Everyone gets a thousand a month but you can only spend it on Bibles, firearms, and truck nuts.
Everyone gets a thousand a month but you can only spend it on Bibles, firearms, and truck nuts.
Everyone gets a thousand a month but you can only spend it on Bibles, firearms, and truck nuts.
That proposes an interesting question.
Much of our current welfare system is needs based and limited use. Food stamps, fraud aside, is only supposed to be used to buy food as an example. Section 8 housing can only be used on housing. And so on.
One element of UBI is that many proponents claim it will replace other forms of means tested welfare. What happens if some dumbass blows their UBI on nonessentials and can no longer meet their own needs? Do they just fall through the cracks?
Would UBI be exempt from creditors? One can imagine a situation where someone gets into debt so deep, they might not have enough UBI left after the monthly collection to actually meet their needs.
I do believe that is one of the primary objections to UBI.
It would have to be untouchable to creditors, no?
We're getting dangerously close to the "The public is too stupid to trust with their own finances, the government should decided how they spend their money to protect them" subtext becoming text here people.
We're getting dangerously close to the "The public is too stupid to trust with their own finances, the government should decided how they spend their money to protect them" subtext becoming text here people.
True. The military is a bad example and I regret even suggesting that the unusual culture there might apply broadly.
I do wonder if UBI can work if it can be subject to unrestrained debt collection. It kinda defeats the purpose if an indebted person, either through their own foolishness or other circumstances, is no longer able to use their UBI to do anything besides pay down debt.
We are unbelievably stupid and irresponsible, true.
Well that's is sort of the problem.
"Money" being a universal means of barter is sort of the point. If you start giving people money that is already pre-earmarked for this or that it's not really money anymore, it's a voucher or ration card or whatever.
I'm not talking about earmarking the cash, I'm wondering if it would be wise to allow debtors to garnish UBI payments, intercepting the funds before they get disbursed to an indebted individual.
In a hypothetical UBI scheme, should UBI be open to wage garnishment or not?
True. The military is a bad example and I regret even suggesting that the unusual culture there might apply broadly.
I do wonder if UBI can work if it can be subject to unrestrained debt collection. It kinda defeats the purpose if an indebted person, either through their own foolishness or other circumstances, is no longer able to use their UBI to do anything besides pay down debt.
The sentiment you identify is pretty much the unspoken assumption undergirding all our means tested programs. The government often goes through great lengths, even when it costs much more to administer, to not give poor people money under the apparent belief that these people will simply squander it.
In a hypothetical UBI scheme, should UBI be open to wage garnishment or not?
Po-tay-to, po-tah-to.
Yes. Or at least not more or no less than wages now.
Either we're giving them money or we aren't.
Now you want to argue that wage garnishment itself is good/bad or needs to be more/less used that's fine, but that's a different issue.
Yes, and he brought in franking credits which lost the election.
Anyway, of marginal relevance. My view, to repeat, is that a UBI is of minor, if any, social benefit, and is politically toxic.
Others disagree, that’s fine. But I’m getting pretty annoyed that I’m criticised for not seeing the overwhelming beauty of a massive wealth redistribution. Not liking a UBI is not being unskeptical.
I suppose a fairly simple solution would to put a minimum income floor when it comes to debt collection, and if that floor was higher than UBI, you wouldn't have to worry about the debt collector taking the food off the table.
*Shrugs* As long as you're also fine with not allowing people under that minimum income floor to go into debt in the first place, sure.
No. I engage with this topic purely as a thought experiment.
Having poor people suffer is a pretty important part of the American political system. Even modest welfare proposals that address this misery of the underclass is met with massive resistance, a sweeping program like this is out of the question. If anything, I see this country on track to further dismantling our tattered social safety net, not improving it.