Alcoholic Actuary
Veteran Member
In the US I'm pretty sure you'd still have to work with UBI - I mean what if you got cancer?
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I agree that your approach would be the best way to do a UBI, I don't agree that we are in a position where it should be done.I don’t know! In my opinion, UPI would be great. Just like Reparations - I’m on board. But I simply prioritize so many other issues more than UPI (and reparations). For example, I’d favor increased spending for our schools, infrastructure, higher ed, environmental problems, and etc.
Perhaps we can gather in support of my version of UBI. Instead of just cash, I propose that income transfers from the comfortable to the less-so be in targeted goods and services:
- Free healthcare for all. Freeing employers from a healthcare obligation increases their demand for workers, so is win-win.
- Subsidized child-care, job training, higher education, public transit, food, housing, etc.
- Improved infrastructure, incl. parks and recreation.
- Some of these come with a sort of automatic "means-testing". The rich will want their own schools, their own transit, etc. This reduces the demand for, and hence the cost of these subsidies.
It sounds like you and I are largely in agreement. However you managed to misconstrue almost every point I made!
Agreed, I misunderstood.I like the idea of making it in the form of benefits. No means testing, though--means testing makes sense if you want to provide something only to the poor.
Yes, and my proposal did NOT involve means testing. It seems you misconstrued my "automatic 'means testing'". The point is that subsidized child care, while available free to the rich, is of no interest to parents who can afford their own babysitters. And so on, down the list of all the free or subsidized services I mentioned.
However, providing it to all but the rich generally ends up with a lot of effort spent on whether they qualify which produces no value.
NO. I am AVOIDING means testing. You misunderstood.
The basic problem is that it's not adequately funded. The government uses it's heavy hand to try to force it's acceptance on providers but they are increasingly fighting back--not taking Medicare or taking only a limited number of Medicare patients. We even have a local hospital that fought back to an extreme--they decided the better business model was to tell the government where it could put it. The get around the government's big stick by simply not billing any service provided to a patient on Medicare that is brought to their ER.I just have a big problem with what the quality level will be. Medicare is already substantially inferior to good health plans and the disparity grows wider over time.
You get what you pay for. Medicare was NOT designed by legislators who wanted a good health program. It was designed by Joe Lieberman, or whoever the 60th-best Senator was needed to stop a filibuster.
The problem with all such evaluations is that if a healthcare system handles the routine stuff well and handles the emergency stuff well it will have wide support even if it fails badly on the big non-emergency stuff. The percentage of it's users that are currently being hurt is low and people tend to have short memories.VA Medicine has a bad reputation propagated by right-wing media (whose goal coincides with Ronald Reagan's dictum to make Americans hate government). Actual users of VA Medical brag about how good it is.
Yup. It needs to be in unconvertable forms.But this is all just pipe-dream anyway. As long as QOPAnon retains power -- even 41 Senators plus Joe Manchin -- many efforts would be doomed to failure.
We already see far too much of money going to the parent's wants before the child's needs.Some of the UBI benefits would be pure cash, but most, while still "universal" in principle, would be targeted as shown.
Libertarians will screech at me to keep gummint's hands off their new-found money: If a couple would prefer to spend this taxpayer largesse on crack cocaine rather than food for their infant, so be it. And the childless who get no benefit from better schools will toss out Marx's "To each according to his needs" and call me a "woke-thinking Jew-loving commie rat inspired by the Khmer Pol Pot." To that I just answer "Calm down, you straw figment lurching and leering inside Swammi's senescent cerebrum!"
So we agree on that!
No. There are two questions--what percentage could be redistributed and what total amount could be redistributed. Your approach addresses the first part adequately but doesn't touch the second. And I'm saying that with the current economy we can't redistribute enough to actually provide a UBI.I don't see how this is even relevant.- - - - - - - - - - -
Ms. Lake asks if we can afford UBI. There are various ways to address that question arithmetically, but one of the most straightforward is to start with inequality measures like Gini. The following are WorldBank estimates of Gini taken from Wikipedia. I show the U.S., the four highest-Gini countries in Europe, and some other large countries. (I also include Haiti and Laos, as examples of countries with Ginis near that of the U.S.)
VERY relevant. The whole idea of income transfers -- taxing (primarily from the high-income people) to provide universal benefit (primarily benefiting low-income people) depends on -- wait for it! -- the high-income people having much higher income than the low-income people! I don't know if I can explain the arithmetic plainer than that.
When asking whether a society can "afford" an income-redistribution program, the quantitative disparity between high- and low-income people is KEY.
I'm not talking the richest 1%, I'm talking the middle class.The U.S. has higher disparity than Europe. (In part this is because European countries already have programs similar to what I propose: programs which have reduced Gini.)
And it is VERY relevant to see countries like Denmark and Holland with low disparity: These are not socialist shit-hole countries. (I will admit that the richest 1% in Denmark may not be bathing their infants in caviar as some of America's super-rich do, if that's your point.)
The point is their redistribution systems are drawing down the standard of living for everyone but the poor. The median household income in Denmark is half that of the US.And note that the standard of living in much of Europe is well below US averages. There's a price to be paid for their generous benefit systems.
UBI is intended to improve the standard of living of the poor. I've no idea what statistic you're referencing but it ain't the standard of living of the poor.
I know you wanted income rather than wealth, but you were using the numbers for total wealth so I did, also.1) By looking at wealth rather than income you neglect the fact that you're consuming wealth.Google is increasingly reluctant to provide me with simple stats I ask for (though happy to point me to paywalls). But I do find crude estimates of wealth distribution. (I'd use income rather than wealth for this comparison, but make do with what Google presents.)
I do NOT propose the following redistribution. Just use it as arithmetic demonstration that the wealth or income gap CAN be reduced without tragic results.
Google shows me that the top 10% of U.S.'s 130 million households have, on average, almost $4 million in wealth. On a "share of the pie" basis this is about double of 50 years ago, I think. We could take away half of that $4 million and the rich would still be as well off, relatively, as during the Boom of the 1960's. If we taxed away a teeny-tiny 2% of that Top-10% wealth and gave it to the lowest 6% (i.e. households in "poverty"), that works out to $133,000 per impoverished household. (I am NOT suggesting we give out that cash along with free transport to the street-corners where crack is sold. I'm just demonstrating that there is huge room for redistribution measures.)
Did I need a larger font here?:
Swammerdami said:(I'd use income rather than wealth for this comparison, but make do with what Google presents.)
I've looked up a lot of this before, downloaded tables and what-not. I've so many bookmarks I need bookmarks to them. But I still use Google mainly, and searches don't work well for me now, what with paywalls etc.
If YOU posted a link to tables of U.S. income distribution, then Sorry, I missed them.
Be careful with overly-simplistic tables, however. So much of America's income goes to the top 0.01% (or even top 0.001%) that it's easy to be misled about the extent of inequality.
Such things are never one time events.In the "thought experiment" the 2% confiscation was a one-time event. I was certainly NOT proposing a $133,000 annual payment to every poor family.Taking that "2%" basically halves the income of retirees even if you're taking it from pre-tax money. Take it from post-tax money and it's far worse.
And again, it was just a back-of-the-envelope example to get a feel for the numbers involved. Emily Lake's claim that such a transfer is unfeasible arithmetically is simply wrong.
You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.2) There's a lot of "money" that can't actually be spent. The economy doesn't produce the goods/services to spend it on, converting it to consumer spending is going to cause an inflation spike.
Take your ill-founded hypothesis to the Inflation thread!
3) You probably didn't do much for those households in poverty anyway--most people in poverty are there because of economic mismanagement and the money won't fix that.
Hunh? My plan offered subsidized housing and food, etc. and specifically NOT "money."
This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
According to a surprisingly large snd historically persistent portion of the population, poverty is the result of choices on the part of the poor. It is really a combination of condescension and arrogance that had been around for many centuries .This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
And it makes the unwarranted implication that YOU know better than THEM how THEY should spend THEIR money; Which is quite an impressive feat on your part, given that you don't know ANYTHING about them; Not even who THEY are.
Are you a god?
Most people in poverty are there because they put wants above needs. And the result of them getting a windfall shows what happens.This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
And it makes the unwarranted implication that YOU know better than THEM how THEY should spend THEIR money; Which is quite an impressive feat on your part, given that you don't know ANYTHING about them; Not even who THEY are.
Are you a god?
Reiterating an unfounded assumption doesn't improve it.Most people in poverty are there because they put wants above needs. And the result of them getting a windfall shows what happens.This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
And it makes the unwarranted implication that YOU know better than THEM how THEY should spend THEIR money; Which is quite an impressive feat on your part, given that you don't know ANYTHING about them; Not even who THEY are.
Are you a god?
The thing is most people can climb out of being poor--this leaves the ones who are trapped because of their behavior (and some who are trapped by disability or the like.) I see a lot of immigrants come here with far greater barriers but with the attitudes needed to succeed. They start poor, they don't stay poor.According to a surprisingly large snd historically persistent portion of the population, poverty is the result of choices on the part of the poor. It is really a combination of condescension and arrogance that had been around for many centuries .This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
And it makes the unwarranted implication that YOU know better than THEM how THEY should spend THEIR money; Which is quite an impressive feat on your part, given that you don't know ANYTHING about them; Not even who THEY are.
Are you a god?
Your repeated statements of your beliefs are entertaining, but not something anyone should take seriously without evidence.The thing is most people can climb out of being poor
Your repeated statements of your beliefs are entertaining, but not something anyone should take seriously without evidence.The thing is most people can climb out of being poor
I’m not going to get into this debate in either side as I haven’t researched it. But I am amazed to say that I personally know a couple families who live pay check to paycheck, are broke, but have yearly income greater than $200k per year.It makes me frustrated and angry to see the claim that “most people can climb out of being poor” being made by people who have never had to do so.
IME, people making such claims are projecting that poor people are playing on the same field that they are.
THEY’RE NOT.
I’m not going to get into this debate in either side as I haven’t researched it.
But I am amazed to say that I personally know a couple families who live pay check to paycheck, are broke, but have yearly income greater than $200k per year.
It's the old "welfare Cadillac" bullshit all over again.Reiterating an unfounded assumption doesn't improve it.Most people in poverty are there because they put wants above needs. And the result of them getting a windfall shows what happens.This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
And it makes the unwarranted implication that YOU know better than THEM how THEY should spend THEIR money; Which is quite an impressive feat on your part, given that you don't know ANYTHING about them; Not even who THEY are.
Are you a god?
And the result of "them" getting a windfall shows that they prefer community over selfishness; It shows three eighths of fuck all about them putting "wants" over "needs", particularly as "remain hugely wealthy" isn't a "need" for non psychopaths.
Yeah, who would have EVER thought that people who have been financially oppressed for their entire lives, would make unwise choices with a windfall?Most people in poverty are there because they put wants above needs. And the result of them getting a windfall shows what happens.This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
And it makes the unwarranted implication that YOU know better than THEM how THEY should spend THEIR money; Which is quite an impressive feat on your part, given that you don't know ANYTHING about them; Not even who THEY are.
Are you a god?
My problem with Loren's claim is his use of the word "most". Certainly there are many who do put their "wants above needs". I know many myself, including in my own family. Whether they account for MOST of those in poverty needs to be supported with evidence. I am doubtful it is most, but I would be curious to know what percentage it is.Yeah, who would have EVER thought that people who have been financially oppressed for their entire lives, would make unwise choices with windfall?Most people in poverty are there because they put wants above needs. And the result of them getting a windfall shows what happens.This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
And it makes the unwarranted implication that YOU know better than THEM how THEY should spend THEIR money; Which is quite an impressive feat on your part, given that you don't know ANYTHING about them; Not even who THEY are.
Are you a god?
Why do people who have always had money, know more about how to handle money than people who have never had any money? Fucking mysterious, ain’t it @Loren Pechtel ?
My problem with Loren's claim is his use of the word "most".
I know many myself, including in my own family. Whether they account for MOST of those in poverty needs to be supported with evidence. I am doubtful it is most, but I would be curious to know what percentage it is.
Right. Even “poor” people making a mere $60-80k would have to chip in a few grand, in order to save the top brackets from having to endure a 95% tax on the billions they make above $200k/yr. It would be a very dark day for avocado toast and mega-yacht vendors.if you only changed the highest bracket, it was completely absurd and a non-starter. To get to the total amount that would be needed, you have to increase ALL of the tax brackets, and not my immaterial amounts.
I agree. Some people climb out of poverty while some do not. But using that observation to conclude that most poor people remain poor because of their choices is illogical.The thing is most people can climb out of being poor--this leaves the ones who are trapped because of their behavior (and some who are trapped by disability or the like.) I see a lot of immigrants come here with far greater barriers but with the attitudes needed to succeed. They start poor, they don't stay poor.According to a surprisingly large snd historically persistent portion of the population, poverty is the result of choices on the part of the poor. It is really a combination of condescension and arrogance that had been around for many centuries .This appears to be a completely unfounded assumption.You can give them a better house and food but they'll still be in poverty because they'll spend on wants before needs.
And it makes the unwarranted implication that YOU know better than THEM how THEY should spend THEIR money; Which is quite an impressive feat on your part, given that you don't know ANYTHING about them; Not even who THEY are.
Are you a god?
Many, maybe most, poor people DO remain poor because of their choices. They chose the wrong lottery numbers for one thing. But mainly, they have never learned how to make good financial choices because they have never had finances to make good choices about. Any “good” choice they make is largely lucky (e.g. good lottery numbers) and is going to produce results that will be drowned out, in a sea of bad choices and urgent needs. Breaking that cycle is possible, but usually only with “outside” help.Some people climb out of poverty while some do not. But using that observation to conclude that most poor people remain poor because of their choices is illogical.