💰 Universal Basic Income | Pros and Cons | UBI - YouTube

Channel: EconClips

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Have you ever wondered what it would be like to go back to the 1970s soviet country, and
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return to our times with then-popular maxim: “Down you lie or up you stand, either way
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you'll earn a grand”?
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Every citizen in our country would have full-time employment and a fixed salary regardless of
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the results of their work, and regardless of whether they would try their best or not.
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But perhaps we should go even further than that.
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Let the government pay regardless of employment status.
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From then on, you would not have to worry about your day-to-day survival.
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You could spend your time on your education and development, without sacrificing it to
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make money.
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You would not have to accept the first job offer that came your way.
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You would be able to choose the best one instead.
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Seems encouraging, does it not?
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Is it a serious solution to the problems of the modern world, or merely some socialist
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utopia?
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Perhaps we bear witness to an impending revolution triggered by an economic proposal gaining
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in popularity among experts at the Silicon Valley and politicians in the Nordic countries,
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that is the Universal Basic Income (UBI).
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Several countries have already experiment with “free money”, while governments face
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changing labor and strained welfare systems.
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Let us look closer at the definition, advantages, and disadvantages of the UBI.
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What is the Universal Basic Income?
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It is a simple idea: Let us give a subsistence minimum income for all citizens, making their
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day-to-day strife for survival a thing of the past.
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Note that the term “subsistence minimum” is by itself very unclear, with wildly varying
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levels proposed by its advocates.
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It is even referred to as the “extreme poverty line.”
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It accounts only for the needs that cannot be postponed.
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Consumption below this level leads to biological wasting and is life threatening.
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The UBI idea has been known and discussed for decades, and it has even been practiced
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temporarily.
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The UBI itself is a regular, equal, and non-returnable cash benefit that is received individually
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by all citizens regardless of their material and occupational situation.
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It is paid with public money.
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Other terms synonymous with the UBI include: state bonus, national dividend, social dividend,
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citizen’s dividend, citizen’s wage, and universal benefit.
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The idea is that the state transfers the money to everyone without any conditions at all.
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Not only the largest or the poorest families, immigrants, students, or single mothers pocket
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the money.
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Everyone does.
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You only need to breathe to get your share of the public pie.
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We have mentioned that it is not a new idea.
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It was already discussed in the 1940s in Great Britain (it was then referred to as “social
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dividend”).
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The concept was abandoned, however, in favor of the classical welfare state ideas of conditional
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transfers addressed to the poorest.
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Another opportunity for its implementation resurfaced in the United States era of Nixon
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and Carter.
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There were even bills ready to be passed, but once again they were cast-off in Congress.
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Only rich in natural resources and sparsely populated Alaska managed to implement something
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roughly similar to the UBI.
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Some classical liberals were interested as well, like Milton Friedman with his “negative
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income tax.”
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Although, he envisioned it as a way to free the nation from the burden of social spending.
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There were also some recent experiments with the UBI.
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During Finland’s two-year basic income trial which ended in 2018 some Finns were getting
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€560 a month.
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Some African countries as well as Canada’s Ontario made similar attempts.
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The latter case is, however, off the map, as the UBI proposal was abandoned after change
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of the political guard.
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The UBI turned out to be too expensive.
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Another such program was rejected by the Swiss people in a referendum.
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The Italian government will implement basic income as high as €780 per person and up
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to €1,330 per family in April 2019, and a trial run will be launched in Germany a
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month later to check how the UBI affects some of its citizens.
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German government is currently recruiting, expecting to select 500 volunteers for the
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study.
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Notice that conditions tried in these experiments are different than those of the real UBI.
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People adapt when they are told: “We will give you free money for a year to try it out.”
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Aware that there is a time-limit for the money, they are inclined to keep some other sources
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of income.
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They respond differently when they hear: "We will give you free money indefinitely.”
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It is extremely difficult to predict people’s behavior in changed conditions when we base
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our knowledge solely on their declarations.
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From the standpoint of philosophy of science alone, microscale experiments fail us as a
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tool of grasping most macroeconomic and macrosociological effects such as, among others: increase in
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the share of wages in GDP, increase in the effective demand in the economy, dynamics
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of private investment or economic growth, or changes in employment rate.
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These changes have a significant impact on the individual decisions of people.
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In order to observe and analyze such effects we would need an experiment on the scale of
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a whole country and lasting longer than all previous trials.
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The previous trials cannot tell us reliably whether money paid to everyone will support
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laziness or creativity.
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The renewed interest in the UBI is motivated by the threat of losing livelihoods by those
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who could be pushed out of the labor market by globalization or automation.
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Automation may be seen as a boogeyman used as a pretext for the UBI.
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Some fear that the development of robotics might make human work obsolete or less needed.
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The UBI advocates argue that in such case it might be necessary to update the ways in
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which the society distributes income.
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According to Michael Munger, transaction costs in the economy of tomorrow will tend to zero,
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making basic income necessary.
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Let us consider closer this worrisome prospect that prompts us to look for other ways of
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income distribution.
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What are the arguments for the UBI?
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The pros The Basic Income Europe Fanpage on Facebook
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gathers more than 41 thousand enthusiasts.
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Among the greatest supporters of the UBI are Silicon Valley’s technical titans like the
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head of Tesla Elon Musk and the head of Facebook Mark Zuckerberg.
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Ray Kurzweil, futurist and engineering director at Google, is very hopeful about the UBI as
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well.
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According to the famous British entrepreneur Richard Branson, the UBI “is really important”
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and “that it will come about one day”.
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In 2016, he said that “inequality is probably the biggest prohibitor that we face to creating
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a sustainable and equitable future for all of us”.
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What are the advantages of the UBI according to its advocates?
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Getting a job – more and more often a temporary, unreliable, “junk” job – is associated
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with a huge opportunity cost.
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Besides having to pay income tax, when you become employed you lose the social benefits
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you were getting earlier.
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As you are required to exert yourself working, you may earn scarcely more money.
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In contrast to many existing social benefits, the UBI would be much more transparent and
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there would be no need to give it up after getting a job.
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The UBI could lead to a reduction of poverty rate and of inequality and insecurity.
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Money for nothing could give some leeway to the employees whose job is threatened by automation.
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It would increase their social security by reducing their dependence on the labor market
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situation.
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The UBI is considered to be one of the simplest tax models that can reduce bureaucracy.
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It could help simplify taxes as well as reduce the red tape associated with circulation of
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tax documents.
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The UBI could remove the adverse incentive for mere formal adherence to the administrative
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requirements needed to obtain specific benefit.
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Defrauding disability benefits with fake documents could become a thing of the past.
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There would be no need for bureaucrats to control whether any conditions were met by
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people receiving benefits, because basic income would be unconditional.
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Thanks to the UBI, many professionally inactive people could start their own small businesses.
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People would no longer have to accept the first available job offer, and this could
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increase their “socioeconomic independence” and bargaining power on the labor market.
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They could take time to look for a job, invest in their education and development, set up
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their own business, or work less and use the time for other purposes.
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The main arguments made by the UBI’s advocates are ethical ones.
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For them the arguments pertaining to the economic efficiency are not as important.
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Social and ecological justice and the elimination of poverty remain their primary concerns.
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As they say: Giving money to everyone unconditionally puts moral pressure on people to act responsibly.
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The UBI would increase everyone’s individual human potential and social capital.
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As some studies show, feelings of insecurity reduce cognitive ability.
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The cons But are there any disadvantages and risks
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associated with the UBI?
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The biggest objections to the UBI are its costs and impact on the labor market.
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Even conditional social benefits put a considerable burden on the budget.
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Moreover, redistribution is a rather flimsy foundation for human dignity.
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The UBI could weaken employees’ motivation to work, thus reducing their productivity.
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If the UBI discourages people to work, then how will society produce wealth?
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From the perspective of employers, the UBI’s harms their interests in two ways: it increases
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wage pressure put by the employees, making them less inclined to work at the same time.
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In addition, as employers usually earn higher incomes, they would also be particularly affected
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by the tax progression.
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Another argument against the implementation of the UBI is the lack of observed negative
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impact of automation on employment.
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When some jobs are made obsolete by automation, other professions, often more pleasant ones,
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are created in their place.
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Similarly, far from being a job destroyer, globalization is a job creator.
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Concerns about automation leading to rising unemployment seem unfounded.
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In the last century, technological progress has created more jobs than it has eliminated
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– and the scale of the progress was historically unprecedented.
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An increase in the wealth of society increases its demand for more luxurious services, such
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as those fulfilled by artisan chefs, craftsmen, artists, interior decorators, or private teachers.
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Among the least vulnerable to automation are social workers, choreographers, doctors, psychologists,
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computer system analysts, anthropologists, and archaeologists.
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The widespread implementation of the UBI could also lead to increased migration to countries
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with the highest basic income, which in turn could further increase the tax burden on those
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who work and produce wealth.
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Because economic migration is a significant threat to the UBI, ensuring effective protection
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against people coming from abroad only to receive the basic income would become a necessity.
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As such protection has its own cost, the uncontrolled access to basic income could further threaten
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the financial security of the country.
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Designed as a response to already ineffectual social welfare systems and overregulated labor
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markets, the UBI itself only furthers government intervention in the market (and requires more
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taxation).
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Besides, one of its more serious drawbacks is that once implemented it becomes very difficult
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to withdraw from.
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The result could be a stagnation that lingers on until the complete shutdown of the economy.
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Summary Let us summarize our knowledge about the UBI.
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In this socio-political model of public finances, the government unconditionally pays every
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citizen an equal and lawfully defined amount of money regardless of their financial situation.
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The arguments of the supporters and opponents of the UBI focus on improving the quality
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of life.
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However, both sides have different ideas on how this goal can be achieved.
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For the UBI to make sense at all, two fundamental assumptions must be met simultaneously.
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1) The UBI must be high enough to ensure economic existence for all.
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If it is too low, it will become just another way of pumping demand on the market.
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2) In order for basic income to actually influence the economic emancipation of citizens, it
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also must be unconditional.
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In other words, people simply have to be entitled to it.
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The fulfillment of both of these conditions, however, will not make the defects and threats
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we have mentioned disappear, nor make certain that the BDP is the solution that is needed
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or most appropriate.
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The author of the script is Justyna Ziobrowska from the University of WrocƂaw