBI. It would be good enough to live in such a small apartment for quite a few years, but not good enough that you would want to stay there if you had the opportunity to move into a bigger/better apartment or house in a better location. If those free apartments then also had different classes (worst to best) which you would get based on (your) need and service (you bring to the country), I believe it might be possible to create a system where not everyone takes advantage of free housing (you would have to actually live there to have one) and people do their best to move into their own housing once they can afford one, despite the free housing not being terrible. This idea is a bit idealistic and still has many problems that need to be solved when implemented in real life, but I believe this has a greater potential than UBI.

  • @ChaoticNeutralMatt
    @ChaoticNeutralMatt11 ай бұрын

    The world always needs more discussion on topics imo. Just "discussion" and not random off the cuff thoughts. My one issue with the flat payment is location living costs. It really needs to be tailored in some way.

  • @AWest-ns3dl
    @AWest-ns3dl Жыл бұрын

    TLDR; UBI should not be rejected as a thought experiment. Farming subsidies have demonstrated the effects on a large economy, and cash in hand aid has demonstrated the genuine benefits to individuals. Basic Payment Scheme, The EU's Basic Payment Scheme (aka SFP, then SPS, now BPS) is essentially a UBI for the agricultural economy. BPS has significantly reduced food prices by boosting the agricultural outputs of Europe. BPS has been particularly effective towards reducing the cost of ruminant meats. Research has also suggested the capital provided by BPS has reduced costs of several agricultural inputs by stabling markets. An example of the stabilisation was storage of fertilisers, and purchase histories of machinery. Direct Aid, There is many examples of Direct Aid (giving individuals money, instead of top-down aid) being much more successful for helping communities break out of poverty. Inflation, There evidence shown from both these examples shows, yes there is inflation, but it is a spike that stabilised after a short period. SFP tended to be implemented over 5 years, in the UK this was for ~10% subsidy of the economy. Capital Flight, Capital flight is way over blow, and you agree. A UBI would bring quality of life up for all, reducing social friction (increasing the feeling of safety and pleasance of public spaces). A UBI would also diversify markets (through the same stabilisation seen in the last 15 years of EU agriculture). I'm sure we can see how this increases the desire to stay in a state with higher taxes. Cost of UBI, It's expensive, and most states could only pay for pandemic bailouts because everyone was doing it. But freeing up labour markets would be huge in our overemployment age. A decade of research has debunked much of these arguments against UBI. And we can always say "more research is required".

  • @qqqchn3753
    @qqqchn3753 Жыл бұрын

    I think one of the things missing from inflation discussions is always the assumption that supply is constrained... Companies produce based on their forecasts of demand. They know short term stimulus won't last and so won't increase production which takes time and money to ramp up. Indeed they'll even scale back production to reduce risk during uncertain times. They'd much rather just ride the wave of temporary higher prices until "normalcy" returns. On the flip side, if the new "normal" becomes higher demand long term then it becomes a competitive necessity to produce more otherwise they will simply lose market share to competitors.

  • @David13ushey

    @David13ushey

    Жыл бұрын

    Supply is constrained by reality if nothing else. We have 1 earth worth of matter to work with and it is not distributed uniformly. Take us off earth and start constructing hundred kilometer orbital habitats with ideal conditions and cheap energy and maybe we'll have unconstrained supply. It's a big universe out there, after all.

  • @JamielDeAbrew

    @JamielDeAbrew

    Жыл бұрын

    Supply is constrained by land, materials, labour etc… That said low income workers spend money on things that have fewer supply constraints (if there is time to ramp up). Wealthy spend on investments like shares and land that are very constrained. And also on items that have less efficient creation eg * custom art * custom houses (where the design costs aren’t spread across many houses) * rarer cars * etc…

  • @julianlaywine7453

    @julianlaywine7453

    Жыл бұрын

    The flip side may be that demand is currently depressed for essentials like food and shelter simply because many people can’t afford them. Giving people what they need will require expansion of supply in these areas no matter how you slice it.

  • @qqqchn3753

    @qqqchn3753

    Жыл бұрын

    In the developed world, most consumer goods are demand constrained. For example, companies won't bake more bread or build more IC cars because they do not forecast enough demand to make increased production profitable, not because there is an input constraint. Few consumer goods are truly supply constrained in the sense that we physically can't produce enough to meet demand (examples could be EV car batteries or advanced silicon chips). From what I've seen the inflation discussion around UBI tends to ignore this and just assume more money = more demand = inflation in perpetuity, whereas I think most consumer goods would probably see supply ramp up to meet the demand and over time achieve equilibrium again, but with overall higher economic output from the production ramp.

  • @devluz

    @devluz

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@JamielDeAbrew Land is about the only thing that is constrained. For materials and labour there is plenty of room to innovate through automation and more efficient production. This will only happen we are actually hit a supply shortage. So far demand is just not high enough and none of these things are actually constrained. I suspect with UBI we see prices go up until the economy rebalances. Only land / house prices and any resources whose supply are inherently fixed (like gold) might see a permanent increase in value.

  • @abexoxo
    @abexoxo6 ай бұрын

    well-made, thorough-researched and fair video. Thank you!

  • @PhoenixianThe
    @PhoenixianThe Жыл бұрын

    One point I've seen before about the cost of a UBI (In The Conversation's article _Universal Basic Income Costs Far Less Than You Think)_ is that it isn't quite as expensive as it looks because UBI can be better likened to a waterwheel powered pump, or (if we liken an money in an economy to the flow of energy in a living body) a beating heart than a project with a straightforward cost. Money, water, and blood flow through each of these, respectively, but each kind of pump only consumes a portion of what it moves. If, for instance, someone pays more in tax than they receive in UBI, then effectively, that program is just a government rebate on their taxes, parceled out over the course of the year, while someone in the middle is at least somewhat ameliorating the costs. Looked at in this way the cost drops to something like a sixth of what it was before. It's still in the mid hundreds of billions in a lot of cases, mind, but that's also still far short of the trillions first glance would suggest, and well in line with traditional big ticket items like defense spending or other welfare programs.

  • @Halollet
    @Halollet Жыл бұрын

    Some added benefits from adding a UBI that you missed. It won't just negate the cost of the bureaucracy behind it. This will replace things like food stamps and support for the homeless which is already billions. It also raises the floor of society since it does not replace things like Welfare and Disability. $1,000 a month plus Welfare should be enough for a person to rent a room in a house. Usually, it actually costs taxpayers more more to support a homeless person being homeless through support programs and temporary housing that doesn't actually improve their situation, than it is to give them welfare + $1,000. It's up to welfare for that region to cover any variable cost of living which you mentioned. (Yes I acknowledge there are some people that need mental health care in order to get off the street, but that $1,000 could go towards getting them that help.) Not only will this pretty much end homelessness, much like how they're doing so in Europe, it also prevents people from being a wage slave. Why would someone allow their bosses to abuse them if they had the financial ability to just quit their job and they would be okay until they found another one? We wouldn't need to raise minimum wage if the workers suddenly had negotiating power. I should mention that living like this would be like living in quarantine, so most people would go stir crazy and would push to do something with their lives if you were worried about creating a multitude of lazy leeches in the system. There are, and always will be leeches, to assume that there aren't now is just silly. Those leeches would still be putting that $1,000 back into the economy which is still better than giving it to billionaires as they will not spend it. That $1,000 can also cover the cost of child care or transportation so people could get to work in the first place. Yes, there are lots of people who are too poor to work. Long term, this would also help health care costs as healthier food is more expensive than junk food, take a bottle of water and a can of pop for example. Being able to afford better food means a healthier life, which translates to less health problems down the line. If all of these people are suddenly able to become employed, then the tax from their income will go back into funding the program. The cost of a UBI would be going down every year, unless there's another pandemic, but then the government wouldn't have to worry about supporting their citizens that can't go to to work. As for how the rich would use it, you were right that they probably wouldn't even notice. There's essentially a point in income rates where they would get that 12k a year but then just be taxed an extra 12k. They get the interest rate from it from their bank but that's it. As for inflation, well, it's already at 11% without this, so obviously there's more problems with inflation then investing in the lower class of society. I also like to think of a UBI as trickle up economics as one way we could also pay for this is to stop supplementing businesses from the government. Instead of just giving these corporations bailout money, they give all the people their bailout money and they have to fight for it on the free market just like everyone else. As you can see, from a capitalist point of view, they probably hate this idea because it takes so much power and wealth away from them. Therefore, I firmly believe that lobbyists are pushing against a UBI, because it makes it so they are unable to exploit the working class in many different ways.

  • @user-zi7oy5op9k

    @user-zi7oy5op9k

    Жыл бұрын

    👍👍 Thanks for watching Let's talk now 🔝🔝

  • @scifirealism5943

    @scifirealism5943

    5 ай бұрын

    Wow

  • @Je.rone_
    @Je.rone_ Жыл бұрын

    8:00 in the USA, if someone sells their company for a lot of money let’s say millions or more, depending on a variety of factors they’d probably pay 23.8% or 20% on all or most of that capital gain as opposed to 15%.

  • @damonguzman
    @damonguzmanАй бұрын

    People will absolutely not start a company because of the taxes. An an entrepreneur, it’s already so much risk and so expensive already. The only reason I do it at all, is the outsized returns.

  • @jish55
    @jish55 Жыл бұрын

    1) the stimulus checks for people was not the cause of inflation (contrary to what those in power cry out), you can thank businesses for deciding to jack up the prices and then BRAG about record profits over the last few years, which in turn means that it was profits to businesses that led to massive inflation. 2) It won't matter what you say once automation displaces over half the world population and makes work essentially impossible for them.

  • @danielchao8484
    @danielchao8484 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. Huge fan of EE! Sometimes I ply episodes that relate to topics I am teaching in my High School Business classes. Thank you for the Content!

  • @thomaspowell2043

    @thomaspowell2043

    Жыл бұрын

    I hope you give your students the opportunity to hear views from less free-market economists as well.

  • @ZentaBon

    @ZentaBon

    Жыл бұрын

    Please consider the fact he is very narrowly focused in his videos ignoring things like existing successful UBI tests in favor of his viewpoint.

  • @mixerD1-

    @mixerD1-

    Жыл бұрын

    He doesn't write these himself...other people write them and he's paid to narrate them.😂😂

  • @_Wombat

    @_Wombat

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ZentaBon I feel like UBI tests will never be successful because you have to apply the idea at massive scale before you can measure the effects - no?

  • @Willsmiff1985

    @Willsmiff1985

    Жыл бұрын

    @@_Wombat Very true, however perhaps the better way for EE to approach this would be to mention the studies as well as their shortcomings in order to be thorough?

  • @wilfredpeake9987
    @wilfredpeake9987 Жыл бұрын

    One thing most people don't talk about when it comes to the ubi is that more people can take out larger debts at lower costs. If a government garuntees ur income any Banker will be crazy not to give u that loan and they will just take part or all of the ubi to pay it off over years. It will single handedly destroy the predatory debt industry.

  • @JewTube001

    @JewTube001

    Жыл бұрын

    kind of moot if it causes inflation, because lenders are looking at your ability repay debt, if cost of subsistence goes up then that's just subsistence money and you need more than that to pay back debts. be nice UBI did lead to higher production and entrepreneurialism but we're not sure if it would do that.

  • @wilfredpeake9987

    @wilfredpeake9987

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JewTube001 inflation is not only determined by the supply of money but also the velocity. Let's say a bank gives you a 5 year loan backed by ubi payments. Since it's backed the interest is likely low and u get almost 5 years of subsidence upfront and since the ubi u are getting from the government is being used to pay off the debt velocity and supply will decrease.

  • @mrapyro
    @mrapyro Жыл бұрын

    Well I guess if I find these videos entertaining/ interesting. Then I'm officially an adult lol. On my 5th one in a row. Been listening to them while working today. Suppose I should subscribe now. Keep up the good work, love the quality of the videos. Well, the audio aspect that is. Hard to watch a video with your screen off.

  • @TryHard__88
    @TryHard__884 күн бұрын

    We need this just like Covid. People need a basic income. Everyone willing. 🤞🏽 this is what we need. It’s Revolutionary.

  • @simonreverb
    @simonreverb Жыл бұрын

    We have to make the change from a consumer society to a needs society. We have to do this together. And we will all feel better after. The Universal Basic Income is one step in the right direction to end poverty. An other thing is a Health Insurance for everybody and Studying has to be free for everybody.

  • @gmmg8734
    @gmmg8734 Жыл бұрын

    It wouldn't even need to be 1000$ a month due to inflation concerns, cost ect. I'd imagine even 100$ or something as low as 50$ a month as a beta test could be implemented and then going from there.

  • @user-zi7oy5op9k

    @user-zi7oy5op9k

    Жыл бұрын

    ✍️☝️☝️✍️☝️☝️✍️.

  • @S0up3rD0up3r99
    @S0up3rD0up3r99 Жыл бұрын

    The problem with UBI is it can be taken away by those who disagree with you.

  • @eg1525

    @eg1525

    Жыл бұрын

    its universal it wouldnt b taken away

  • @jurajo.2129

    @jurajo.2129

    Жыл бұрын

    @@eg1525 you could say that in 2019.

  • @eg1525

    @eg1525

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jurajo.2129 ok said it in 2019

  • @michaelpond813

    @michaelpond813

    Жыл бұрын

    Many folks have no healthcare. If Yu can't be healthy and need doctors then we can't get decent jobs.any need mental health care and basic ins. We also need to plan getting off benefits down the road. When we reach a basic subsistence level we can pay more taxes and pay for our own ins. The ins needs to be expanded under. A. C. A. Get a clue America we are becoming a s hole country whicheads to revolution and we don'tean trump ste take over who h benefit him and family of crooks.

  • @JewTube001

    @JewTube001

    Жыл бұрын

    you could means test anybody or just make laws to hobble people you don't like. doesn't really have anything to do with UBI as a policy. especially since U part. GMI is the one where you're suppose to exclude some people.

  • @tibfulv
    @tibfulv Жыл бұрын

    There is also the Romer and Romer(2010) study, which established that the tax level at which you maximise revenue is 33%. So the hump of the Laffer curve occurs much sooner than people used to think.

  • @kenoliver8913
    @kenoliver8913 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who in their career had to evaluate for government serious and practical UBI proposals - both for their economic effects and their administrative viability - I could easily make a comment that is much longer than this video. A UBI is both economically and financially feasible. The net loss of GDP as measured with static allocative models (some of which I built) is of the order of 2% in return for basically abolishing poverty and giving everyone more economic freedom - a big gain in aggregate wellbeing. The long run DYNAMIC effects (ie on innovation and productivity) are extremely uncertain but more likely, on a priori grounds, to be positive. And a proper BI/FT system is administratively far simpler than what have, both on the payments and tax side. But I also think the political economy, not the economic or social effects, of it is dreadful. It is not POLITICALLY sustainable because people have a deep intuition of "deserves" and wish to punish the undeserving (probably founded in evolutionary game theory). They will not tolerate "my money" going to "the undeserving", whether they consider someone undeserving because they are a billionaire, or because they are poor and being punished by God, or are a bad parent, or just because they have the wrong skin colour. They'll always find an excuse to punish - that's just what people are.

  • @sendittobrandon2012
    @sendittobrandon2012 Жыл бұрын

    I’m a hard worker my family has always worked hard to get by but that’s all it ever was to get by 1000 dollars a month sounds like I can’t quit my job but I can definitely sleep better at night

  • @kenmodenbach2403

    @kenmodenbach2403

    Жыл бұрын

    The efficiency and efficacy of a minimum income is not important; perceived fairness is. If a minimum income were instituted at the State level perhaps Clevelanders would be willing to accept taxation to pay citizens of nearby Cincinnati. Citizens of Norfolk, Virginia would never accept taxation to pay those living in far away California even though Californians pay higher taxes and produce a higher GDP. A minimum income might work in small countries (think Switzerland and Spain) and it might work at the State level. It would never work in a large county where those living a thousand miles away are considered to be “others” with incompatible values.

  • @tylersomerville313
    @tylersomerville313 Жыл бұрын

    Uploaded 2 minutes ago? As if a Friday could get any better!

  • @mr.34coffeecups67
    @mr.34coffeecups67 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for having such a nuanced discussion.

  • @Traumglanz
    @Traumglanz Жыл бұрын

    A common idea is the UBA as tax deduction which can go drive your taxation into the negatives and thus becomes a payout with the simple base at the minimum level of existence. And would be financed mainly by removing other deductibles en large.

  • @bodaciouschad
    @bodaciouschad Жыл бұрын

    14:00 "Accompanied by massive increases in spending from lower income households. Which would put strong upwards pressure on consumer prices" That would lead to more companies making more consumer products to meet the increased demand, hiring more workers and creating upwards pressure on unskilled labor, the kind that typically becomes low income earners. "Don't stop the model when it starts to deviate from the intended narrative, your bias is showing, said the contrarian to the ecconomist." Unless I'm missing something.

  • @YasinNabi
    @YasinNabi Жыл бұрын

    “Business opportunities are like buses, there’s always another one coming.” - Richard Branson. Thanks for the video :)

  • @luke_fabis

    @luke_fabis

    Жыл бұрын

    That is such a painfully European quote.

  • @anubis2814

    @anubis2814

    Жыл бұрын

    Until they cut the budget for public transportation.

  • @jokerpilled2535

    @jokerpilled2535

    Жыл бұрын

    When there are no opportunities, you take it by force - mustache man

  • @brucemiller9324

    @brucemiller9324

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder if Richard Branson has ever seen the inside of a bus.

  • @anubis2814

    @anubis2814

    Жыл бұрын

    @@narsaku1408 Wow, that has literally nothing to do with the topic. Also, "i was an atheist" tells me nothing about why you were an atheist in the first place. There are really bad reasons to be an atheist especially if you never thought it out, now you are shoving your religion into places no one cares about but from this you will get the satisfaction of being persecuted. It sounds like you are one of those people who leave tracts in place of tips. you aren't going to change one mind doing this. Just a bunch of people wishing you'd go away.

  • @tomhuiskes3045
    @tomhuiskes30453 ай бұрын

    An honest discussion about a universal basic income should probably be a multidisciplinary discussion. Only looking at it from a financial perspective is a bit hollow in my opinion. For example I've read some examples where giving poor people UBI for only a couple of years makes them use a lot less alcohol and drugs, take better care of their children, start new studies etc which while being positive for the economy in many ways also makes a country more humane and lowers stress levels (and all consequences of high stress because of not knowing if you can pay next months rent for example). One of the problems in my country with the welfare system is that there are a lot of strings attached that add a lot of stress to one of the most stressfull situations a person can find themself in, not having the money to pay for their basic needs (food, house etc). I think UBI or some form of UBI could be part of becoming a more humane society.

  • @scifirealism5943

    @scifirealism5943

    3 ай бұрын

    The real reason is poverty is a feature of USA. Conservatives oppose welfare and ubi for they destroy work incentive, by what is actually meant is the incentive of the poor to do the needed dirty work when the wage from work is smaller than the government grant

  • @ruathawylderkin2268
    @ruathawylderkin2268 Жыл бұрын

    Even after over 30 years of research into UBI, it still requires consideration from a broader vantage than existing economic theories and monetary policies. Never seen a study that shows negative results for UBI (though some studies have been wrongly interpreted that way), but the fact is that until it's done at scale, we just don't know for sure. As for inflation, oh my, so many factors. However, the percentage impact which US government checks have played on US inflation certainly seems minimal compared to supply chain issues and profit gauging. As such, I remain in convinced that inflation on a properly taxed and managed economy would immediately result in inflation. Then again, when basic nessecities like housing and food are viewed solely as markets where profit I king, then any opportunity for raising prices will be taken. It might require more 'controls' to stop runaway inflation. P.S. As someone who followed Andrew Yang's campaign with a lot of 'skeptical/hopeful interest', I think he certainly got to the point that he truly believed it was not only minimally possible but practically possible, though he always knew it was a long shot, to get UBI to happen.

  • @Je.rone_
    @Je.rone_ Жыл бұрын

    One could keep the tax brackets the same and increase effective tax rate by changing what deductions and credits are available to individuals and businesses, and increase enforcement of the tax law. Not saying i personally would be in favor of this but it’s a relevant point. An extreme example to emphasize the point is: If you raise the tax brackets to say 70% but allow people to deducted any money they spend, no one is going to actually be taxed at 70%. They’ll spend more money. And if you don’t enforce the tax law people will just say they spent the money on their return and keep the money and pray they don’t get audited which they probably won’t if audit rates are similar to what they have been the last few years.

  • @vicgamesvt9682
    @vicgamesvt9682 Жыл бұрын

    One similar proposal I have heard that is much cheaper is the minimum guranteed income. How it works is each person is entitled to a minimum income and this amount slowly phases out as your income grows. I think this could work as long as the clawback rate is less than 30%.

  • @boiledelephant

    @boiledelephant

    Жыл бұрын

    That would partially solve one big problem with the UK's welfare system, wherein if you're claiming unemployment benefits and manage to secure part-time or one-off work, they simply subtract your meagre income from your benefits, usually negating them (since the benefits are roughly equivalent to what you could scrape together doing odd jobs). This massively disincentivizes people on benefits to actually take small steps to finding work, since the choices are: stay on benefits and receive £x, or do work and receive £x.

  • @XIIchiron78

    @XIIchiron78

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ThomasVWorm a UGI is a lot more transparent and involves less overhead than sending everyone money you'll just take back later even if the net effect is the same (and the net effect is not necessarily the same due to how marginal tax rates work)

  • @XIIchiron78

    @XIIchiron78

    Жыл бұрын

    @@boiledelephant the UK already uses some bracketing/marginal withdrawal for the WTC, currently at 41% above the calculated entitlement.

  • @XIIchiron78

    @XIIchiron78

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ThomasVWorm perhaps. I was thinking more about overhead in terms of collecting, managing, and sending out a bunch of extra unnecessary money to people who would just end up paying it back (which they also have to predict and manage and save until tax day etc). But it's true that there are things to consider either way, like for example deciding what interval matters for determining each person's payment, and how they'd file for it...

  • @mikebrines5708

    @mikebrines5708

    Жыл бұрын

    With this low earning workers would just quit. The unemployed would be discouraged from getting jobs. Why bother when you get the same $ anyway? The difference between working and not isn't the money you'd make. It becomes the money you'd make minus the guaranteed income. So unless the job really paid a lot, why bother?

  • @syranth8912
    @syranth89123 ай бұрын

    The solution that has come in on the research that I haven't seen many people talk about is wage adjustments. Because everyone on the lower-earning side would have a survival budget supplied by the UBI the businesses could pay less in wages. Survival would be covered by the UBI while employment becomes a source of quality of life and luxury access. In this case, the wage expenditures go down for employers of unskilled labor for example. If an employer is supplying a full budget of $3000 per month for the employee they would then be able to pay $2000 per month under the UBI amount from the video knowing that the employee has the same buying power. The difference can now go toward other budgets within the company with the possibility of growing the value and return of the company as a whole. This would lead to more small business entities which have historically proven to improve economies and function as the "backbone" of growth and stability.

  • @TK-gd9td
    @TK-gd9td Жыл бұрын

    Whats stopping landlords and basic necessity corporations from just raising their prices to soak up all the UBI so that everyone is still paycheck to paycheck? The laws need to change to remove capital profit for basic necessities if we’re going to do UBI on large country wide or worldwide scale.

  • @Josh-oj9mm

    @Josh-oj9mm

    4 ай бұрын

    Land value tax.

  • @dingusdingus2152

    @dingusdingus2152

    3 ай бұрын

    Landlords and basic necessity corporations could be excluded from access to ubi money by making it an account like an ebt card.

  • @JonathanMaddox

    @JonathanMaddox

    3 ай бұрын

    @@dingusdingus2152 That is a silly suggestion, because the whole point of universal basic income is so that everyone can afford their universal basic necessities, including accommodation. The right answer(s) are land value tax and competition from the public sector with public housing and universal basic services. Removing "capital profit for basic necessities" is problematic if the provision of those necessities stays mainly in the private sector. Businesses (including small traders, not just massive corporations) need to be able to recoup costs and a margin if they are to stay in business, and they will find ways around most rules to prevent it. It's ok that the prices of agricultural goods should fluctuate seasonally and with the weather; letting market mechanisms determine prices isn't stupid, except in times of true scarcity, when the best solutions, terrible though they are, are rationing and legislatively fixed prices for the basics.

  • @dingusdingus2152

    @dingusdingus2152

    3 ай бұрын

    @@JonathanMaddox this land value tax you speak of, how does it work? How does it prevent landlords from jacking up the rent?

  • @ChemistTea
    @ChemistTea Жыл бұрын

    Great episode! I wish you mentioned Andrew Yang's VAT (value added tax) idea and your analysis of it as a way to pay for UBI.

  • @katm9877

    @katm9877

    Жыл бұрын

    Most countries in the world have VAT already, I was surprised to learn, from a different channel, that USA does not.

  • @carrias1
    @carrias1 Жыл бұрын

    One thing that you missed is the changes to economic efficiency caused by economic redistribution. A lot of people are effectively priced out of the job market, because they’re in a desperate position that forces them to make very short term decisions. As seen in Northern Europe, raising the baseline causes more people to have the capacity to persue advanced educations and start businesses. It also changes who is employed: students and single parents will work less, and their jobs will largely go to existing unemployed people. Also, removing gatekeeping systems removes work from both ends of those transactions: people spend a Lot of time engaging with systems trying to prevent benefit abuse, and not doing so frees up that energy and time to let those people better care for themselves and improve both their lives and their ability to contribute

  • @killerbye1985
    @killerbye1985 Жыл бұрын

    I live in South Africa where the government is floating the idea of a social grant to give to everyone. That social grant will be R350 ($20). Doesn't seem like a lot, because its not. But then you factor in that we have 60 million people, and approx 5 million tax payers. And the middle class who can emigrate are leaving in droves because of how badly this country is being run, and you end up with a realization that you could be trying to fund this very basic UBI with the taxes from an ever dwindling tax base. Utopian ideas like UBI, universal medical and universal pension only really work in a country with 80%+ of its work force paying taxes.

  • @giuliolele
    @giuliolele4 ай бұрын

    I'm convinced that UBI requires some more radical changes to be really viable, like substituting ALL taxes with an unique tax appplicated to all circulating money similar to what Gesell proposed as "expiring money", focus the government on laws and less on regulating market and others. Interesting ideas have been proposed by Giuseppe Bellia in his Anthropocracy concept, but unfortunately it is almost unknown.