Universal Basic Income
Opening Statement
Consider for a
moment that from this day onwards, on the first day of every month, around
1,000 Rs is deposited into your bank account because you are a citizen. This
income is independent of every other source of income and guarantees you a
monthly starting salary above the poverty line for the rest of your life.
You might think that this is sheer madness and this is not possible,
this is a new economic policy that is being seriously considered in many
countries in the world today. In fact, it is also being implemented in many
places across the world today. This economic policy is called UNIVERSAL
BASIC INCOME.
About the topic
A universal basic income is a government guarantee
that each citizen receives a minimum income. It is also called a citizen’s
income, guaranteed minimum income, or basic income. The intention behind
the payment is to provide enough to cover the basic cost of living and provide
financial security. The concept has regained popularity as a way to offset job
losses caused by technology.
Why There is a need for UBI
One of the most important reason is the job losses that are happening
and will happen in the future due to automation and AI (artificial
intelligence), experts believe that there will be so many job losses that not
everyone will be able to secure a job in the near future and people would not
be able to bear their expenses in the absences of a job so it is necessary to
give them some money for free to help them afford a basic standard of living so
they are able to afford basic necessities like food, medicine, etc.
History behind UBI
Thomas Paine, Napoleon, and Martin
Luther King, Jr., don't have much in common at first glance. Nor do
socialists and libertarians or Finnish bureaucrats and Silicon Valley tycoons.
Some policies have a habit of creating strange bedfellows, but none more so
than the idea that governments should guarantee their citizens a minimum level
of income. Not by creating jobs or providing traditional welfare, but by
cutting checks, for the same amount, to everyone.
Universal basic income (UBI) is an
old idea, but in recent years it has gained considerable momentum. The threat
of automation is focusing minds: Algorithms are learning to perform a growing
number of blue- and white-collar jobs, and soon there may not be enough paid
employment to go around.
In a strict sense, the intellectual
history of universal basic income is roughly half a century old. But the idea
that the government should somehow prop up everyone's earnings has cropped up
repeatedly over the past two centuries: as a citizen's dividend, a social
credit, a national dividend, a demogrant, a negative income tax, and a
guaranteed minimum income, among other concepts. Few of these proposals fit the
usual definition of a basic income, and they differ from
one another significantly. But they share a common thread.
Real-life Experiments of UBI
·
Alaska has
had a guaranteed income program since 1982. The Alaska Permanent
Fund paid each resident an average of $1,606 in 2019, all out of oil
revenues. Almost three-fourths of recipients save it for emergencies.
· In 2017, the Hawaii state legislature passed a
bill declaring that everyone is entitled to basic financial security. It directed
the government to develop a solution, which may include a guaranteed income.
· In Oakland, California, the seed
accelerator Y Combinator will pay 100 families between $1,000 and $2,000 a
month.
· In 2019, Stockton, California, began a two-year
pilot program. It's giving $500 a month to 125 local families. It hopes to
keep families together, and away from payday lenders, pawnshops, and gangs.
About 43% of the recipients are still working. Most of the others were taking
care of relatives, disabled, retired, or students.
· Chicago, Illinois, is considering a pilot to give
1,000 low-income families $1,000 a month.
· Canada is experimenting with a three-year
universal income program. It's giving 4,000 Ontario residents living in
poverty C$17,000 a year or C$24,000/couple. The government expects it
will cost C$50 million annually.
· In 2017, Finland gave 2,000 unemployed people
560 euros a month for two years, even if they found work. The recipients said
it reduced stress. They said it gave them more incentive to find a good job or
start their own business. Instead, the Finnish government found that they did
not have higher incomes or more workdays than the control group.
Pros And Cons Of UBI
Pros
· Workers could afford to wait for a
better job or better wages
· People would have the freedom to
return to school or stay home to care for a relative
· The "poverty trap" would be
removed from traditional welfare programs
· Citizens could have simple,
straightforward financial assistance that minimizes bureaucracy
· The government would spend less to
administer the program than with traditional welfare
· Payments would help young couples
start families in countries with low birth rates
· The payments could help stabilize the
economy during recessionary periods
Cons
· Inflation could be triggered because
of the increase in demand for goods and services
· There won't be an increased standard
of living in the long run because of inflated prices
· A reduced program with smaller
payments won't make a real difference to poverty-stricken families
· Free income may disincentivize people
to get jobs, and make work seem optional
· Free income could perpetuate the
falling labour force participation rate
· There are many opposed to handouts
for the unemployed
My Opinion
The UBI scheme can be a boon for an economy or it can be a catastrophic failure,
according to me the end results of this scheme mostly depends upon how it is
implemented. I personally think that the government should only give extra
monetary benefits to those people who are at least doing some kind of job -
like farmers, street vendors, maids, etc. If we give free money to everyone
then why anyone will work? So we should give extra monetary benefits to only
those people who are doing at least some kind of job and this will also promote
other people to do at least some small job. By doing this we will also solve
the problem of unemployment and as people have done some hard work to earn this
money they will spend it wisely, which will also solve the problem of
inflation.
Thank you
If you have any doubt or questions
about this topic please let me know in the comments below.
My Instagram account - https://www.instagram.com/thepotatoeconomist/

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