"The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design. To the naive mind that can conceive of order only as the product of deliberate arrangement..." - Frederick Hayek
Whether or not UBI is a good idea, a useful idea, or a moral idea is an interesting question (I generally think not, but it seems that position is losing the debate). Arguing for UBI (or any other aspect of the economy) from an engineering perspective is a mistake though. An economy is not an elevator. When we put failsafes in to elevators, we know what they do. When we put failsafes in to economies, they behave in bizarre, unpredictable ways.
A lot of things went in to the 2008 financial collapse, but at least part of it was due to a large group of smart (but in retrospect, unwise) people assuming that a math equation accurately represented the financial system.
I think it's worth bearing in mind that Hayek lived before the information age, and that there are real limits to the validity of the idea that design isn't useful (and especially in economics/finance).
UBI may not be a good idea, but the reason being that it's likely not the best design (I would say Minsky had it largely correct [0]).
There are essentially two types of economic regulation. Blacklist regulation and whitelist regulation. Whitelist regulation works like an elevator, or more accurately, an airplane. You can reason over it, and speculate over the effects of adding new items to the list. It is a constrained problem. The blacklist style results in more innovation, but also more chaos.
Hayek may not have realized this himself, but he was certainly talking about the blacklist style when he said this. In further support of this idea, the repeal of Glass-Steagal, which precipitated the 2008 crisis, essentially moved the investment banking system from a whitelist to a blacklist, and the result of this, was a bunch of insurance companies maximizing their correlated risk through a convoluted series of loopholes because that is always the goal of a limited liability enterprise. This was the event that made the equations invalid.
I agree with your overall point, but I don't think it has unlimited applicability, and ever since Hayek first published on this topic, even liberal economists and philosophers have been critical that it fails to take into account the evolution of government as part of that anarchy of the market. Some suggest the tension between rational constructivism and spontaneous order is a false dichotomy in the real world.
It's worth noting that Hayek's conception of the economy as spontaneous order may run into something of a paradox[0], and in the view of some, the emergent and unconscious shaping of the market as we see it today can certainly conflict with other goals - in particular justice. I think most people are interested in at least asking about what can be done rather than sitting down at the command of "don't touch that, who knows what may happen!".
It feels like the combination of Yang's presidential run and covid has broken the seal on the idea of UBI in the US. After having the experience of the government sending everyone direct payments, I think it's all but inevitable that we'll arrive at some level of formal UBI in the future.
Given its sky high bipartisan popularity, it's hard to imagine how any non-UBI supporting politician will be able to compete with a UBI supporting politician going forward. I'd speculate that this was the deciding factor in the Democrats' recent Georgia runoff victory. Nothing motivates voters like the prospect of money placed directly in their pockets.
While I'm strongly in favor of UBI and think we are basically doomed without it, there are a couple things in particular that I worry about:
1 - As the Frédéric Bastiat quote goes: "the state is the great myth that everyone can live at the expense of everyone else". Once people get a taste of UBI, how do we prevent voters and politicians from pushing it to unsustainable levels? It seems like the incentive on both sides will be to always push it higher and higher.
2 - Motivation and purpose. Imagining a world with UBI, widespread automation, and general or close-to-general AI, what percent of humanity will be able to meaningfully contribute? If the number is, say, 50% or less, how do we maintain any semblance of purpose and opportunity under these circumstances?
> Once people get a taste of UBI, how do we prevent voters and politicians from pushing it to unsustainable levels?
You might also ask: Once corporations get a taste of increasing the national debt, how do we prevent them from lobbying politicians to push it to unsustainable levels?
As to your actual question, don't worry, the wishes of voters have very little effect on US government policy.
> Motivation and purpose. Imagining a world with UBI, widespread automation, and general or close-to-general AI, ...
Removing UBI from that equation doesn't lead to a better outcome in terms of motivation and purpose, unless you include the motivation and purpose of the unemployed masses fighting an (unwinnable) war against the elites who control the economy and the killbots.
Perhaps we need to accept that jobs are just leaky abstractions for motivation and purpose, and governments should be trying to create positive outlets for people's talents and social instincts, rather than constructing ever more dehumanizing ways of punishing people for being poor as incentive to work in pointless jobs.
> Once people get a taste of UBI, how do we prevent voters and politicians from pushing it to unsustainable levels? It seems like the incentive on both sides will be to always push it higher and higher.
You're forgetting the other side of the coin. The money comes from somewhere.
Suppose you can fund a $12,000 UBI with a flat 25% tax rate. So now the breakeven point is at $48,000 in income. If you make more than that you don't want to increase the UBI amount because it'll cost you more than it gets you.
Whereas you could fund a $15,000 UBI with a flat 35% tax rate. The rate has to be more than proportionally higher because of the negative impact of higher tax rates on economic activity. Now the breakeven point is at ~$43,000 in income. It's lower, so fewer people want to increase it more than that.
When the breakeven point has more than half of the population on the other side, you don't have the votes to raise the amount any more.
> Imagining a world with UBI, widespread automation, and general or close-to-general AI, what percent of humanity will be able to meaningfully contribute?
Imagine a world with widespread automation and general or close-to-general AI without a UBI.
> you don't want to increase the UBI amount because it'll cost you more than it gets you
I think this is an oversimplification, because in practice, there will be a gradient of people around the inflection point who would be willing to take less in order to stop working, and that gradient will vary by the individual and by the job.
Additionally, I can also imagine politicians promising increases to the UBI without concomitant tax increases, funded by bonds or other kind of financial mechanisms for monetary injection whose long-term negative externalities would be easy to obfuscate from voters.
> Imagine a world with widespread automation and general or close-to-general AI without a UBI.
This is the key point. UBI is (in my current opinion) a necessary tool for smoothing an economic transition to a highly-automated level. However, I am concerned that it might induce other economic instabilities such as in tax rates, voluntary or involuntary unemployment, underemployment, inflation, borrowing, minimum wage, and so on -- these instabilities could then spread to social or political disruption that would undermine progress towards the transition that UBI was originally meant to support.
Since the size of the UBI would roughly correlate with the size of its influence economically/socially/politically, then as the UBI increases, the variance of these potential instabilities would also increase. As such, increases to the UBI should be carefully controlled, for example by gating them to developmental milestones. Of course, that opens a whole can of worms on who sets the milestones and so on, so I suppose it's really just shrugging and hand-wringing all the way down.
> I think this is an oversimplification, because in practice, there will be a gradient of people around the inflection point who would be willing to take less in order to stop working, and that gradient will vary by the individual and by the job.
This is less of a problem than you would think, because the people for whom this is the case are the exact people who would already be in the "make it higher" camp.
Suppose you make $20,000/year from your job ($15,000 after tax) and then get a $12,000 UBI, so $27,000 in total. $12,000 is less than $27,000, but maybe if it was $15,000 and then you didn't have to work, you might be willing to take the pay cut. But this is the same person who benefits from raising it to $15,000 even if they continue to work; it doesn't change their vote.
Whereas the person making $52,000/year ($39,000 after tax, $51,000 after the UBI) is not going to be inclined to go from $51,000/year to $15,000/year even if it meant they didn't have to work, so all of those people are going to want to keep it at $12,000, to say nothing of anybody making more than that.
> Additionally, I can also imagine politicians promising increases to the UBI without concomitant tax increases, funded by bonds or other kind of financial mechanisms for monetary injection whose long-term negative externalities would be easy to obfuscate from voters.
But we have this problem already. It's an independent problem.
If you can find a way to stop it, do it. But if they're going to do it anyway then better that the money goes to everybody than that it goes to whichever cronies have the best lobbyists.
Re: 2 - It'd be kind of interesting if the UBI was tied to a 30 hour work week or 4 day work week. A bit like ok we want to give you money to pursue your dreams but we also want to make sure you have your act together with some cadence so you don't drift off into nowhere-ville.
And before you downvote - I'm coming off reading this story which is on the HN front-page where the guy basically created his own UBI and then fell off the map:
Let’s assume forcing people to work for UBI is a good thing (something I completely disagree with) and focus on the practicality of it instead.
As soon as you put in qualifiers it is no longer universal. Inevitably with gatekeepers you will have corruption (controlling who qualifies gives you power) as there is always an incentive. On the flip side you incentivize cheating (loopholes in the qualifiers, lying, etc.) and then all the $ spent staffing and building tools to enforce those qualifiers, then the staff who regulate them, etc.
So with good intentions you’ve completely ruined what could have been a very simple, fair, and efficient system. Basically what government does every day (usually with good intentions).
> It seems like the incentive on both sides will be to always push it higher and higher.
Exactly. Every president's platform is going to be centered around "the UBI is too damn low!" And if it gets high enough you're going to find lots of people who you could otherwise depend on for the tax dollars that keep this scheme afloat deciding to retire and live off UBI the rest of their lives. I mean I make six figures and have a modest, paid-off house in a relatively low COL area. Get UBI up to say $4K per month and I'll sure as hell think hard about dropping out of the workforce. And don't say UBI will never get past $1K per month...
Also, there will also have to be a reckoning on immigration of unskilled workers if UBI came to pass. The whole argument around UBI is that there's so many unskilled workers in the US who are going to find themselves automated out of a job, so we need to pay them UBI. Meanwhile we... continue to import huge numbers of unskilled workers who are destined to do soak up UBI? Something's gotta give.
I have a simpler argument. The necessity of being fed, clothed, and housed, comes with a monthly price tag. The price of an annuity which pays for these things is the amount of debt that you are born with. That debt is completely undischargeable in bankruptcy, and is, in fact, the zero value to which you are set should you declare bankruptcy. The (inflation adjusted) price of that annuity varies wildly with the economic circumstances, even if the monthly payout does not. Being born in a time with low annuity rates could mean that you intrinsically owe hundreds of thousands of dollars more than someone born in a period of high annuity rates. This is obviously a knob that should be turned.
Debt and money are invented abstract objects. Pure ideas.
The question is, do we have the resources to feed, clothe and house everyone?
Yes we do.
UBI is just another formal tool to wake you up to this truth. Ephemeralisation. We can each day do more with less, but our irrational economic system is impeding adequate distribution of resources.
This is a naive engineering argument in that it assumes a simple closed system when in reality it is an open system that does not even usefully approximate as a closed system. There are material tradeoffs being made that are not even acknowledged as a consequence. Several failure modes have simply been placed outside the system by definition to make the problem seem easier.
I am sympathetic to the idea of UBI but there is no trivial engineering argument for it. It is a system with many poor characteristics from an engineering perspective that would need to be addressed in any design that makes a claim of robustness.
Site is hugged for me, so I can't check to see if the author addresses this. I've been wondering - wouldn't UBI tend towards an inflationary spiral?
I'm sympathetic to the goals of UBI. But without price controls, what would prevent rent/mortage/food/entertainment prices from just rising to absorb everybody's newfound income?
College tuition has been going up exponentially since the introduction of federal student aid. Is there any reason to assume UBI wouldn't do the same thing (albeit without the debt)?
> The Social Security Administration sends out checks each month to 64 million people, mostly the elderly and disabled. Unemployment Insurance programs send out checks each month to 2.1 million people. In other countries, the government, in addition to paying these kinds of old-age, disability, and unemployment benefits, also pays out a monthly benefit to every child. In the US that would mean checks going out to the families of around 74 million children.
> None of this leads to any inflation problems because, as mentioned in the very first section above, taxes are used to fund these programs, just as they would be for any other permanent welfare state expansion.
There are roughly 209 million adults in the US. Providing a $1,000/month UBI (which seems to be what's commonly proposed) will cost us $2.5 Trillion every year. That is a lot of tax to collect. If we are not careful it will be become a debt burden and it will cause inflation. I'm not saying that it can't be done but I think we would all like to see a very careful plan on where exactly that much money is going to come from.
While i am very pro-tax and pro-support nets, i don't think we can have UBI - an insanely high tax social program - without a tax overhaul.
Most specifically, the more social programs you provide the more transparent taxation becomes. Right now our tax programs are not only lacking in transparency but are straight obtuse. This exists, i assume, because they had to work around peoples aversion to taxes and sticker shock when paying taxes.
A massively increased tax spend will only serve to illustrate the sticker-shock problem more. I just don't see UBI happening until people can learn to pay for the common good, recognizing what they're getting out of it and how the common good has material impacts on their self - even if entirely selfishly motivated (as most Americans seem).
Unfortunately the only way i see UBI (or similar) happening is in the face of mass layoffs and lack of work due to a large technology change - like various forms of automation. Until then, it's a problem people can't see, aren't directly affected by, and won't want to pay for.
Why nobody ask where is the money going to come from when is for military spending? They always find the money, or just they print it, lol.
Because yes, money can be printed. It's a mere abstraction, a measure tool.
Actually the USA has already paid for a UBI from just its pandemic-related stimulus alone, e.g. CARES Act.
The way to achieve an perpetual ongoing UBI with just a one time expediture of $3T is... drum roll... Stipulate that all payments must be spent on basics & essentials. AND then issue the payments & handle collection digitally/electronically like with debit cards. I sit astounded that the country's best leaders have not proposed a "basics only" amendment.
These are all groups of people that aren't working so there isn't any extra money available for people to raise prices on them.
If everyone makes $X more dollars than normal I don't understand why prices wouldn't go up to take advantage of that. Would it just be because taxes would go up as well so any extra profits would end up being fed straight back into the system?
Competition.
What would then impede people migrating to rural areas, where life is less expensive, to live better?
Prices in the city will go down if there is not enough demand.
> wouldn't UBI tend towards an inflationary spiral?
A UBI higher than the economy can support would seem to drive inflation, especially if we're (literally or effectively) printing some of the money.
Whether that leads to a "spiral" depends on what we do in response. If our UBI is intent on delivering a certain real value, so we give an $X that we adjust regularly to account for observed or expected inflation, then we run risk of inflationary spiral. So let's not do that.
If our UBI is a fixed dollar value, increasing based only on targeted inflation, then inflation drives down the real value to something we can empirically support.
There are also proposals that tie income to a specific revenue stream (a carbon tax, or Alaska's permanent fund), which has its own dynamics but doesn't seem to risk inflationary spiral.
> But without price controls, what would prevent rent/mortage/food/entertainment prices from just rising to absorb everybody's newfound income?
Competition, of both direct and indirect substitutes; this is the same thing that prevents rent/mortgage/food/entertainment prices from rising to absorb everybody's oldfound income.
Considering rent and mortgage in particular, as they seem to be in more limited supply than the others, I want to note two things:
First, competition is not merely competition amongst like units. If there is a fixed number of rooms for rent in a city, more people that want rooms than rooms available, and everyone can pay more, we should expect prices to rise. But as prices rise, choosing to take on an additional roommate, keep living with your parents, or similar become more attractive. And of course, the number of rooms for rent is only approximately fixed, even in the short term. These will typically stop the price from rising the full amount.
Second, we aren't actually particularly limited on housing available; we're particularly limited on sufficiently desirable housing available. A huge portion of what makes housing desirable is that it is sufficiently close to sufficient sources of income. By reducing necessary income, we are actually directly increasing the supply of "sufficiently desirable" housing, even before anyone starts building.
> College tuition has been going up exponentially since the introduction of federal student aid.
There is a very different dynamic when we give people dollars that they can spend as they need, versus when we give people potential dollars they can only spend for a single purpose. If I save a dollar on tuition today, and I'm borrowing from a lender that will only lend to me for tuition, then I can't turn around and use that dollar for anything else that I need (or want). This means it's less important to me to save that dollar, so there's less pressure keeping the price down.
My philosophy is that basic income will be ultimately a good in the long run, even if there are some amount of people who take advantage of it and ultimately do nothing productive for the rest of their lives. Because I don't want people like that in the workforce anyway. I believe only people who are actually motivated to work, and enjoy their jobs or duties should be there. I really do not want some sadsack of a person who hates their job serving me at a restaurant, who will mess with my food if he feels slighted by me. He should go rot away in a small apartment and leave that position for someone who actually cares. Society should gladly pay these people to keep them away. It's sad that someone who is happy to work, must compete with hundreds of people who dont give a shit, for the same job. I hope that basic income would get rid of much of the competition for jobs like this, which would also mean business owners can no longer take advantage of a big labor pool to pay poor wages.
People who have unemployment don't want to work because they'll loose unemployment :/ UBI seems like a good motivation and a fun experiment, looking forward to hopefully AY launching it in NYC.
>People who have unemployment don't want to work because they'll loose unemployment
It's not all people do this or all people do that. It 100% happens that some people on government benefits (unemployment, etc.) choose to stay on these benefits for their entire duration and then pursue work opportunities.
Much of this has to do with well understood welfare cliffs.
Sure, some people won't work if they have the option for a menial existence on welfare.
Many more would like to increase their income, but would suffer loss of healthcare, housing, or other necessities if they do.
>People who have unemployment don't want to work because they'll loose unemployment
hasn't this been debunked repeatedly? While yes, Im sure there are some people who do their hardest not to work to collect money, most people want to be out there working.
I dont think youre correct per se, but I do think that part of the reason people linger on unemployment is because jobs that they are able to get dont pay nearly enough as unemployment, thus there is no incentive to get back to work.
I know someone who is fighting this. It's not so much they don't want to work, but the fact that with our current system there are places where working causes you to earn less. Unemployment is one piece, but food stamps and other benefits get cut off as well. Working costs money. Commuting, child care, uniforms, etc. For a person with children, a minimum wage job is tough to justify.
A system where government help was tapered until people were above the poverty line would eliminate these perverse incentives.
>People who have unemployment don't want to work because they'll loose unemployment
It's not all people do this or all people do that. It 100% happens that a non-trivial percentage of people on government benefits (unemployment, etc.) choose to stay on these benefits for their entire duration and only then pursue work opportunities.
And in traditional fashion many people (mostly just one group, lets be honest..) throw out the baby with the bathwater on social safety nets. Because some people exploit it, the people who need it get damned.
It seems weird to be criticizing a group for identifying a problem that actually exists (welfare traps / phase out cliffs / perverse incentives) while proposing a solution to it that would actually work better (NIT/UBI). There are proponents of a negative income tax on both sides, e.g. conservative economist Milton Friedman.
I'm definitely not criticizing people for proposing an alternative. However, literally all of the .. group of people i know who might by lumped in that statement offer no alternative. Or rather, the alternative is a complete lack of social safety nets.
If you propose an alternative you're not throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
I find a good way to get out of this tribalist mindset is to realize that the stereotypical member of a given party that believes all of the party's official positions is not a real person who actually exists. (Politicians and political operatives sometimes pretend to be but even they're not in reality.)
Some of the people who vote for Republicans oppose taxes. Just the existence of taxes at all. "Taxation is theft." If you want to help people, don't pay taxes to the government, give that money to a charity.
Others think that the US should have the strongest military in the world. An obviously incompatible idea, right? Good luck crowdfunding your fleet of aircraft carriers. But they're in the same party.
It's not an inconsistency because they're not the same people, even if they both vote for Republicans. The Republican party platform itself is incoherent. So is the Democratic party platform. They're not logically consistent sets of policies, they're just coalitions that evolved to gather enough votes to control the government half of the time.
But here's the secret. Nobody cares about things nobody wants. Both parties aren't just automatically the opposite of one another. It isn't that one of them is in opposition to Kill All Humans and the other one is in favor of that. For one of the parties to advance something, it has to be because there are enough people who think we should do that to make it worth a party's time to try to get those votes.
So screw the tribes. Convince the whole public that good ideas are good ideas and bad ideas are bad ideas. When there is consensus in the public there will be consensus in the parties.
If the party who already agrees with a good idea is in control at a given time then you take the win, but if you can't convince most of the country then it just gets reversed in a couple years and we can do better than that.
> People who have unemployment don't want to work because they'll loose unemployment :/
Do you have any evidence for this? This is not claimed in the article as far as I can tell. I don't understand how anyone might make that calculation. I don't believe any state pays your full salary while you were on unemployment. And it's time limited.
I know quite a few people who have either not looked for jobs because it would have meant less income overall, or refused promotions / higher salary for the same reasons.
This is a well known phenomenon known as the welfare trap [0].
This may not be the case if you have the opportunity to go from unemployed directly to a higher salary but most unemployed people have minimal wage as a best prospect, many times not even that.
UBI evens it out in that if you do get a job you'll make more money instead of downright trading your free time for busy time with no financial gain.
As an anecdote, my wife used to work in the front office of a low income apartment complex, and she said it was common for tenants to purposefully stay on welfare/unemployment, while getting paid under the table for stuff like landscaping and handyman work. Getting a normal job would have effectively been a pay cut for them.
Unemployment is only a minor part of this simply because it expires after a fixed duration. Housing and healthcare are much bigger factors. For many people, getting a job means losing their state funded healthcare and housing, but the income from the job is not enough to make up the difference.
It won't help. Too many people will fall for schemes that just take all the UBI payments. They will apply the UBI plus their income to get the amount of mortgage they can afford, and then when (not if - bad things will happen, though how bad differs!) bad things happens they can't afford their payments. Or worse they will get involved in some sort of scam which takes all their UBI for some reward that never happens.
Replace UBI with "income" and nothing about your statements change (apart from UBI/income switch and the "UBI plus their income" becomes "their income"). Do you also think that having income doesn't help?
this is true, but kinda misleading. a very large portion of that 6 figure debt is going to be a mortgage on a home. as long as you're not upside-down and you can afford the monthly payments, it's not bad to have a mortgage. you have to go down to the tenth percentile of american households to find negative net worths. of course, net worth doesn't tell the whole story either, but it's a lot better than presenting debt loads without balancing it against assets held.
I don't think its really all that misleading. The article is talking about basic income being needed as a safety-net for events like losing your job so that you can continue to feed your family. I suspect that absent a car, mortgage and credit card payment coming due every month most people would actually be able to weather this sort of event. The reality of these monthly liabilities doesn't change all that much regardless of your equity situation.
I'm disagreeing that "the average american has a six figure debt load" is a problem to begin with. if you take the total outstanding consumer debt in the US and divide by the number of households, you get about $110k for the mean, which is pretty close to the median household net worth. unless the distributions of debt and net worth look quite different, this implies that a typical household has a debt-to-assets ratio of <0.5. this doesn't strike me as a problem.
this is independent of whether I think UBI is a good idea in general (I do, actually).
This would have tons of negative consequences even if you believe that we'd be better off with debt and loans generally, e.g. essentially acting as a huge windfall (i.e. a free house) toward people who currently have mortgages while doing nothing for renters.
But, see, who holds the debt? It's not just evil people who deserve to lose their ill-gotten gains. It's things like pension funds, too. So a debt jubilee sounds great. A "lose your pension fund jubilee" sounds a lot less nice.
Why? Buying a house or car through debt is not a bad way to match your payment stream to the usable lifetime of the asset.
Even if you can pay cash, unless you have a huge cushion this could make a lot of sense (taking your savings to 0 is worse than taking your savings to n months of cost of living, including the loan payments).
I am lucky enough to be a cash buyer but I can still see the logic of using debt in this way.
from an economic perspective, it doesn't make sense to buy a depreciating asset, like a car, with debt. a house, on the other hand, is generally considered a stable asset, so debt is appropriate there.
it can absolutely make sense to finance a depreciating asset.
example one: I have just been offered a good job that requires a car for commuting. I have no car and negligible other assets. it is rational to take out a loan for a reasonably priced car as long as I can comfortably make the payments on my new wages. if I later lose my job but am not upside-down on the loan, I am still better off than I started.
example two: I make $200k and have $500k in assets and I want to buy a $20k car. I could easily afford to buy the car outright by selling some assets, but then I would have to pay capital gains and forgo future appreciation. if the expected appreciation + capital gains tax on those assets is significantly higher than the loan interest over the full term, it is rational to finance the vehicle.
care to explain further, perhaps in regards to the two examples I gave? it seems to me that your original comment was not considering all the opportunity costs (in example 1, forgoing a higher income; in example 2, forgoing future appreciation and paying unnecessary tax).
Sure it does, for the cash flow reason I mentioned. Consider the debt payments as an insurance premium against financial problems.
A municipality can take on debt for a capital expenditure on a bridge or something that might reasonably be dismantled or replaced around the time the bond is paid off, for the same reason.
I would not consider either case to be irresponsible or economically irrational in principle. Especially as humans have finite life spans.
sure, a bridge provides net economic benefit, so is not simply a depreciating asset. it's paying for broad benefits that accrue widely across society, rather than strictly to the government (externalized benefits). that doesn't happen with cars. in fact, cars produce large negative externalities. there's also fewer viable, affordable substitutes for bridges, whereas cars have multiple viable such alternatives, which makes debt often a bad choice for cars but not bridges.
but to the point of bonds, a lot of bond measures are not for net economic benefit, but rather political gain (school funding bonds, for example, tend to fail to improve educational outcomes despite the political rhetoric).
Whatever happened to the "large scale" UBI pilots that were being conducted over the last few years? I believe some were being conducted by Altman/et al.
Instead of (very) poorly fit conceptual models (this article), let's just look at the data.
From what I recall from other UBI pilots around the world, results have been mixed to outright disappointing.
The argument works, but is too simplistic as other comments mention, and only looks at an ideal-state.
It's unfortunate that politicians are often responsible for making this decision, because most of the time they fail to understand the economics, and make decisions that optimise their term in office or other selfish interests.
I live in South Africa. Last week the governing party made a resolution to "look into" UBI/basic grants. [0]
Today, thousands of disabled and old people were queuing for their basic grants, in inhumane ways, during a pandemic + a South African virus variant that's more aggressive. The Minister in charge of social development, said "there's no money" [1].
Revisiting the engineering argument. It talks about fail-safes if the elevator stops working. This partly assumes that the elevator is maintained, because it not plunging is less of a concern than it being stuck for weeks at a time. If governments fulfilled their social duties, the overall cost of living would remain low, those in need of social services would regularly get them (without the strong need to pay people money). This reduces the bang-bang effect mentioned.
Productive labour forces also minimise the length of elevator failures.
If we look at Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, with a view of universally solving them; we'd be incentivised to optimise for food production (reduce hunger), providing basic + better shelter (reduce homelessness).
Play fair with resources to improve safety (colonialisation, domination, creating wars, displacing people, increasing crime).
Doing a lot of these things, and addressing the ills of capitalism, become the fail-safes that diminish the preconditions that allow people to argue for basic income (where the recipient is an able-body who is not being productive by choice or circumstance).
The author misunderstands science, math and engineering. He says "Whatever can go wrong, will go wrong," then uses this argument to cite the need to use UBI as "fault tolerance" and cites examples of planes and safety systems.
The irony here is that his statement of whatever "will go wrong" applies to fault tolerant systems as well. You can't deploy redundant safety features without testing that it works.
Is UBI tested to a degree of verifiability that it will always work? No.
Also "testing" and "making arguments" is not strictly the case of engineering. These two things are the domain of science and while engineering can in many cases use "science" this is not what's going on in this article.
Engineering is mostly about using what we already know about in science and mathematics to solve problems.
This article neither uses Engineering, math or science to say anything. It's just a qualitative argument demonstrating an arbitrary point using a bunch of analogies to cast an illusion that this is an "engineering argument."
You need to run a scientific experiment with a control group or observe real world examples to make this argument at all "scientific" or "engineering" related. Until then it's just an opinion.
Whatever your political stance on this policy is... nothing substantial was said here. Just a regurgitation of things we all already know that may or may not be true.
And economics nowadays have nothing to do with mathematics, because, where is the rational use of resources to provide for everyone's basic needs?
So, UBI is just a fist step outside of this wasteful system to acknowledge that economy should serve and preserve the whole human species, and not the other way around.
You can't rationally predict the outcome of complex systems anymore than you can rationally predict the weather or the stock market.
In general you need to run something called "tests" to verify certain hypothesis. And even then you may not get a definitive answer given the complexity of the situation.
This is not "math" this is the scientific method.
>So, UBI is just a fist step outside of this wasteful system to acknowledge that economy should serve and preserve the whole human species, and not the other way around.
Communism was an alternative solution to UBI. In fact if you squint enough communism is UBI taken to the extreme, where all forms of income become UBI. Communism in theory works, but in practice there is no working example of a communist utopia in existence today.
So you want to turn all of society into some UBI utopia because it fits your political ideology? How about let's not be stupid and run some experiments first.
Whether or not UBI is a good idea, a useful idea, or a moral idea is an interesting question (I generally think not, but it seems that position is losing the debate). Arguing for UBI (or any other aspect of the economy) from an engineering perspective is a mistake though. An economy is not an elevator. When we put failsafes in to elevators, we know what they do. When we put failsafes in to economies, they behave in bizarre, unpredictable ways.
A lot of things went in to the 2008 financial collapse, but at least part of it was due to a large group of smart (but in retrospect, unwise) people assuming that a math equation accurately represented the financial system.