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Slashdot Asks: Which is Better, a Basic Income or a Guaranteed Job? (timharford.com) 899

Barack Obama said this month that AI research is accelerating, making it harder to find jobs for everybody, and concluding "we're going to have to consider new ways of thinking about these problems, like a universal income."

But a Financial Times columnist adds that "an intriguing debate has broken out over how to look after disadvantaged workers both now and in this robot future. Should everyone be given free money? Or should everyone receive the guarantee of a decently-paid job?" An anonymous reader quotes some of the highlights: Psychologists have found that we like and benefit from feeling in control. That is a mark in favour of a universal basic income: being unconditional, it is likely to enhance our feelings of control. The money would be ours, by right, to do with as we wish. A job guarantee might work the other way: it makes money conditional on punching the clock. On the other hand (again!), we like to keep busy. Harvard researchers Matthew Killingsworth and Daniel Gilbert (UK) (US) have found that "a wandering mind is an unhappy mind". And social contact is generally good for our wellbeing. Maybe guaranteed jobs would help keep us active and socially connected.

The truth is, we don't really know... It is good to see that the more thoughtful advocates of either policy -- or both policies simultaneously -- are asking for large-scale trials to learn more.

He titled the column "The secret to happiness after the robot takeover." But what say Slashdot readers?

Is it better to be given a basic income -- or a guaranteed job?
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Slashdot Asks: Which is Better, a Basic Income or a Guaranteed Job?

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 29, 2018 @06:41AM (#57026948)

    Doing a pointless task or showing up to do nothing in order to earn a living is soul-crushing.
    In a low-job boom economy we may need to encourage people to get out and socialize, but there are many better ways to do this.

    • Distopian future.. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by thesupraman ( 179040 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @06:55AM (#57027008)

      Yes, a 'guaranteed job' pretty much means 'YOU better find a job you like, or we will find one you DONT'
      Its just renamed 'work for your unemployment benefit', which it most definitely a stick, not a carrot.

      Of course the powers that be LIKE people to be at their behest, and LIKE to have to control, so why am I not surprised they will try and sell that as a solution.

      A real UBI system (and nearly every time we see those in power talking one it is NOT, it is just another benefit for people who 'need' it) is very different from that.
      It is a reward for being part of a system, that is not dependent on your position in the system.
      And, almost as importantly, it REPLACES most of the other parts.
      It replaces benefit for unemployment, sickness (but not necessarily medical), old age, education, and many many more, thus removing the HUGE beuraucracy that is wrapped around operating and policing those.
      Why do those in power hate it? because it reduces their control, and their ability to sell themselves as 'helping us' by endlessly making slight changes for how they give our own money back to us when they decide we need it.

      But no, they must sell UBI as being a form of benefit for people who failed, because they think that will help keep it from ever happening, because they are sure the silent majority hate such things. That is why pretty much every proposed UBI 'trial' is not UNIVERSAL.

      It will take a big change in the political systems before we ever see anything like UBI (and no, i don't mean to some kind of socialist nirvana, such people generally hate anything equal and universal with a great passion).

      • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @07:15AM (#57027104)

        Yes, a 'guaranteed job' pretty much means 'YOU better find a job you like, or we will find one you DONT'

        This is staggeringly a lot like it was in the former Soviet Union. Find a job, or we find one for you. Somewhere in some godforsaken backwater town in the middle of Sibiria, there is always a shortage of ... everything. So no matter what you can do, they need you there.

        • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @12:41PM (#57028546)

          One could offer a small guaranteed income and if you want more then a guaranteed job as well. It doesn't have to be either-or.

          As for meaning full work the Depression era found many meaningful jobs. Every time I visit an older park I'm so grateful for the lasting staircases and bridges that were hewn into the walls of canyons for me to walk through. We don't have that scale of free labor these days. I'm sure it was hard work but it was meaningful and lasting. Many people were employed as artists and not only made epic frescos and such that we still have today but also produced temporary art like theater for the desperately poor folks of the depression. It was morale boosting and reminded people we are a society that can come together. It had great value to defining US culture. It was also a time when a lot of new ideas got explored too.
          Even mathematical functions were enumerated and tabulated (before computers) so that people could knwo the zeros of the hypergeometric series functions for my gaussian quadrature integrals needed to compute the amount of concrete needed for hoover damn or the stress on an airplane wing.

          Lots of meaningful work from blue-collar to academian occured in the depression era jobs programs.

          Paying one person to dig a hole and another for fill it back in is unlikely to be what people mean by gaurenteed jobs.

          In fact I would argue that compulsory public service is really a good thing for citizens. I certainly volunteer lots of time to causes because I can see the impact it has on my community. That impact makes me feel good inside. But it also binds me to my community too which is a good thing.

          Finally, if you study the Gini index and consider which countries have the largest economic mobility (Do you earn a different wage than your father did?) then you see that countries with good safety nets actually have more economic mobility than those without. I would guess this is because people willing to take risks can achieve more, but they won't take them if there's a chance of losing everything. Thus just knowing there's a net helps even if you never need it.

          • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @01:56PM (#57028922)

            It wouldn't even have to be a "guaranteed job", but what I could easily see is some kind of gig-economy for what's now low-end jobs where no to very little training is needed. People who don't work could take such jobs for expenses they have (like getting a new washing machine or TV), for a few weeks, i.e. as long as it takes to get the money together. I could well see some sort of online service come into play where employers could post their requirements, people could post their resumes and a matchmaking service bringing them together, complete with thumbs-up/down votes for good/bad employers and employees that are honest with their abilities or claim some they don't have.

            Not so much like Xing or LinkedIn, it would probably be closer to uber-for-jobs. We are already essentially in a gig-economy for some jobs, why not go all the way if that's where we're heading anyway?

      • I thought Trump was sending them down the coal mines.

        • I thought Trump was sending them down the coal mines.

          Just wait till he finds out about salt mines from Vlad!

      • You shouldn't be rewarded for being part of the system. That's retarded. You should be rewarded for *contributing* to the system. (And yes I am aware that there are a great many rich people who are a net drain on the system. If we can figure out how to get them separated from their weather I highly favor it)
        • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @10:01AM (#57027664)

          I would rather see UBI than make-work, because so long as the salaries for real jobs are significantly higher than UBI, people will be motivated to take them. Just characterize UBI as 'unemployment comp for life."

          • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @10:38AM (#57027856) Journal
            The crucial question really is, how many people can go onto UBI without society collapsing? That is, how many people can choose to be supported only by UBI without the system being overloaded?

            Obviously if everyone decided to only be supported by UBI, it wouldn't work. The question is, how many people can be, what percentage? If you can't answer that question with some level of accuracy, you have no business implementing a UBI.
            • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

              The reason UBI is being proposed is because automation looks like it's going to come for an unprecedented number of jobs. It's not really much of a stretch to see how one day it might be virtually all of them. Every person who loses a job to automation is one who can be supported by society without working.

              Automation is *more efficient* than having people doing the job. Otherwise you'd use the people.

              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                by greenwow ( 3635575 )

                We've heard that claim before. When, for example, a cotton gin could replace a year of work every single hour it runs, people panicked. Instead of that being a problem, it freed-up people to do more productive jobs.

                • by yusing ( 216625 )

                  Freed, huh? For jobs like being paid shit to dig coal, with a mandatory target to reach each day not matter how sick you are? and get thrown on a boxcar or even shot (along with your family) when you strike for a better wage? Take a look at history once.

                  'Productive'. Most people in the US today have no idea what 'productive' work is. And no idea what 'labor' is. Sitting in front of a stack of paper or a computer, working a phone, 'customer service'?

                  Didn't need a gym or jogging to keep fit. Ate real food.

            • by sjames ( 1099 )

              I suspect very few will choose to live solely on UBI. Think about it, on UBI you can afford a basic apartment, clothes, an OK car, and decent food. But if you do some work, you can afford a nicer apartment, better food, a nice car, designer clothes and/or a nice vacation.

              Under UBI, you will see more artisans and more freelancers. You will still see some 'day jobs', but the bosses/managers will tend to be polite to employees and reasonably accomodating out of necessity.

              Even under our current system, it's no

          • "so long as the salaries for real jobs are significantly higher than UBI"

            By definition this is true. Those working get their wage plus UBI and those not working get just UBI, so those working always get more money. No roll-off of benefits, no weird discontinuities where if you earn more you wind up with less.

            • by lgw ( 121541 )

              What's the difference between "roll-off of benefits" and taxes? It works out to the same thing. And without a seriously high tax rate on almost all workers, there's no way to fund any sort of UBI.

              I expect there would be a lot of jobs that pay next to nothing, because there's no need to pay enough to live on, and people get bored, so of course that will be exploited.

              Also, UBI fails to take into account that old people just need more money to get by than young people - what you used to be able to do yoursel

        • by west ( 39918 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @10:09AM (#57027716)

          You shouldn't be rewarded for being part of the system.

          Why not?

          I'll happily declare that my fellow Canadians deserve many rewards simply for being Canadian - free education, health-care, various welfare systems if they are in need, free roads and other infrastructure, free defense at the expense of the lives of my fellow citizen, and a myriad of other services. None of those are dependent on their contribution to the system.

          And yes, as a Canadian who's doing reasonably well, I pay a fairly substantial tax for the privilege of sustaining those services that benefit me and every other Canadian.

          And this is not selflessness. The benefits that I gain from having these services available to my fellow Canadians far exceeds my contribution.to the tax pool. (If I was selfless, I'd be trying to extend those benefits to the world. I'm not as the benefits aren't great enough.)

          Anyway, I'll just say that a society that doesn't place a strong inherent positive value on its members is one that's falling apart.

      • by teg ( 97890 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @08:14AM (#57027288)

        And, almost as importantly, it REPLACES most of the other parts. It replaces benefit for unemployment, sickness (but not necessarily medical), old age, education, and many many more, thus removing the HUGE beuraucracy that is wrapped around operating and policing those.

        This is the part many don't like. Today, many of these benefits are dependent on your income and thus how much you pay into the system. If I'm sick, my wife is on maternity leave etc, these benefits replace the paychecks so that you don't lose money. If these are replaced with UBI, suddenly getting a child will lose you a lot of money - all of your pay check . Getting sick? Same thing - no pay, but you have UBI at the bottom.

        For people actively contributing, today's system works much better than UBI.

        • by w3woody ( 44457 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @10:37AM (#57027850) Homepage

          The funny of it is, if you add up how much we pay administering the current welfare system--the thousands and thousands of bureaucrats who administer things like Electronic Benefit Transfer cards, who determine what items you are allowed to buy, who determine if you qualify, who police the system--we could provide a reasonably generous UBI to everyone with nearly no administrative overhead.

          Remember: a proper UBI replaces EVERYTHING, including tax deductions normally enjoyed by higher-income individuals, such as tax deductions for children (as children also receive a UBI), mortgage tax deductions, tax deductions for retirement savings, tax credits for paying for college. The idea is to eliminate the unfairness that is intrinsically tied into all of these separate programs, each which have their own target audiences, administrative bureaucracies and qualifications.

          The UBI would also replace Social Security--both the OSADI and SSI disability funds.

          Imagine how much smaller the administrative state becomes when your tax return is essentially four lines: A: gross income, B: tax (from tax tables), C: UBI D: Tax owed (or refund due).

          This is why I don't think we will ever have a proper UBI. Because there are just too many people--both working for the government, and private companies (like Intuit, who constantly lobby against simplifying the tax code) whose jobs rely on the massive administration of hundreds of government programs which would all be wiped off the map by a properly designed UBI.

          Tthat's part of the problem: we pay nearly as much in administrative overhead administering the current welfare state and the current tax code as we do paying out benefits. If you consider those bureaucrats as beneficiaries of the welfare state, that's a lot of jobs which would be wiped off the map. And they make a very powerful lobbying group--which is why in government corners, "UBI" is always reframed as yet another program for them to administer, rather than a new program that would cost them their job.

          • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @01:07PM (#57028684)

            The funny of it is, if you add up how much we pay administering the current welfare system--the thousands and thousands of bureaucrats who administer things like Electronic Benefit Transfer cards, who determine what items you are allowed to buy, who determine if you qualify, who police the system--we could provide a reasonably generous UBI to everyone with nearly no administrative overhead.

            Remember: a proper UBI replaces EVERYTHING, including tax deductions normally enjoyed by higher-income individuals, such as tax deductions for children (as children also receive a UBI), mortgage tax deductions, tax deductions for retirement savings, tax credits for paying for college. The idea is to eliminate the unfairness that is intrinsically tied into all of these separate programs, each which have their own target audiences, administrative bureaucracies and qualifications.

            I don't think it will be that easy.

            To me the big unsolved problem with UBI is still going to be people at the margins. There's always going to be a portion of people who are really bad at managing their money, only 39% of Americans can handle a $1k hit right now [cnbc.com], presumably most of the remaining 61% are employed, meaning that even with a UBI they'd still be $1k away from financial trouble.

            Think about what will actually happen with a UBI. Some people will spend it on a big mortgage, or they'll find a way to borrow against it by building up credit card debt, or they'll have a substance abuse problem and spend everything on feeding their habit. Or they'll just have zero savings like most people do now and a major expense will come up and cause ruin.

            So even with a UBI we still have homelessness, we still have kids going hungry, we still have families with their heat and power shut off, and we're still going to need programs to deal with those people.

            • by w3woody ( 44457 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @01:17PM (#57028738) Homepage

              Your argument essentially is an argument for taking away individual freedom.

              I mean, consider the statistic that only 39% of Americans can handle a $1k hit right now. By your implication, this suggests that 61% of all Americans lack the sufficient wherewithal to be making their own financial decisions.

              And if they can't make their own decisions for themselves, who make it for them? The State?

              Ultimately I find arguments like your an aesthetic one, because often, when you explore the boundaries you find arguments like "he shouldn't eat at McDonalds because those are empty calories" or "she shouldn't spend her time out partying because she isn't spending enough time making home-cooked meals."

              And down that rabbit hole is authoritarianism--one where only 39% of Americans are trusted with their own money.

      • A real UBI system (and nearly every time we see those in power talking one it is NOT, it is just another benefit for people who 'need' it) is very different from that. It is a reward for being part of a system, that is not dependent on your position in the system. And, almost as importantly, it REPLACES most of the other parts. It replaces benefit for unemployment, sickness (but not necessarily medical), old age, education, and many many more, thus removing the HUGE beuraucracy that is wrapped around operating and policing those.

        UBI is completely incompatible with mass immigration. The people generally prefer to take care of their own but business wants cheap labor and Democrats need more voters so we end up with mass immigration. Thus UBI will never happen shy of a major reshuffling of priorities.

        Why do those in power hate it?

        See above. With regards to the original question, I'd favor a guaranteed job over UBI. I've seen people who get money for free and it rots their brain and saps their initiative. At least social security has to be earned, UBI is payin

    • Career vs Job (Score:5, Interesting)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @08:48AM (#57027384)

      A Job is what you do to make money. A Career is what defines who you are. Sometime a Career may contain Jobs, some that you like and some that you don't.

      Most jobs doesn't have you doing pointless tasks because that are paying you money to do them, so they should have some sort of value to doing the job. However many jobs are not really utilizing your full potential which makes them boring and at the end of the day you do not feel good with yourself.

      You have to find meaning in your work vs. work giving you meaning. No matter what job you do in your career it will feel meaningless.
      I work in Health Care I see Brain Surgeons and Cardiologist who do a fine job, but are worn down to the world, because for them it feels like they do the same thing every day, only to have the patients leave and abuse their bodies again. They are actually saving lives every day but they just don't feel meaning, because they have stopped looking for it.

      The real problem I see is the lack of Empowerment in the modern work culture. I am stuck in a meeting with 2 VP yelling at me, because both of them Got yelled at by the CIO and CFO. Which in tern call me to often have to yell at the vendor because there isn't anything I can do about what they are yelling at me to do, Because the CIO and CFO chose the vendor and the product and passed it down to me to implement, then the Vendor just points to the contract conditions, which then I express back to the VPs which get angry with me, but afraid to to express their problems with the CIO and CFO because that product is their baby. So most everyone is unhappy, because no one has power to do anything to really fix it. And the ones who do done agree on a course of action.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Nah, everybody loves doing pointless busywork. And we all know people who don't work for some corporation never find anything productive to do, just sit around and watch Oprah all day.

      The last of the hard core believers in the protestant work ethic are having their shark jumping moment.

  • Universal Income. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by YukariHirai ( 2674609 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @06:46AM (#57026972)
    I'm definitely in Camp Universal Income. Everyone gets enough to live comfortably enough on, and if you want more income on top of that, you can work. Guaranteed jobs for everyone on the face of it doesn't sound like a bad idea, but it will wind up being the case that a lot of people are given pointless makework. As much as people do like to keep busy, no-one respects being given work that exists only for the sake of keeping them busy.
    • by martyros ( 588782 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @07:03AM (#57027048)
      Worse yet, if you're "guaranteed" a job, can you be fired? If not, then for some people it's the equivalent of basic income, because they can just show up when they want, do what they want, and not worry about the consequences. Worse, because the people who *are* trying to work will be demoralized and understaffed. And if you can be fired, then it's not really guaranteed, is it?
      • The guarenteed job assumes people show up and make a token effort to do their work.

        You can not be fired and not paid at the same time for all sorts of jobs.

        Take jobs where you're paid by the hour... if you show up but don't work those hours... should you be paid for them? Depending on the employer you may or may not be paid excluding being fired as an option.

        Various jobs pay according to some observable labor... Let us say I pay you to pick baskets of cherries... I may pay you by the basket of cherries you

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Take a peasant farmer from a thousand years ago. These people were generally not fired. How were they encouraged to work?

          Starvation.

        • The UBI etc presumes to maintain the economy whilst destroying the feedback loops.

          Most economists disagree, particularly the libertarian ones you'd expect to be really opposed to such universal forced redistribution programs. This is because they believe UBI would do far less to distort incentives than minimum wages (which say that some people's labor is worth too little to allow them to work and some jobs have too little value to pay for them to be done) or needs-based welfare systems (which are often structured to degrade as much as assist, and to actually disincent work).

          We really

    • Guaranteed jobs for everyone on the face of it doesn't sound like a bad idea, but it will wind up being the case that a lot of people are given pointless makework.

      Yeah, and you can only have so many slashdot editors. Maybe they could work for Facebook and Twitter, deleting offensive posts.

    • Re:Universal Income. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @07:13AM (#57027094)

      I not only think this could work out, I'm positive that it would actually be more interesting for businesses too. Because now you have to pay someone a wage that's enough to at least compensate the person for his time so he can live. With universal income, any minimum wage is off the table. We would move into a gig economy more than we do today already, at least for zero/low skill jobs. You need 300 bucks extra? Go work for a few weeks at the supermarket. Yes, they will mot pay more than maybe those 300 for full time for a month, because there's people who wouldn't mind working that, because it's EXTRA money, not money they need already to fulfill their basic needs. As an employer, you could probably get people for less than 300 a month if it's really just some zero skill job with no responsibilities like restocking. You wages would probably go down (at least for no/low skill jobs), and still people would not complain because the money they now earn is on top of what they need, it's not what they need to get food and shelter covered.

      High paying jobs would probably change little to not at all, because whether you pay your employee 400 less per month is kinda moot if you already pay about 10 grand a month. Here, very little would change, neither in fluctuation (which would most likely increase a lot for low skill jobs) nor cost.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by ColdBoot ( 89397 )

        you guys need to study economics and business. UBI is a pie in the sky dream. National economies are systems of systems. Mess with one aspect and the others are affected. To pay for UBI, you have to raise taxes. Raising taxes raises costs. The more it costs to live the more you have to pay out in UBI. UBI is an unsustainable model.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by w3woody ( 44457 )

          As originally conceived by Milton Friedman, UBI (or rather, a "negative tax") would replace all other programs--welfare programs, middle class tax deductions, Social Security, etc., etc., etc.

          And the point was not to add a new, generous welfare payment. The point was to replace the existing welfare system with a new universal system which requires almost no administrative overhead. The program would be paid in part from the existing welfare system (which is scrapped), from increased tax receipts (from middl

    • Everyone gets enough to live comfortably enough on

      Who sets this level? Elected representatives? If not elected then it will inevitably be an entrenched, connected elite. If elected then we have a big problem and here's what it is:

      Suppose you live solely on UBI and aren't comfortable "enough", what's your best, easiest way to get more money? Simply vote for whoever promises the biggest UBI increase in every election. Even if you work a little for some money in addition to UBI, how likely are you to vote for someone who will reduce, or even hold steady the c

    • I'm definitely in Camp Universal Income. Everyone gets enough to live comfortably enough on

      It doesn't work like that. The value of money isn't fixed. It fluctuates based on the ratio of productivity to pay. When you screw with it, the value of the currency rises or falls. In other word, productivity is what's conserved (everything that's consumed must be produced), not money. So if you set an arbitrary consumption level (UBI) which doesn't match the amount of productivity the country is generating, th

  • Guaranteed job mean more or less many people will have to dig hole to fill back them again. With automation there won't be many job left in a few decades that people without high level education can do without being easily replaceable. that leave "keep busy" guaranteed job. And you know what's worst ? Having a job you know is USELESS but given to you to a pittance to keep you busy. That is why UBI is better. Then it is your choice of what you do. Many people would simply wallow in their sweat before a tube
  • Neither. (Score:3, Informative)

    by Chas ( 5144 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @06:52AM (#57027000) Homepage Journal

    Both are "shit sandwich" choices.

    Paying people not to work destroys the ability to achieve.

    Putting people into do-nothing jobs destroys the desire to work.

    Both damage the economy.

    One by raising cost of living to compensate for unearned payouts.
    The other by depressing wages.

    So, which shit sandwich will YOU take a bite of?

    • Re:Neither. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @06:58AM (#57027018)

      Paying people not to work destroys the ability to achieve.

      How does eliminating a demeaning "you want fries with that" job and leaving the person to pursue something they consider worthwhile "destroy the ability to achieve"?

      • Don't we need someone to do those "you want fries with that" jobs?

        Maybe McDonalds will completely automate those specific jobs at some point, but there will always be some low-prestige jobs that need doing. We all can't be rockstars.

      • by Chas ( 5144 )

        Because YOU have an agreement with your employer to do the demeaing "fries" job. Only IDIOTS stay in that job and don't progress.
        Hell, the major franchises have PROGRAMS to help you advance your career beyond "Want fries?"

        Shit jobs like that teach you, as a kid, one thing.
        Those types of no-skill jobs SUCK. And if you don't wanna be stuck doing that forever, YOU IMPROVE YOURSELF.

        As for paying people not to work.
        It's not sustainable. It just isn't.

    • Re:Neither. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ChatHuant ( 801522 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @02:50PM (#57029138)

      Paying people not to work destroys the ability to achieve.

      Fortunately that's absolutely not what we're talking about. People get UBI whether they work or not; with the UBI as a safety net, they can be more choosy about their jobs, or they can try this new idea they thought about but couldn't risk before because their kids would starve if it failed. Look at J. K. Rowling; she wrote the first Harry Potter book while on unemployment, but being on the dole didn't destroy her ability to achieve.

      Surely, if UBI were implemented there will be some that would just sit on the couch all day watching TV. But, once you take basic survival out of the equation, people do like to work, if the job is interesting or meaningful to them. Comparatively few people retire after they make their first million(s), even though they could spend the rest of their lives comfortably on their couches. But instead they keep working, putting in crazy hours, trying new ideas, starting new companies.

      For an example of this, see Elon Musk: after selling his share of PayPal he could have lived the rest of his life in extreme comfort, on the best couch money can buy. Instead, he started trying any number of new things, and has changed the world. Obviously, not all salarymen are potential Elon Musks, but I think UBI will free quite a bit of human potential.

  • Basic income (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @06:56AM (#57027014)

    To quote a German comedian, I need money, not an occupation. I can keep busy all right myself, no need for that.

    • To quote a German comedian, I need money, not an occupation. I can keep busy all right myself, no need for that.

      That's actually the problem, not the solution.

      We have been experimenting with giving people money and then they find stuff to do. For quite some time.

      The results may make for exciting movies and rap videos, but aren't real good for society overall.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • A basic income empowers people, it doesn't prevent those who are able to work from working and earning money on top of that income. A guarantee of a job is just a guarantee of minimum wage in a different form.

    People aren't begging for a handout, they have built the technology that enables you to replace their jobs. Ideally they should be given stock in the companies that automate their workforce without regard to "new employment" created by importing workers on student visas and other scams.
  • As automation becomes cheaper and better, a greater proportion of human jobs will be 'bullshit jobs'. Technically most countries already have a system where persons can get free food and housing; it's called 'prison' and an alternative 'solution' is to put more people into that system. The question is how long people put up with that 'solution' until they have their Bastille Day.

  • by Karmashock ( 2415832 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @07:28AM (#57027142)

    The dream of something for nothing is not sustainable.

    The guaranteed job has problems but fewer problems than a guaranteed income. The job has a potential of you doing SOMETHING of value to the system. You finding it meaningful is not the issue. Things need to be put in boxes. Inventory has to be checked. There are lots of jobs held by billions of people on this planet that are hard to cite as "meaningful".

    The job concept at the very least has you doing something. It need not be dig a ditch and then fill the ditch in with the same soil.

    That said, EVEN IF the job is that bad it is at least motivating you to get another job. If I give you income there is no motivation for you to do anything. You got your income. If I require that you do something annoying to get the money then you'll be interested in finding a less annoying way to get the money... perhaps getting a better job.

    We can iterate on the problems these these concepts quite deeply. Entire books have been written on these issues from many angles... moral, logistical, social, political, ethical...

    However, many seem to take the complexity as meaning it is arbitrary and thus "there is no wrong answer" because its complicated.

    This is why I like to keep it simple.

    The simple inescapable point here is that the goods and services that people want to obtain in exchange for money must be produced by someone. And if you're not producing stuff... then where is it coming from?

    Someone else? Magical fairy land?

    A wealthy society can afford a certain amount of wealth spent on non-productive things. But that account is FINITE... not IN-FINITE. Which means there is a limit. The amount you can blow will be relative to the wealth of the society. So you have a paradox where the richer a society is the more money you can throw at welfare but... you have to be very careful with your taxation and regularitory policies otherwise you'll make the society poorer... not richer.

    Its the goose and the golden eggs. And you have to be very careful that you eat ONLY golden eggs and no geese.

    This balance is inherently unsustainable. It requires wisdom and restraint to the point of personal political self sacrifice on the part of politicians to maintain this balance. There will be a short term personal benefit to exceeding the balance and eating geese for the politician. He can promise the moon and the stars... and deliver it for a year or two at the price of economic collapse after five or ten years.

    Do you trust your politicians to sacrifice their political power by not over promising, slaughtering the geese that lay the golden eggs, and then leaving their nation to rot after the politician retires to a private island somewhere?

    This is not cynicism... the examples of this happening are easily accessible.

    All of these concepts people are coming up with to slight of hand the magical money into pockets... it... is short term thinking. And the difference between short and long term... the difference between small and big picture is the difference between good and evil.

    Literally.

    Good and evil is a matter of scope.

    Every act of evil seems like a good idea to the man that does it. And every act of evil seen from a wider perspective is seen for what it is.

    Take every act of theft, murder, battery, abuse... etc... and contract it to a moment and the man doing it... and the act will have a "rightness" to it. I'm excluding literal insanity... consider acts of theft, revenge, etc. It all can be justified if you collapse the entire world to the man doing the action.

    Then expand the perspective out... to include friends, family, community, strangers on the street... expand it in time as well as space by not merely considering a moment but days, months, years, and generations. The act takes on a different character in different contexts.

    Guaranteed income seems like a good idea from a limited perspective over a short period of time. If you look at it in the context of millions or

  • People of retirement age have been asking this same question on a personal level since time immemorial. Do I take my pension/investments and quit this mind numbing job, or do I keep working because I donâ(TM)t know what Iâ(TM)d do with myself outside of work. Some people are creative and independent, other people need a structure applied from externally. Some people make their best contributions to society outside of the structure of a paycheck, and some people have no internal motivation to accom
  • That is a mark in favour of a universal basic income: being unconditional, it is likely to enhance our feelings of control.

    Nothing the government gives you is truly yours. They can withdraw your benefits, if enough people vote for that to happen. For example, to cut their taxes or to divert the money to themselves.

    Whereas a job that is based on actually providing a necessary or useful service, does provide security. Since the function the employee performs truly is needed. This doesn't hold for most office jobs, for example, as most of them create no value and fulfill no function except empire-building.

    The big problem is to

  • Obviously, it would be better if everyone could just go to school, study whatever they wanted for however long they desired and then afterwards always be able to find job waiting for them somewhere, preferably not too far away. Unfortunately, things just don't work that way in a market economy.

    As the world economy continues to develop and an ever increasing number and types of jobs are automated, governments do not seem to be making any plans for what to do with the legions of unemployed that will inevit
  • by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @08:02AM (#57027240)

    If you want UBI, go work a job and/or invest what you earn. It's Universal, it's Basic and it's Income.

    Automation/AI isn't going to change things, it hasn't in the past it won't in the future.

  • by bluegutang ( 2814641 ) on Sunday July 29, 2018 @08:52AM (#57027398)

    If the choice is between basic incomes and basic jobs, there are a number of massive problems with a basic jobs program which don't exist for a basic income program. Specifically:

    1. Basic jobs don’t help the disabled
    2. Basic jobs don’t help caretakers for sick family members, or parents of children
    3. Jobs require massive personal expenses - transportation, rent in desirable areas with manageable commutes, babysitting for when you're away from home - wiping out much of the salary received
    4. Basic jobs may not pay for themselves by doing useful work
    5. Private industry deals with bad workers by firing them; nobody has a good plan for how basic jobs would replace this
    6. Private employees deal with bad workplaces by quitting them; nobody has a good plan for how basic jobs would replace this
    7. Basic income could make private jobs better to work in; basic jobs could make private jobs worse to work in
    8. Basic income supports personal development; basic jobs prevent it
    9. Work sucks, and basic jobs would make huge numbers of people's lives suck

    Full discussion here [slatestarcodex.com]

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