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The idea behind universal income is to take care of people who can't afford the most basic of needs. That sounds great.

But why then should the income be universal when the situation where somebody cannot afford basic needs is not a universal situation?

For example, in the USA, anybody making over 50.000 dollars should certainly not be struggling to make ends meet. We are probably talking at least half of the labor force. Why should they also receive a basic income?

It just seems to make more sense to give a basic income to people that are already struggling, with an income below or at least near some sort of poverty line. The whole problem with UBI is financing it, and financing it would be a lot easier if we weren't wasting money giving 1000 dollars a month to a guy already making 6 figures....

Another argument is that incentives are not distorted. People who don't receive the basic income will obviously not have any change in their incentives*, and people who do receive the basic income are poor to begin with, so obviously their incentives are less relevant, since they aren't major contributors to the economy anyways.


*not quite true that people who don't receive the basic income won't have distorted incentives. If you are only just ineligible for the basic income so that you would be better off working less and thus getting the basic income, that would be a problem ... but it's easily solvable: just make the payment of basic income linear so that those "discontinuities" are dealt with.

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    By the way your sub-question on incentives is a fiendishly difficult one. The econ theory on this has mixed answers, depending on the UBI scheme details. None of that has been addressed in any answer here or in the other question (which also asked this sub-question). For a good answer of that issue, ask on econ.SE or read bath.ac.uk/publications/… Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 3:43
  • Various comments deleted. Please don't use comments to answer the question or discuss the subject matter of the question. For more information about how comments should and should not be used, see the help article about the commenting privilege
    – Philipp
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 10:41
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    @fizz same subject, different approaches. This question does not asks about swapping money for something else. Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 12:22
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    I very much disagree with the premise. While historically a public safety net could have been implemented as universal minimum income, the thrust of universal basic income going forward is to address 1) automation. AI and other technologies will make most work and education irrelevant 2) macroeconomic failure. Since 2007 the financial crisis has been on ice through state/central bank stimulation, which only profits the banks and corporate elite. The 'helicopter drop' is a more effective and socially fair way of perpetuating economic stability.
    – Sentinel
    Commented Mar 23, 2019 at 6:17

14 Answers 14

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The problem of giving X to people earning much more than X is very easily solved by taking it away again through tax brackets.

The real motivation for the universal in UBI is a privacy and dignity argument:

  • Nobody deserves not to have an income below certain levels necessary to provide some kind of housing, food and other necessities of survival

  • At the moment, all forms of assistance come with intrusive questioning intended to measure whether they "deserve" it. This is tedious, difficult, and wearing on human dignity, especially things like disability benefits where you are expected to prove what you can't do.

  • Given that we assume everyone deserves something, there is no longer any need for the questioning. Removing it enhances dignity and also reduces bureaucracy.

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    Any UBI scheme will also involve raising/using taxes to cover the costs of the scheme. If some people get more out than they put in, that necessarily means that some people will put more in than they get out. Commented Mar 21, 2019 at 20:08
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    > This is tedious, difficult, and wearing on human dignity. -- it also means it is more expensive, since you have to have a system which enforces that only the deserving get the assistance
    – Gnudiff
    Commented Mar 21, 2019 at 22:07
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    Dignity is a big part of this. Society often shames people for receiving public assistance (whatever form it night take). UBI can help alleviate that, because at least then everyone receives it.
    – asgallant
    Commented Mar 21, 2019 at 22:17
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    The current system has a lot of push-back against those receiving assistance. "If I can make a living so can they." or "Why should the govt take the money I earned and give to someone who is too lazy to get a job?" Making it a universal income may help resolving those objections.
    – CramerTV
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 0:34
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    @Tom It is ridiculous to argue that by taxing robots or markets you are not taxing people. "Taxing robots" is shorthand for taxing people who use robots. Taxing "markets" is shorthand for taxing transactions that people make on markets. Every tax takes money from the individuals who would receive it if not for that tax. Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 16:00
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Cost

The whole problem with UBI is financing it, and financing it would be a lot easier if we weren't wasting money giving 1000 dollars a month to a guy already making 6 figures....

When parcelling out money, there are actually two costs:

  1. The money itself, and
  2. Administration of the system.

Assessing need is complicated. Complicated things are expensive. A system that avoids assessment costs is therefore much, much cheaper. So from the point of view of administration costs, it's cheaper to just give (say) $1000 per month to everyone, rather than spending time and energy (and money) working out who needs it.

The actual cost of the benefits (the $1000 dollars per month per person) is superficially, the more expensive part. However, we (that is, most countries) already have a system that both funds government expenditure and acts (to some extent) to redistribute money: taxes.

Your imagined income threshold, above which you think people should not be receiving the money, simply becomes the income at which taxes are set to equal $1000 per month. The end result is that anyone with an income below that point, wherever it might be, receives their $1000 dollars per month from the government, but pays pay less than that that in taxes: a net income. Above it, people still receive the $1000 per month but, between that and their other income sources, wind up paying more than that in taxes.

Incentivising work

You mention distortion of incentives, particularly at the point where any additional income source would lead to no longer receiving government money and, therefore, result in a net loss -- a disincentive to work. You acknowledge this and attempt to provide a fix by tapering the benefit; however, the argument in favour of Universal Basic Income is that this tapering is, again, something we already cover in the tax system. Every extra dollar of income will incur less than a dollar in tax. Under UBI, extra income is therefore always (financially) worthwhile, with no further tweaking, as opposed to the situation in many welfare systems where passing some income threshold results in all benefits being stopped and, accordingly, a net loss of income.

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    as opposed to the situation in many welfare systems where passing some income threshold results in all benefits being stopped and, accordingly, a net loss of income. => I've seen that with people refusing "small" part-time jobs of only a couple hours per week; the job itself wouldn't pay much, at minimum wage, and would cause the loss of more social benefits. Some still preferred to work, "to feel useful"; poor chaps :x Commented Mar 21, 2019 at 20:22
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    My favorite implementation of this is the negative income tax. Just register everyone as taxable and if your income is below the minimum taxable amount you start getting negative taxes (money credited to your bank)
    – slebetman
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 8:36
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    @pluckedkiwi: The issue with annual payments is more that a year is a rather long time to survive on zero income, if you e.g. lose your job in January and cannot find a new one. Especially if you were already living hand to mouth before that, and thus don't have savings to carry you over. (In principle, private lenders could help work around this issue e.g. by providing loans to poor people that come due when the tax credit comes in. But even if such a system worked smoothly, it would just serve to transfer part of the universal income to the lenders instead of its intended recipients.) Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 16:11
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    A wonderful illustration of the disincentive issue is at 1.bp.blogspot.com/-fPe2_5TbYrU/UMlkiOHBgyI/AAAAAAAATNM/…, prepared by the Pennsylvania Secretary of Public Welfare, illustrating how the combination of income tax rates and reduced/eliminated eligibility for welfare programs produces an effective tax rate exceeding 100%. That is to say that there are points at which increasing wages result in the worker having less money after taking taxes and subsidies into account. Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 16:49
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    @pluckedkiwi: No. All I'm saying is that "UBI should only be enough to keep people from suffering actual privation" and "nobody should be living hand to mouth because of UBI" are not really compatible statements. (Also, you keep focusing on financial irresponsibility a lot. Without going too far off on a tangent, I'd just like to point out that there's a big difference between "spend it all on hookers and blow" and "spend it all on microwave meals because nobody taught you how to cook from raw ingredients", even if both arguably count as "not living within your means".) Commented Mar 25, 2019 at 13:47
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If a basic income is not universal, we're essentially back at the current situation for most European countries: anybody who doesn't have a job, or only a part-time job with a salary below a certain level, receives social assistance / welfare up to a level which is equal to or comparable to that of minimum wage. One could call that basic income but it really doesn't make a difference.

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    The social assistance / welfare minimum is well below minimum wage...
    – gerrit
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 8:27
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    Once you realize people get that money anyway, universal income just becomes an exercise in minimizing paperwork.
    – JollyJoker
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 11:06
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    Even for receiving social assistance there are conditions on savings and property beyond just having low income.
    – hkBst
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 11:19
  • OP's proposal would be more like guaranteed minimum income "a system of social welfare provision that guarantees that all citizens or families have an income sufficient to live on, provided they meet certain conditions. Eligibility is typically determined by citizenship, a means test, and either availability for the labour market or a willingness to perform community services. The primary goal of a guaranteed minimum income is to reduce poverty. If citizenship is the only requirement, the system turns into a universal basic income." Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 15:16
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    @Fizz: No, a guaranteed minimum income for all citizens is not the same as UBI.
    – Ben Voigt
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 23:11
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From the point of view of those running the system, the primary advantages of a universal basic income over means tested welfare or guaranteed income systems are transparency and efficiency of distribution. Each person gets a pot, and money is paid into it without needing to collect any evidence beyond identity, and with fewer opportunities for gaming the system.

To quote a 2015 piece in the Guardian including an interview with a Dutch councillor experimenting with the scheme:

“In Nijmegen we get £88m to give to people on welfare, but it costs £15m a year for the civil servants running the bureaucracy of the current system. We will save money with a ‘basic income’.”

Of course, this has to be balanced against the extra cost in funding people who don't meaningfully benefit, but it does move the conversation from one of morality to one of economics. In fact, this is exactly the other side of "flat tax" systems.

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    Yes, but this reasoning just shifts the work of administration onto the income tax office. The amount of administration is not less, just done by another taxpayer-funded person.
    – RedSonja
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 9:29
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    @RedSonja: Yes, to some extent, however usually welfare has more conditions attached than just the amount of income available, such as willingness to work, health situation, number of dependents, not having savings etc. Checking all that would no longer be necessary.
    – sleske
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 10:07
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    @RedSonja We already have armies of people staffing our tax offices. This will effectively be a change in tax law for them -- they won't have to add staff to account for the change. On the other hand, we could theoretically shut down entire bureaucracies devoted to means tested welfare.
    – bvoyelr
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 12:37
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    @bvoyelr: I think that's different in the US, but e.g. in Germany income tax is set up in a way certain groups of people never need to do a tax declaration. This includes everyone who gets basic welfare and everyone who doesn't have substantial income other than from wages (and note retirement is for most entirely via pension cass and not by investment accounts - so no substantial capital gains for many). So for those countries it would indeed mainly shift administration (and at least for Germany I'm not sure tax laws are less complicated than social insurance/welfare laws)
    – cbeleites
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 17:07
  • Cbeleites. If you don’t have to fill out your income tax declaration in Germany, a declaration where you fill in your name, your marital state, number of children, your annual income and the tax you paid (which might not be needed) is all you need. And if your income is only wages, you must fill out your income tax declaration anyway if you have anything that you want to deduct from taxes and want some of your taxes paid back. You don’t have to fill out anything because the tax office made sure you did pay enough tax or more than enough.
    – gnasher729
    Commented Oct 26, 2020 at 13:50
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What you are describing is not Universal Basic Income. It is simply welfare, just like it already exists in most of europe and north america (the execution may differ, but the idea of "giving something to people who truly need it" is the same).

The whole point of UBI, is that it is Universal. That is the big factor that makes it different from welfare.

Of course, you may argue that welfare is better. This is pretty much what your question is doing. But even if you think one system is better than another one, doesn't mean that the other one should not exist as an idea and be discussed.

A sizable portion of the population believes that welfare is an incentive to not work. You may think that those people are wrong, but it doesn't change the fact that they exist. With UBI, since it is universal, this argument doesn't work. If you determine that everyone needs $1000 a month to survive, and you give $1000 a month to everyone, then everyone can survive, but still be poor, unless they work. And, more importantly, they get to keep most of the money they make while working. (They still need to pay taxes, though.)

If, in another system, you give everyone the money they lack to reach $1000 a month, it essentially means that the first $1000 you earn every month means nothing, you would have gotten it by not working. This essentially makes a big split into the population.

Everyone has a certain amount of effort and time they are willing to put in for a certain amount of money, but it differs from person to person. Most importantly, the more you are already investing and earning, the less willing you usually are to satep it up. For example, with a $100,000/year salary, many people would not be willing to work a 6th day per week to make $120,000 instead, even though all of those people are willing to put in the first 5 days at $20,000 per day.

So with welfare, everyone that was willing to work for $0-1000 a month, will now not work at all, because they aren't willing to work enough to go past the $1000 line, and they won't get anything from all work before that line.

With UBI, they can be willing to work for $500 only, and they will do it, because it increases their income from $1000 to $1500.

You can argue all day that you think welfare is better, but the fact remains that UBI is an idea, with its own set of pros and cons, and most of the differences are derived from the "Universal" part, so as long as one person believes it is better, the idea will persist, and will stay universal. Remove the Universal, and you get a totally different idea, which is also preferred by many people, but those people aren't the same group.

You can say "I think Welfare is better than UBI", but you can't say "I think UBI should not be Universal", because you are simply arguing for the removal of the idea itself.

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    Some good points, but you seem to be mixing in an idea that taxation will be abolished alongside the introduction of UBI.
    – Jontia
    Commented Mar 21, 2019 at 19:25
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    @Jontia I think the point is unclear. I thought the same as you initially. The problem is this line "And, more importantly, every cent they earn while working is going to them." It seems to imply there will be no tax but I think it actually means there will be no reduction in welfare (or whatever it is called) payments to compensate. That phrase would be better as "And, more importantly, every cent they earn while working is actually increasing their gross income". I'm not confident enough that I know what Kaito Kid actually meant to edit but I'm 99% sure that's what they intended to say.
    – Eric Nolan
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 11:36
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    Jontia and Eric, yes that is what I meant. Nothing in my question is addressing the question of taxes, because I assume that there are many ways to tax the population with or without UBI, and they don't necessarily have a direct correlation. What I meant was really what Eric said, which is that eveyr cent increases your gross income, and under most taxation systems, every cent also increases your net income. The point is that if welfare depends on your salary, it is possible that the first dollars you earn don't affect your income at all, since they remove welfare dollars. UBI is not like that
    – Kaito Kid
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 12:46
  • It's not even just about every dollar increasing the net income, but about the total marginal tax rate (including the reductions in welfare). Badly built welfare systems can reduce the welfare payments by e.g. 90 cents for each dollar earned, which is still a net gain, but doesn't really create an incentive for working. Income tax doesn't usually get nearly that steep, so there's less negative incentives.
    – ilkkachu
    Commented Mar 24, 2019 at 15:21
  • every cent they earn while working is going to them. is it really though? I'd like to see some computation on this because the UBI has to by someone too. In the end, wouldn't those who work to earn a lot more than just UBI have too pay so much more in taxes to foot the bill for the UBI for the rest?
    – JJJ
    Commented Mar 24, 2019 at 15:31
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Standard Welfare systems create criminals.

Many countries have Welfare systems where they try to help those who need help, and ONLY those who need help.

Of course, some people will try to appear needful so that they get help they don't really qualify for. This is Welfare fraud.

And of course, normal tax payers will resent these people.

Since normal tax payers outnumber the needy, politicians will promise to crack down on Welfare fraud.

One effect is that there is a huge bureaucracy dedicated to controlling Welfare recipients. This cost money. It also creates the true impression among the needy that the bureaucracy is out to get them.

The "Welfare Police" catches a number of people. Some of these are deliberately defrauding the system. And they should be punished for this.

My worry is the others, people who have made simple mistakes, misunderstood some instruction on one of the endless sequence of forms they have to fill out.

In some cases, Welfare case workers have given bad advice. As a result, the recipient is accused and convicted of fraud.

With Universal Basic Income, this all goes away. Everybody is qualified, nobody can sneak in. End of problem.

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    "Universal Basic Income, this all goes away." --> We still need to administer things else my alter ego, my bots or dog Scruffy might get in line - maybe twice. Sure we hope the bureaucracy/overhead/scamming will reduce. Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 15:10
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    @chux True. Still, I was mostly concerned about people accidentally scamming. You aren't going to accidentally register Scruffy as a human. Commented Mar 25, 2019 at 8:36
  • @StigHemmer I think 'accidental scamming' is an oxymoron, it kind of has to be intentional to qualify as a 'scam'. Ultimately though the expense of welfare scam, while real, is trivial compared to the total amount of welfare paid in a year. Even if one presumes all welfare scamming were to disappear entirely, which I side with chux in believing they would just scam in another format, ultimately the difference in savings is still small enough to pale in comparison to larger questions of cost such as rather welfare disincentivize people from working or logistical overhead of welfare etc.
    – dsollen
    Commented Oct 27, 2020 at 17:17
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The problem is that removing the basic income at an income threshold essentially makes it prohibitive to increase your income. E.g. in your example, anyone below $50,000 gets a supplement of $12,000. Above $50,000, zero. So if you make $49,000, there is no incentive to take a raise of $2000. Or even $10,000. Your overall income would become $51,000 or $59,000 where previously it had been $61,000. I.e. you make less money from getting a raise. So at $49,999.99, it's not worth getting a raise unless the raise is more than $12,000, to offset the lost payment.

Going forward, I'm going to use a US-based example. Other countries will have similar programs that produce similar results but with their own individual quirks.

So how would we fix that? One way is to make the payment fade out. At $0 of income, the payment is $12,000. At $50,000, the payment is $0. But that is an implicit income tax rate of 24%. Add that to a Social Security tax of 15.3% for a total rate of 36.5% (after adjusting the base) on the 0% rate up to $12,000. But after that, the income tax rate is 10% for a total rate of 45.8%. And then a 12% rate for a total of 47.7%. Which then drops to 25.4% before going back up to 34.6%. That's both weird and not progressive. So let's not do that either.

Now consider a system with no Universal Basic Income (UBI) but with four tax brackets, 0%, 15%, 28%, and 38%. Now, it turns out that a system called Social Security exists and for those who pay the 15% rate, the total rate is about 28%. So we can think about there being two brackets: 28% and 38%. But what if we made one bracket? If everyone pays 38% but gets $12,000 back, for those with less than $120,000 in income, they're better off. They pay less than $12,000 in taxes and get a $12,000 UBI. Net they're ahead.

Before    Income              Old tax            Social Security/Medicare      New tax
  0%         $0 -  $12,000        $0                  $0 -   $1976             $0 -    $4560
 15%    $12,000 -  $40,000        $0 - $4200       $1976 -   $6588          $4560 -  $15,200
 28%    $40,000 - $132,900     $4200 - $30,212     $6588 - $21,889        $15,200 -  $50,502
 28%   $132,900 - $400,000   $30,212 - $105,000  $21,889 - $29,847        $50,502 - $152,000
 38%   $400,000 and up      $105,000 and up      $29,847 and up          $152,000 and up

At $40,000, the tax increases from about $10,788 to $15,200, but that is offset by a $12,000 payment. That's a net decrease of $7588. At $400,000, the tax has gone up by about $17,000. Offset by $12,000 that's still a $5000 increase. The zero point, where the basic income just matches the tax, is somewhere between $132,900 and $400,000. Probably around $300,000.

TL;DR: A flat tax of 38% with a UBI is more progressive than either a threshold or a fade out if we include Social Security and Medicare taxes in the analysis. And that's why it is better for it to be universal than only given to lower incomes.

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  • I'm a bit confused. 12,000 is 24% of 50,000, yes, but how does that amount to the tax amount? Wouldn't the actual tax needed to fund the UBI depend on the number of people of each income level? Also, if you put your fadeout threshold at a higher income, would your results hold?
    – Obie 2.0
    Commented Mar 21, 2019 at 23:17
  • @Obie2.0 That has nothing to do with the tax required to fund UBI. The point there is that if your salary/wages increase from $0 to $50,000, you lose 24 cents on the dollar after UBI. I.e. if you make $1, your UBI goes from $12,000 to $11,999.76 (assuming an even fade). So your overall income is now $12,000.76. An implicit tax of 24 cents on your $1 income. If you make the fade out threshold higher, the implicit tax rate will be proportionally lower. E.g. 12% at $100,000 or 8% at $150,000. But $50,000 is specifically the point where the question no longer wanted the UBI.
    – Brythan
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 2:04
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In addition to the excellent answer by pjc50 about dignity, I would add that in every system there is a time delay between applying for a benefit and actually getting it. This can be over a month. So if you are on benefit and take a short term job for a couple of weeks then you have to deal with stopping your benefit for those weeks, then starting it again, and waiting for the point when your "new" benefit actually arrives. During that time you have no income, but you still need to eat and pay rent.

This is a big disincentive to people on benefits taking short-term work. It is also a huge problem for people in the "gig economy" or on zero hours contracts.

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  • Of course, it is also an incentive to build up savings. Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 21:30
  • @Acccumulation Sure, but many forms of government assistance require that people have little to no savings before they can receive benefits. So even if someone has built up their savings to cover gaps, they may have depleted it by the time they have this problem. Commented Mar 24, 2019 at 8:06
  • This is similar to what I was going to post; there are delays. In addition, a person with intermittent employment might have a qualifying income over the whole year, but not at a given time. Under UBI, they can immediately receive payments as soon as their income drops, without waiting for a qualifying period.
    – DrSheldon
    Commented Mar 25, 2019 at 0:24
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There is another advantage of UBI that has not been mentioned that is a halfway decent argument for the universality of the basic income, it is that generally without that universality the tax/giving authority needs to know about your family structure. So if your government is not explicitly a religious authority it is possible that your citizens can be married in the eyes of one religion but not in the eyes of your government; if so then the UBI would, if not universal, potentially amount to a program that says "Hey Alice and Bob, I will pay you both to not get married, because it turns out Bob has almost no income as the homemaker and Alice has all the income as the breadwinner, so Bob will cease to qualify for the basic income programs when we divide the amount 50/50."

It's mostly just saying that you would like the structure to be explicitly family-structure-agnostic that leads to this sort of thing. Indeed, one can prove that the only forms of family-structure-agnostic progressive income taxes, each amount to a fixed-percentage non-progressive income tax plus a universal basic income offset.

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  • I don't get it. Why would a government have to consider marriage differently from cohabitation?
    – gerrit
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 8:31
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    @gerrit Religion. Otherwise known as "don't have sex without paying us the licence fee first".
    – RedSonja
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 9:46
  • I thought that "citizens can be married in the eyes of one religion but not in the eyes of your government" is currently the default in developed countries.
    – hkBst
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 11:30
  • @hkBst yes, it is currently very normal for taxation structures to depend on government-recognized family structures; it is an ideological purpose to simplify government so that it doesn't have to track that. With that said if the USA were to extract the same income tax in a family-agnostic way ($10T total gross income, 200M taxpayers, $1.5T extracted) then with a 20% tax rate we give everyone a $2500 UBI, with each 2% rate increase yielding $1000 more in UBI. So even at 40% tax folks still only get $12.5k in UBI per person. Might be better for any married couples making less than $65k?
    – CR Drost
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 17:47
  • @gerrit they don't have to but quite often they do. For welfare eligibility they might look at the family as a whole (as in this example.) Roommates (even a long term ones that you share the same bed with and have children with) might not be considered family. Marriage makes the relationship official, and thus recognized by the welfare authorities. This really just boils down to another one of those perverse incentives that impact welfare systems.
    – Mr.Mindor
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 18:13
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  1. The economic argument for universal income is that it removes welfare overhead. If everybody gets universal income, there is no need to spend money to figure out who "deserves" welfare.

  2. Unlike "traditional" welfare systems, universal income motivates people to work by design. If we look at the "traditional" welfare systems from a naive and overly simplified perspective, people who earn less than $1000 simply get whatever difference they need to reach $1000 ( <- this is a naive and overly simplified example). People who get paid less than $1000 are better off not working at all in such a system.

  3. To counteract the current system's lack of intrinsic incentive to work described above, welfare does implement artificial incentives for people to get off of welfare, because it has to. These incentives, such as social shaming, forcing people to wait half a day in a queue, or requiring people on welfare to give up some of their basic rights, are not always contributing to the economy or to the society.

  4. A "traditional" welfare system requires proof that somebody deserves welfare. This introduces a chance for a false result - both false positive and false negative, inherent discrimination against various disabilities (e.g. dislexia, discalculia, depression), and a delay during which people may be completely out of funds.

  5. Universal income is balanced with tax. People who earn sufficient money to live without universal income do pay more taxes than those who don't.

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    This is a good blanket answer about the benefits of a UBI, but the specific question was about the lack of any threshold.
    – user12171
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 22:51
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There are two main reasons:

  • It is more simple and more fair at the same time
  • Because we can

The first has been elaborated in other answers. A welfare system that gives money only to those who need it is by its very nature discriminatory. It needs some way to figure out who needs, and it needs ways to avoid frauds, and it must be carefully constructed to avoid false incentives. All of which creates a nightmare of regulations, applications, forms and programs - or, in simpler words: A lot of opportunities for mistakes.

The second wasn't mentioned so far: We can.

The belief that financing UBI is the core issue couldn't be further from the truth. I'll take my home country of Germany because I know the numbers for it. It has around 80 million people. Giving every man, woman, child and baby 1000 Euros per month would cost 960 Billion Euros. While that's a considerable amount, it's only about a quarter of the GDP. It's less than three times the current government budget, but only 15% of the combined annual turnover of the German economy. It is a huge amount of money, but it is within the realm of the possible, maybe for the first time in history. Especially if you realize that this money isn't lost, and the vast majority of it will be immediately turned into consumption, especially since people no longer need to hoard money into pension funds for old age or keep reserves in case of unemployment.

The fact that it is possible, that productivity has raised to such levels that we can think about UBI also opens the path to entirely new visions of society, in much the same way that new types of society appeared when it became possible for considerable parts of the population to not grow, gather, hunt or herd their own food anymore. And the only way to think about such societies of the future is to consider UBI to be universal.

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    In your maths remember that you should be replacing existing welfare payments and a lot of the cost to administer them with the UBI payments. I had a quick look and it seems that Germany spends around 25% of their GDP on welfare. Even acknowledging that some of those costs will still exist it still means the actual net cost is going to be a lot less than 960 billion. I realise this is a bugbear for those who hate taxes but as a relatively high earner who would be given an extra 12k a year I have no problem having my taxes increased to compensate. UBI is fairer and more efficient.
    – Eric Nolan
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 11:51
  • Your point about pension funds is weak. People will still want pension funds so that they don't have to subsist on only UBI after they retire. Also pension money is not "hoarded": pension funds are big investors. Commented Mar 25, 2019 at 9:10
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    A lot of people in the low-income sector would be better off with UBI than with their current pension funds.
    – Tom
    Commented Mar 25, 2019 at 10:30
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Other people have touched on this, but I think it should be made more explicit: there isn't really any difference between taking X, versus failing to pay X that you otherwise would have paid.

Suppose someone has a job that pays $40k, and they also receive $12k in UBI, and they have to pay $6k to the IRS. We can call the $6k as "phase-out" of the UBI, or an "income tax" on the $40k, but either way this person is getting a take-home pay of $46k. What we call it is just a matter of semantics. Whether it is framed as a total gross income of $50k with a tax of $4k, or a base pay of $40k with a $6k UBI bonus doesn't affect this person's bottom line.

So as long as there is still income tax, we have a situation that is, even if we call it be a different term, effectively a phase-out of UBI. Unless you're imagining that UBI will be accompanied by the abolition of income tax, your question doesn't really make sense.

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  • Exactly: income tax already accomplishes OP's goal of "make the payment of basic income linear so that those "discontinuities" are dealt with"
    – Ben Voigt
    Commented Mar 22, 2019 at 23:04
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Universal income should be universal income for the simple fact that you can't just look at the income of a person and determine if they are living above or below the poverty line as there are many factors that would impact that besides how much money you get paid.

You are making some bad assumptions. In your example you are assuming that someone making $50,000 a year has the same standard of living regardless of where they live. It should be noted that where a person lives and in what conditions (health, how large of a family, how many wage earners and other factors) are just as important as basic income when calculating how well someone lives.

What people tend to forget is the poverty line is not the same around the country and or even in the same place from person to person. For example a single person with an income of $100,000 is going to have a much better standard of living then a family with 5 kids on the same income.

https://www.rentjungle.com/average-rent-in-san-francisco-rent-trends/

As of February 2019, average rent for an apartment in San Francisco, CA is $3787 which is a 4.94% increase from last year when the average rent was $3600 , and a 0.4% increase from last month when the average rent was $3772.

One bedroom apartments in San Francisco rent for $3402 a month on average (a 1.79% increase from last year) and two bedroom apartment rents average $4494 (a 1.58% increase from last year).

According to that source the average one bedroom apartment costs $40,824 to rent in the city of San Francisco.

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As I explained in another answer, UBI is universal because it is easier to give people the money to get their basic needs than have the government try to decide that. On a small and individualistic level, the government can be bad at determine the needs of individual people and attempts at that lead to issues like the 'poverty trap': an issue when the government decides a poor person is in a position that they 'no longer' need help, so they take away their benefits. This can lead to a person falling back into poverty without a social safety net because the government decided for a certain people that a person made enough money to not need basic benefits without checking if the individual is truly doing well. This is what happens in our current welfare system. A study in Illinois found that this poverty trap could lead to a situation where "lost benefits and increased taxes outweigh any additional earnings, making it harder for beneficiaries to escape from poverty and reach the middle class". It also incentivizes people to stay in poverty instead of risking employment with a job that could lead to losing their meager benefits (benefits that might not meet their actual needs, but they have to live off of since the government determined that this was their 'need'). UBI can alleviate this problem since a person can keep the money they made while in poverty instead of potentially losing their benefits, with the only thing changing is how they are taxed in the bracket they ascend to.

If we desire to have incentive alignment in our economic system, where every marginal amount of time worked by an individual leads to a marginal increase in total income, the poverty trap created by the welfare system is a major problem.[...] The beauty of universal basic income, paired with a negative income tax, is that these decisions to forgo work or a raise because of a loss in state benefits, are non-existent. In a UBI system, incentives are always aligned for the individual to accept a raise or to work an additional hour because it will always put more money in their pocket. -How basic income ends the poverty trap by Derek Horstmeyer

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