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We're expanding our Gemini 2.5 family of models

https://blog.google/products/gemini/gemini-2-5-model-family-expands/
1•meetpateltech•12s ago•0 comments

Show HN: Rssrdr.com: The simplest RSS reader on the planet

https://rssrdr.com/
1•due-rr•1m ago•0 comments

Gemini 2.5: Updates to our family of thinking models

https://developers.googleblog.com/en/gemini-2-5-thinking-model-updates/
1•meetpateltech•1m ago•0 comments

Please take my weird moral puzzles quiz

https://dynomight.substack.com/p/puzzles
1•crescit_eundo•2m ago•0 comments

Don't Build Multi-Agents

https://cognition.ai/blog/dont-build-multi-agents
1•JnBrymn•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Structured Character and Illustrated Fiction

https://musings-mr.net/post/WZFBlctl9mzKSPaNvRiy
1•mrkiouak•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Solostat – Showcase all your metrics from one page

https://www.solostat.io/
1•krm28•6m ago•0 comments

Know Your Customer API, allows third-party access to ISP subscriber data

https://developers.opengateway.telefonica.com/reference/kyc_match_v02-2
1•akyuu•6m ago•0 comments

ELIZA Reanimated: Restoring the Mother of All Chatbots

https://www.computer.org/csdl/magazine/an/2025/02/11030922/27sQDLuL7Uc
1•abrax3141•9m ago•0 comments

Can 3 point text be readable?

https://excamera.substack.com/p/can-3-point-text-be-readable
2•jamesbowman•9m ago•0 comments

The lethal trifecta for AI agents

https://simonw.substack.com/p/the-lethal-trifecta-for-ai-agents
1•tosh•9m ago•0 comments

Managing split DNS in a multi-tenant Kubernetes setup

https://medium.com/learnings-from-the-paas/a-journey-through-kafkian-splitdns-in-a-multitenant-kubernetes-offering-d5fd274f676f
2•Bogdanp•10m ago•0 comments

China can become a biotechnology superpower

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-01888-1
1•rntn•11m ago•0 comments

AI Scheduling for Teams [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayIG7BZPSTI
1•sgallant•11m ago•1 comments

Nazi doctor executed in the same camp where he experimented on inmates

https://medium.com/timeline/sigmund-rasher-nazi-doctor-37ca7120a2c3
3•metabagel•13m ago•1 comments

Trade and Tax Policies Start to Stall U.S. Battery Boom

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/16/business/energy-environment/trump-battery-factories-electric-vehicles.html
3•standardUser•16m ago•0 comments

How Long You Should Hold a Plank for a Stronger Core (2022)

https://www.bustle.com/wellness/how-long-should-you-hold-plank
1•mooreds•16m ago•0 comments

CPU-Based Layout Design for Picker-to-Parts Pallet Warehouses

https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.04266
1•PaulHoule•17m ago•0 comments

Atmos Space Cargo is shaping Europe's spaceflight future with reentry capsules

https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/06/atmos-space-cargo/
2•LorenDB•18m ago•0 comments

Canada-wide class-action suit against McKinsey for alleged opioid promotion

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/mckinsey-opioid-class-action-lawsuit-purdue-1.7563040
1•canucker2016•19m ago•0 comments

Organic Markdown

https://github.com/adam-ard/organic-markdown
1•aard•19m ago•0 comments

Windows 10 EOL

https://solhsa.com/oldernews2025.html#WINDOWS-10-EOL
2•zdw•19m ago•0 comments

Is Fake Grass Safe? A Manufacturer Sues to Stop a Discussion

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/17/climate/artificial-turf-grass-lawsuit-defamation-health-risk.html
2•reaperducer•19m ago•0 comments

The OpenHands CLI

https://twitter.com/allhands_ai/status/1934990437627936949
2•tosh•20m ago•0 comments

What's Happening to Reading?

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/open-questions/whats-happening-to-reading
2•pcaharrier•21m ago•1 comments

Please take my weird moral puzzles quiz

https://dynomight.net/puzzles/
2•zdw•23m ago•0 comments

Iran's Internet Traffic Shows Sharp Drops During Recent Israel-Iran Conflict

https://radar.cloudflare.com/ir
1•saeedesmaili•24m ago•3 comments

Regime change emerges as unstated goal of Israel's war in Iran

https://www.axios.com/2025/06/17/iran-regime-change-israel-war-trump
2•cempaka•25m ago•0 comments

Scale AI acquisition boon for AI labor marketplaces

https://www.gardinercolin.com/p/marketplace-memo-12
1•predogger•32m ago•0 comments

How did free tiers breed humanity's greatest evolutionary threat?

https://dmf-archive.github.io/docs/story/digital-cambrian/
2•NetRunnerSu•32m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Just How Many More Successful UBI Trials Do We Need?

https://medium.com/the-no%C3%B6sphere/just-how-many-more-successful-ubi-trials-do-we-need-64ed124c7001
25•rbanffy•3h ago

Comments

prhn•3h ago
https://archive.is/BBPGY
cscheid•3h ago
You can also just grab the same piece from Substack: https://thenoosphere.substack.com/p/just-how-many-more-succe...
magospietato•3h ago
At least one in my opinion. None of these studies are designed to be capable of tracking "success" across a society.

There's this wide belief that the plebescite will emergently produce great cultural works if they're freed from labour.

We already have effective UBI for the non-working classes in many countries. I can assure you that the recipients produce little of worth.

gruez•3h ago
>We already have effective UBI for the non-working classes in many countries. I can assure you that the recipients produce little of worth.

What is this referring to? Pensioners?

tdrgabi•3h ago
I'm sorry if this has been answered many times in the past. I didn't find the answer anywhere else.

If everyone gets 1000$ extra, why wouldn't rent increase by close to 1000$. If you're not willing to pay it, someone will. I don't understand how giving all of us X amount of dollars would help. The number of goods are the same, they would become more expensive through inflation.

cscheid•3h ago
Presumably because one of the two things are true:

- there's competition, and so if it's possible to rent for less than 1000-eps and still profit, someone will

- there's no competition, which is a cartel, the kind of thing that civilized societies ought to frown upon

vasco•3h ago
Do you know the adage location location location? The competition for good locations is among renters, not landlords. Seller's market vs buyer's market. Doesn't have to mean there's a cartel, it also doesn't mean there isn't one but it's not a guarantee.
svnt•3h ago
I am trying to understand your perspective. How do people buying and selling real estate, the origin of the adage “location, location, location,” not compete on locations?
vasco•3h ago
I didn't say that people didn't compete on locations, I said the opposite.
svnt•3h ago
You said “the competition for good locations is among renters, not landlords.”
gruez•3h ago
Rent is expensive because all the jobs are in expensive metros, so people are forced to move there. With UBI the idea is that some fraction of people won't have to work (or can do part time remote work), and therefore can move to a random town in North Dakota with cheap rent.
vasco•3h ago
Other cool things cities have is police stations and hospitals, but I guess since there's no jobs you just get treated by a robot in the woods?

But then if people are creating art or working on their theater play or whatever, they'll want other people to show it too. I don't see cities existing only because of jobs.

danaris•2h ago
This is an unhelpfully binary view of cities vs small towns.

I live in a village of roughly 5k people. The nearest city is 45 minutes' drive away. We have both a police station and a hospital.

bradlys•1h ago
Ah, yes. Famously people only like cities cause there’s jobs there. They’d otherwise live in a place where the population density is 5/mi.
gruez•13m ago
It's not a pleasant place to live, but beggars can't be choosers.
squeegee_scream•3h ago
I don’t think _everyone_ gets an extra $1,000, just those at the bottom. I’m pretty sure there are different ways of implementing UBI, and some of them only provide a certain amount to the lower income folks. So if you are making plenty of money, whatever plenty means in your location and context, you would not receive any additional income.
kajumix•3h ago
If it's not for _everyone_ it's not _universal_ basic income. It's just welfare for poor in that case, and that's already very common
purerandomness•3h ago
That's not UBI (the universal part), that's state subsidies, which already exist today all over the world.
hn8726•3h ago
UBI by definition is paid to everyone, regardless of their income. That's contrasted with GMI, guaranteed minimal income, which supplements your current income to some minimal level, which would work as you described
jghn•3h ago
The "U" in "UBI" is "Universal"
KaiserPro•3h ago
> why wouldn't rent increase by close to 1000$.

prices are dependent on demand/supply rather than how much money people have.

It might increase rental prices, but the people that are reliant on UBI tend to be on some sort of rent control mechanism.

The biggest hurdle though is that people getting jealous of "money for nothing" despite interest being literally that.

echelon•3h ago
> prices are dependent on demand/supply rather than how much money people have.

That's not the full story of how the economics of demand work.

Demand increases as the money supply increases, but supply remains constant. This is inflation. More dollars chasing the same basket of goods.

Another way to look at it is as the money supply increases, the cost of money and the cost to borrow decreases. This leads to an increased desire to spend. It's an aggregate demand increase across businesses and consumers.

We recently saw the impact of this when the money supply was increased during Covid. It led to one of the largest jumps in inflation in our lifetimes.

KaiserPro•6m ago
> Another way to look at it is as the money supply increases, the cost of money and the cost to borrow decreases.

I'm going to say something radical here, so do hear me out. any bank that loans money, is increasing the money supply. the more banks lend, the more money is printed. There is no fixed supply of virtual money. We don't really know how much actual dollars there are out there. (ignoring eurodollars)

Banks profits are literally because they are printing money. The very act of loaning out means that the 1 dollar bill you deposited with become 1.8, as its loaned out again to someone else, who then repays it, with interest.

<<end radicalism>>

Sure we had QE, we had covid cash, but the problem with using covid as an example of "giving money to everyone causes inflation" is that its difficult to distinguish from supply chain, tariffs, stimulus and $other.

the other problem is that stimulus was given to companies as well.

but the argument about not increasing the money supply is difficult to argue unless you are a bank, because that's their job, not the government's.

so, the point is, the economics of demand is an approximate model, rather than a formula. Its based on the collective perceived value of a good or service, rather than a strict supply/demand. sure its a close approximation, but not an accurate one.

azornathogron•3h ago
That doesn't seem like a full explanation. Sure, prices are tied to supply and demand. But demand is tied to how much money people have, so that just brings you right back to the original question.
dagw•2h ago
Housing supply and demand isn't static. With UBI the need to live close to employment opportunities decreases, opening up more supply in areas that are currently less attractive and decreasing demand in other areas.

Furthermore we still don't know how people will react to UBI once they feel it is universal and permanent. If you're busting your ass to take home $1500 a month today, and then you get $1500 a month UBI, will you keep working just as much and take home $3000 a month, will you cut down on work and aim for $2200 a month, or will you keep living on $1500 a month and just chill all day. Depending on what choices people make, most people might not end up with that much more money.

bradlys•1h ago
We’ve already seen that the market is not like that. Rent collusion already exists with landlords.

When it comes to a necessity like shelter, it doesn’t follow supply/demand curves all the time.

bryanlarsen•1h ago
Housing follows supply/demand curves more than most other goods do. Most other goods have elastic supply -- when demand for widgets goes up factories start producing more widgets so the price follows the commodity rule "price = marginal cost" rather than classical supply and demand.
mike_hearn•6m ago
> prices are dependent on demand/supply rather than how much money people have ... [UBI] might increase rental prices

Which is it? You can't have it both ways. The right answer is that if you print new money prices go up. If UBI is funded by taxes it's not a UBI (some people will end up giving back more in taxes than they "receive" in UBI, so it's net negative for them). If it's funded by borrowing it's not sustainable. If it's funded by money printing then prices will rise and the effect is eliminated.

> the people that are reliant on UBI tend to be on some sort of rent control mechanism

The argument for UBI is it lets you get rid of other means tested welfare systems. If you're going to introduce a category of people who really need UBI vs other people who don't really need it, and have special rules for the former, it's just a rebranded welfare system and those already exist.

RiverCrochet•3h ago
- If more money is available for rents (increase demand), more people will build apartments to get that money (increase supply). This will introduce competition and keep rents reasonable. This won't work where housing supply is artificially limited.

- I might live with a relative instead of paying $1000 extra, and can now afford the car to get to and from my job instead of living with them without a job or deepending on them for a ride.

- I might put that into a mortgage payment instead of rent. UBI if done correctly is always there so it's something a bank could count on as a reliable asset.

- "The number of goods are the same, they would become more expensive through inflation" - If there is more money to buy goods, people will find a way to produce more goods, if allowed. If people aren't producing more goods then your problem is there - transportation to markets could be an issue.

radpanda•3h ago
I’ve always seen UBI as part of a post-scarcity sci-fi future. Once the robots run the farms and deliver the food and build the buildings and so on, and there just isn’t enough work to go around for humans, of course the fruits of this productivity should be shared with the wider population (both morally and to prevent uprisings). Sure, in this sci-fi future you can live in your basic pod and eat basic food for free or you can work a little or a lot to try to upgrade your situation.

But I don’t think we’re there yet. We do have a lot of industries that rely on shit jobs that people would rather not do. If we, IMHO prematurely, try to institute a UBI now we’d be in for a world of pain along the way as the prices of basic services skyrocket without robots being ready to step in.

K0balt•2h ago
“Of course”

But, that’s not where we are headed.

Instead, automation will make money irrelevant in the “we don’t need to make money because money ultimately only can be used to pay wages, and nothing else” way.

Since automation means you don’t pay wages anymore, you only need natural resources and energy.

When corporations no longer see (external) money as useful, but only as a way to apportion resources internally to stakeholders, that makes everyone outside of that system into ants.

It’s grey goo, just on a macroscopic scale.

yorwba•2h ago
If you make the "basic pod" a tent, wealthy countries could probably afford this sci-fi future today. But "enough money to live like a homeless person without having to beg or steal" doesn't sound so great as an aspirational goal, does it?

If the "basic pod" is supposed to be something more durable, probably the first step would have to be building enough homeless shelters for all the UBI recipients without another source of income.

gruez•2h ago
>If you make the "basic pod" a tent, wealthy countries could probably afford this sci-fi future today.

Don't you also need food?

yorwba•5m ago
Yes, I'm saying that wealthy countries can definitely afford the "basic food" part of the "live in your basic pod and eat basic food" future.
insane_dreamer•1h ago
> of course the fruits of this productivity should be shared with the wider population

we're quickly getting closer to that stage with the promises of AI-increased productivity; and yet, there is not the faintest signal from those building and profiting from AI that the fruits of the increased productivity will be shared; quite to the contrary it will be captured almost entirely by shareholders -- why are investors pouring hundreds of $B into AI otherwise?

hedora•3h ago
With UBI and a flat tax, you end up paying:

tax_rate * income - ubi

to the government. Tax rate has to go up for UBI to be revenue neutral. So, it is not inflationary. It just provides safety net for low income people.

Note that this formula would greatly simplify the tax code (especially if income included capital gains and maybe excluded donations), and is also actually progressive (your effective tax rate increases monotonically with income), unlike the current US system.

dgfitz•3h ago
So, when hundreds of millions of people got checks because covid, that wasn't inflationary? Sure feels like it was. UBI is the same thing.
AnimalMuppet•2h ago
You're not listening. During Covid, we did not do what the GP said. So no, UBI (implemented the way the GP said) is not the same thing.
brendanyounger•2h ago
The current US federal tax system already is progressive in this way. Your first $X are taxed at 0%, the next $Y at 10%, etc. up to 37%. Your UBI in your formula is basically the standard deduction in the current system. But you still need to work or invest to make the first $X which are federal tax-free.
afiori•2h ago
those percentages only apply if you decide not to do any of the various legal variants of money laundering
hedora•2h ago
“Strategic tax planning”
hedora•2h ago
For instance, you can time (usually, defer) your income to make sure you are never in a higher tax bracket. That doesn’t worth with flat tax with UBI.

One big problem with stock based compensation is that it pushes income into a big windfall year. The top marginal tax rate in the US is something like 52%. So, someone that would pay 25-30% effective tax in a fictional average year ends up paying 52% on multiple years worth of income.

Also, you can’t use the standard deduction to make your taxes negative. Assuming the average effective federal tax rate is 25%, to convert the standard deduction to UBI, it’d be reduced from $22,500 to $5600, but applied to the total tax owed, leading to the IRS paying you if you paid less than $5600 in taxes pre-deduction.

I think $5600 is too low. It should be enough to live off of. The 25th percentile household income in the US is $40000. $10,000 UBI per person seems more reasonable (probably still too low) to me.

hellisothers•1h ago
How do you usually defer your income if you are a W2 earner which I think most people are?
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF•2h ago
> money laundering

Just for the sake of precise communication: it’s tax evasion.

splix•3h ago
I think you're referring to the Winston Churchill's "on Land Monopoly".

I don't remember exact details and may miss something, but the work is very short so please check it. In short, he described, I believe, a real situation when a major of people in a town got extra extra money because a toll on the bridge to the fabric was eliminated. But in a short time the town's rental cost grew up by exactly this amount.

K0balt•3h ago
Because presumably the money doesn’t come from increasing the money supply but rather by the redirection of tax revenue.

FWIW we have had a form of UBI in the USA for decades: the earned income tax credit, which for many people amounts to a significant subsidy over and above their tax burden. Nobody stopped working, and prices didn’t go up.

gruez•2h ago
>FWIW we have had a form of UBI in the USA for decades: the earned income tax credit, which for many people amounts to a significant subsidy over and above their tax burden

How is a tax credit that you only get if you're working, and scales up depending on how much you earn (to an extent) an "universal" basic income?

>Nobody stopped working, and prices didn’t go up.

Nobody stopped working because you had to work to get the tax credit.

bryanlarsen•1h ago
UBI will lower rent.

The most common criticism of UBI is that landlords will raise their prices to capture all of the gains. I disagree, I believe that a properly implemented UBI will lower rent prices.

Rent rises quickly because both supply and demand are inelastic and renters are relatively price-insensitive. Any market with relatively fixed supply and demand experiences large and quick price changes. The most prominent example is oil -- a small change in supply causes a large change in price because demand is inelastic; people don't stop buying gas just because the price went up. But oil experiences quick price changes in both directions. Rent only seems to increase.

Housing is a necessity. If there are more families needing housing than there are houses, families will pay as much as they are able to ensure they're not the ones without housing. So when supply exceeds demand, price rises rapidly. The converse is not true. Most landlords are not as desparate to rent their dwellings. When supply exceeds demand they have the ability to say no, they can and do choose to leave the dwelling empty rather than accept a lower price.

But prices do eventually come down when supply exceeds demand. For example, the rent for 1 bedroom apartments in Toronto is down 10% in the last 12 months.

If implemented poorly UBI could definitely be inflationary. If UBI is paid for by money printing rather than through taxes it will be inflationary. But if it doesn't increase the money supply and is constant across the country UBI will lower rents rather than raising them.

Why? Becuase it makes demand elastic. Right now people are moving to the expensive cities because that's where the jobs are. They don't really have a choice. UBI gives them a choice. You can move to San Francisco and work 2 jobs to be able to afford rent, or you can move to West Virginia and pay your rent out of UBI and not need a job. Some people are going to do that. Not many, but likely enough.

There's a saying. "100 supply, 101 demand; price goes up. 100 supply, 99 demand, price goes down". Small changes on the margin can have a large impact on prices.

Keep in mind that any UBI that is fully tax supported is going to necessarily be very miserly. US average income if $40K. So if you set tax rates at 100% and spent every penny on UBI then UBI could be $40K. Obviously neither assumption is going to be true. Tax rates will have to be significantly less than 100%, and we'll spend money on our military, etc. A UBI of more than $1000/month seems highly unlikely without money printing. And there are basically only three ways you can live on $1000/month: Move to a low cost of living region like West Virgina, live on the street or live in highly shared accomodation. All three of these scenarios reduce housing demand in expensive cities rather than lower it.

msgodel•1h ago
What kind of idiot would work for free and pay taxes when they could work on their side project for free, use UBI for rent, and not pay taxes?

Probably not the industrious and productive kind I'm sure.

bryanlarsen•1h ago
And how would UBI change that? The kind of people who are willing to break the law to avoid paying taxes are already breaking the law to avoid paying taxes.
msgodel•1h ago
Right but now the rest of the people have no reason to pay taxes so you're going to be printing money for everything.
bryanlarsen•1h ago
You're reiterating my "UBI will be miserly" point. Yes, if taxes were set at 100% to support a $40k/year UBI, I would quit my six figure job to make $10/hour cutting grass under the table. OTOH, if my taxes went up 25% to support a $10K/year UBI, I wouldn't.
rbanffy•51m ago
> What kind of idiot would work for free and pay taxes

If you work for free, your income is zero and you won't pay taxes. You'll still get UBI though.

Simulacra•3h ago
UBI will never work without stringent price controls. If a car dealer knows you are getting an extra $1000 a month, they are going to raise the price by $1000. That's just how economics works. Without the government brutally controlling the price of things, a UBI will only result in net zero. Emotionally, it feels good, but economically it's unfeasible beyond small groups.
MOARDONGZPLZ•3h ago
I don’t think you’re necessarily wrong, but you’re really hand waving a lot with “that’s just how economics works,” which universally seems to be a statement said by non-economists. The economy is incredibly, ridiculously complex.

That being said, I note that there is a proliferation around military bases of auto dealers who happen to accept down payments of the exact signing bonuses of new recruits.

puterich123•3h ago
You don't need price control, there is going to be competition for the extra 1000$ that's for sure, but its the customers choice where they spend the extra money.
sokoloff•3h ago
Car dealers are free to change their offers just as consumers are free to change their demand curves. Government price controls are rarely a good answer.

UBI would have an inflationary effect, but it wouldn't be that every merchant would suddenly demand all of the UBI surplus because there are scores to hundreds of businesses that a given person buys from each month and they can't all get the full UBI increment, for at least two reasons: 1. They are jointly going to consume the UBI amount, not individually and 2. Many people would be paying higher taxes (in order to pay net UBI to people paying taxes&transfers which are zero or net-negative once UBI is included) and many of those people would see a net decrease in spendable money versus today.

jiggawatts•3h ago
There is no "extra" payment with UBI, it's just an altering of the tax code so that it starts at a negative value instead of at zero. The slope is steeper to compensate. The total tax and the total income remain unchanged.

Note that UBI is effectively "everyone gets extra income" for the poorest parts of society, so things only poor people buy will get some inflationary effect.

purerandomness•2h ago
If I get $1000 a month, I'll stop my grind job and open a car dealership, selling for pre-UBI pices, until I drive my competitors out of business.

It's a fantastic game theory playground.

sumtechguy•2h ago
I would like to see where that 4.5 Trillion per year comes from. Just for the US alone.
dagw•2h ago
A lot of it will come from being able to remove services like food stamps, unemployment benefits, various pension and social security payments etc. The rest will probably have to come from raising taxes. You can structure the UBI and tax rises in such a way that they end up cancelling out for those people who don't 'need' UBI
sokoloff•1h ago
You have social security recipients who have earned (and are eligible for and counting on) benefits of $3K, $4K, or $5K per month. Removing those and replacing with $1K/mo of UBI will be...difficult...
dagw•1h ago
Yea, it didn't mean that UBI could replace all of social security for everybody. Social security is (greatly simplified) made up of a guaranteed minimum payment + a payment you've 'earned' by working. UBI would replace (and be equal to) the minimum payment, the money that you've 'earned' from working will still be paid out. The core point is that at least a chunk of UBI will be replacing existing government subsidies and not be in addition to them.
blueflow•3h ago
> What did change for many, however, was what they did for work. Within the first 18 months, job-switching rates spiked in the basic income group compared to the control one.

Some jobs are just shit, and people will quit them as soon as they can. UBI would put some companies out of existence.

blindriver•3h ago
We already had the world’s largest ubi experiment during Covid and it was a complete failure. Everyone stopped working entirely. It won’t work.

I was a huge proponent of ubi and Andrew yang before the pandemic but it’s clear that it won’t work at all.

Simulacra•3h ago
Not to mention inflation.
AnimalMuppet•3h ago
Depends on how it's funded. If you fund UBI by printing money (as happened during Covid), then yes, it causes inflation. If you fund it by taxes, then it doesn't cause inflation, but then it's a harder sell, because people will have to pay the taxes.
svnt•3h ago
This seems to invert the causal chain. People stopped working almost entirely first. That is why we got the benefits.

It has also been shown that people behave differently when they know the benefit will end.

Beyond these issues, for the COVID experiment there are far too many confounds to say anything conclusively about UBI from it.

contagiousflow•3h ago
Could there have been any other reason for people not working in 2020?
piva00•3h ago
People stopped working because of Covid, not because of the safety nets, you should remember that a lot of businesses closed down which usually means not being able to afford staff.

It's not clear at all from the pandemic what UBI would do, this is completely inverted...

Mordisquitos•3h ago
> We already had the world’s largest ubi experiment during Covid and it was a complete failure.

I believe there might have been a slight confounding factor involved.

purerandomness•3h ago
Wait, what? Do you mean the mass layoffs during Covid, or the resulting state subsidies paid out?

Here in Europe, people moved to remote work, but nobody "stopped working".

None of that was universal, and none of that counts remotely as "income".

ensignavenger•2h ago
I don't think the pandemic was a good measure of the impact UBI would have. People were being laid off before the payments started. There were certainly those who quit or decided not to work as a result. And there was a lot of inflation. But it is hard to draw any conclusions from the random panicked temporary approach vs a more well thought out implementation.
TimorousBestie•2h ago
The height of unemployment in the US was 14.8% in April 2020. By the end of summer it was down to 7% and continued to fall.

https://www.bls.gov/charts/employment-situation/civilian-une...

15% unemployment is high, but it’s definitely not “everyone stopped working entirely.”

The CARES Act authorized a one-time payment of $1,200/$500 per adult/child in March 2020, an extension added $600/per in December.

The American Rescue Plan Act passed in February 2021 and added $1400/per.

This is the closest the US got to UBI-adjacent policies at the federal level.

It’s difficult to believe that the first payment caused a massive spike in unemployment, but the subsequent two did not.

kome•2h ago
Everyone stopped working entirely? What? Perhaps because of Covid.
insane_dreamer•1h ago
> Everyone stopped working entirely.

Firstly, that's not at all true. Secondly, those who did stop working did so because they were unable to work, because their company could not operate without in-person contact (i.e., restaurants).

Also, the government benefits only came _after_ people had stopped working/companies shut down, not the other way around.

dragonwriter•1h ago
> We already had the world’s largest ubi experiment during Covid and it was a complete failure.

COVID response neither featured a UBI, nor saw everyone stop working (and the people who did stop working largely stopped working because of a combination of formal restrictions and voluntary behavior changes due to a contagious illness either banning their mode of business or resulting in them not having customers, additional government support, which was not structured as a UBI, was given because of that and to cushion the impact of it.)

RegnisGnaw•3h ago
The problem is that no UBI trial reflects how it will work. In all the trials, the people in the trial knows it will end so they won't change their behavior as much as they would if it was permanent. Hence any analysis is flawed.
crmi•3h ago
I agree most are flawed. I read one (I think from Sweden perhaps) that had a longer timeline and actually used some better methodology than others which seemed more insightful.

But as others say, at the end of the day if everyone has an extra $1000 a month, there will be groups such as landlords trying to jack up prices.

To counter other commenters on this issue - we do have price controls on things such as milk, bread etc and it does 'work' to some degree. In the landlords example above - a smart gov would implement an algorithm for 'greed' and fine/tax offenders and put that money into the UBI cash reserves.

I think UBI as a real possibility needs to be taken seriously. The level of AI has accelerated in such a short timeframe that (imo) we're starting to see the knock on effects into society. This is just in tech for now - thousands applicants for positions, and no one really needing to hire juniors as Claude et al easily replace the tasks they do.

Once other industries realize that they can replace a lot of tasks with ai, we'll see a gradual shortage of jobs for unskilled admin jobs (not manual labour... Yet)

There's a lot of shouting about AGI but the current LLM landscape effects are slowly happening around us right now. UBI studies should be taken more seriously and at a larger scale.

UncleEntity•2h ago
> To counter other commenters on this issue - we do have price controls on things such as milk, bread etc and it does 'work' to some degree.

My understanding, based in the US, is the commodity price controls set a minimum price to protect the farmers and not the consumers.

To counter your point, look no further than tuition prices at US universities. In the '90s (when I went to university) they were fairly heavily subsidized then the state governments stepped back and federal loans and grants took over. Universities, seeing this new influx of capital, promptly raised their prices well over inflationary rates to capture more and more of these federal funds leading to what we have today. I, admittedly, took the cheap route of community college and state university (along with the GI Bill) and only had something like $6k in student loan debt by the time I got my bachelors in '97 while today's community colleges have higher tuition than what I was paying at university.

Though... I don't doubt AI is going to cause some serious problems when it starts replacing people at high rates across the board.

insane_dreamer•1h ago
> they were fairly heavily subsidized then the state governments stepped back and federal loans and grants took over ... Universities, seeing this new influx of capital, promptly raised their prices

wasn't this simply a substitution of income sources (from state government grants to the federal government student loans) rather than an actual increase in capital?

keiferski•3h ago
I think I’d rather first have free education, healthcare, public transit, and a half dozen other things paid for / subsidized by the government before UBI is implemented.

Especially as the world gets more complicated: giving people money without any sort of structure or guidance is a recipe for malaise and lack of purpose.

MOARDONGZPLZ•3h ago
> giving people money without any sort of structure or guidance is a recipe for malaise and lack of purpose.

The whole article talks about this aspect. What was your take on the points the article raised with respect to this?

keiferski•3h ago
The key point is that people feel better because they have more financial security…which is better achieved by providing the resources I mentioned.

It has nothing to do with laziness, as the (unnecessarily hostile article argues) but is simply because the world is getting more complex, and an inflationary-prone method like UBI is inferior to actually investing in societal institutions.

Many UBI proponents never seem to ever discuss public goods, but think that the ideal solution is to just make everything rest on the individual. I don’t think that will work, and to me it obviously didn’t work during COVID, which was a real world application of UBI.

TimorousBestie•2h ago
UBI proponents, in the US at least, usually don’t discuss investing in the public good because both political parties and most of their respective wealthy donors are actively hostile to the public good. The current administration just decimated weather forecasting earlier this year, after all.

UBI sneaks around the problem by giving the rich the same exact benefit as the poor.

keiferski•2h ago
Yes, and this is why I’m a bit skeptical of the idea of UBI in general, as I can already tell it will be used to politically justify cutting public services in the name of efficiency.

I don’t think a society with poor public services and UBI is a desirable one. It sounds pretty dystopian to me, frankly, especially if people become dependent on the payments.

TimorousBestie•2h ago
A society with poor public services and UBI is better than a society with poor public services and no UBI; I suppose that’s my position. They didn’t need UBI to exist before they started cutting everything.

Most everyone is already dependent on the federal govt anyway. Barely a fraction of the country could survive a year without some kind of federal aid or social services.

hn8726•3h ago
Good chunk of the world already has all of those, so it looks like talking about UBI is right on track there. I suppose countries like USA would need to figure out the basics first though, I agree any basic income seems redundant if one trip to ER wipes out several months worth of UBI anyway
rbanffy•43m ago
Part of the UBI budget could fund mandatory comprehensive healthcare insurance.

But the US isn't ready for that either.

codersfocus•3h ago
UBI is the wrong approach.

Once CBDCs become a thing, citizens should have the ability to have direct credit relationships with the central bank.

We can then transition from a cash based monetary system to an accrual based one (similar to how businesses do their accounting.)

Public benefits, then, rather than being given out like it is currently (e.g. you get $200 for food stamps) will instead be based on allowing you to draw credit.

So, the eGovCreditCard would for example always allow any citizen to draw $200 per month for food expenses.

Potentially, if we want to do more generous policies a la "UBI," we could add e.g. $1000 always being allowed per month for rent.

Health care similarly, instead of if the archaic and very inefficient system we have now where those on the dole often go to emergency rooms, money is funneled through "insurance", etc... would allow you to draw money for regular doctor care. Maybe at a set maxiumim limit per citizen, e.g. $1M.

FpUser•3h ago
>"...credit relationships with the central bank"

Will that come with the healthy interest rate one could never hope to repay?

codersfocus•3h ago
Interest is not always fulfilled by usury.

For example, friends lend each other money without usury simply because the "interest" comes from helping a friend.

Similarly, the central bank which is an agent of the government fulfills its interest by having healthy citizens. So there probably wouldn't be usury.

Instead, earnings from the citizen would be garnished if they had debt.

jas8425•3h ago
So you're saying that instead of receiving $200/month worth of food, poor citizens should go into debt to the central bank by $200 every month? How would that be a better approach? Personal debt is already a huge burden, this seems predatory.
RiverCrochet•3h ago
In this scheme, what prevents a central bank from abusing its position and denying you access to food due to ideological concern? Cash (for basic stuff) spends the same regardless of my political affiliation or criminal history. An employer can do the same, but I can get a new employer with some effort. I'm not sure I can switch to a different central bank easily.
codersfocus•2h ago
CBDCs and cash dollars can coexist. If you don't like borrowing from the government, no one is forcing you, you can earn and spend as you do now.
kajumix•3h ago
Your suggestion basically amounts to: digitize and centralize welfare. There are already electronic cards for food. If the money is drawn directly from the central bank as credit instead of from the state welfare fund, it won't make it any more efficient. In fact any experimentation among states will disappear. Also, if CBDCs become a thing, you could see a slow slide into behavior control. What people eat, and where they live becomes a concern for the central bank, because they get to decide who the approved vendors are for those things. "Central" anything is a design smell in most cases.

Getting rid of cash also requires proper paper work and identification so you can sign up for the CBDC wallet. In that case you're excluding the very people from the system who need it the most.

codersfocus•2h ago
I never said get rid of cash, CBDCs and cash can coexist.

Also it would make welfare more efficient, as you can garnish earnings from citizens to repay back the debt, whereas now it's just a gift.

Apreche•3h ago
We have evil political leadership. It works in its own personal interest and does not care about what is best for the citizens and for humanity. What does it matter if you conduct a study and discover the truth of what is the best policy? All that does is tell the evil leaders to avoid that policy.

Even if we agree on facts, we don’t agree on basic morality. No amount of well conducted studies can overcome that gap.

neilwilson•3h ago
Every 'successful trial' is trumped by the far greater data set that comes from the widest 'UBI' trial of them all - state pension payments.

That is a permanent payment to live on to a section of the population, except that section is divided by age not location. And the results from millions and millions of data points across the globe are crystal clear - the people stop working and the dependency ratio goes up.

To the extent that Denmark has just increased the age to 70, ie reduced the size of the section of the population entitled to the payment. They wouldn't have needed to do that if 'people continued to work'.

Of course a payment to a small section of a fixed currency area will work. It's paid for by all the other people from that fixed currency area not getting the payment. As will a small payment that is not enough to live on - which ends up as a subsidy to private sector employers and results in wage compression towards the minimum wage.

The fun starts when you try to give a living payment to all the people within a fixed currency area. And that has yet to be trialed anywhere.

Premature extrapolation is a cruel affliction.

joegibbs•2h ago
I think UBI is something that can only work in small trials.

The people on the trial - whether that’s a random sample or the population of a geographical area - all get an economic privilege over the people who aren’t receiving the UBI, and therefore can buy more goods and services.

But when you expand this to the whole country (which is producing the same amount of goods and services) then prices naturally increase to match the same disposable income that the entire population now has, due to increased demand.

Now you could say that it’s not actually giving everyone the same, increased, amount of money since it would require huge tax raises on the wealthy to afford it.

But when a poor family gets that extra money they’ll spend it on things that a poor family would buy - a new low-tier car, food, a better air conditioner. And a rich family doesn’t just buy the same stuff as a poor one but in greater quantity - that painting is a million dollars and it’s not like it’s going to feed anyone or get them anywhere.

So the price of goods for the average person will increase, because despite redistribution there will be basically the same supply with more demand.

542354234235•2h ago
But you can buy anything, so demand for any given thing is only go to go up a tiny fraction. Everyone isn’t going to all buy oranges. Some will pay off debt, some will buy a new TV, some will buy cat food, some will buy new jeans. There is no evidence that all goods and services across the entire economy would rise to match (see the entire history of minimum wage). And buying more goods and service mean that businesses have more business, and will pay for more working hours to meet demand, which puts more money in working class hands.

The US already spend $1.19 trillion a year on welfare programs, or about $4,600 per adult in the country. Much of that is wasted due to the massive bureaucracy required for means testing aid (determining rules for eligibility, having people to administer and test for eligibility, enforcing “proper use”, etc.). UBI could just be a check after you file your taxes every year.

Come to think of it, prices often go down with demand, since so many costs are fixed costs that businesses have to whether they have high or low demand. A restaurant has to pay their lease and their staff whether the place is packed on a Saturday or dead on a Tuesday afternoon. People eating out more would better utilize the space and bring per customer costs down. Same with basically all service industries. For goods, most companies have equipment they have to have for manufacturing but aren’t 100% utilized, and increased demand would allow them to optimize closer to 100%. And if they reach 100% and would need to buy more equipment and raise costs, well then there are probably other companies in that sector that aren’t yet at 100% and can still sell at a lower cost.

ethbr1•2h ago
Supply-side UBI (UBE?) is equally curious.

I.e. if we took the money (or a portion of it) that would be going to UBI and instead used it to directly buy the goods, for distribution, at scale.

Universal tertiary education (for the countries that don't have it), universal healthcare (for the US), universal food and shelter entitlements, etc.

I'll grant that some amount of direct income would be best, because of the flexibility it affords, but UBI in capitalist societies is a slippery slope for the reasons you mentioned (especially market price changes).

Why not instead focus on directly driving costs for basic goods so low (via volume) that we can make them effectively free?

johng•2h ago
Don't mean to be insensitive but payments to Native Americans has been a long running UBI experiment, has it not?

I grew up near a reservation, and I can tell you --- it's not good. I don't think many people can point out reservations that are doing well except for casino money.

Free government money, I believe, has systematically destroyed the people over the generations.

svnt•2h ago
> But it’s particularly women receiving basic income who experienced the most significant increases in autonomy, as shown in the chart below.

> Image via Pilotprojekt. Study period: March 2021 to November 2024.

> This is likely because women are more likely to experience poverty and economic dependence arising from the gender pay gap, workplace gender bias, as well as the disproportionate burden of domestic and care labour.

These are false. As the author mentions earlier in the article, these are young adult Germans, working for something close to minimum wage, specifically selected to not have children. They are probably not up against any of these issues.

The reason I am frustrated by these dogmatic answers is because this new sexist dogma prevents any curiosity around the real cause of these differences.

For example, perhaps this result discloses a more fundamental reality about female experience that could be analyzed. Or perhaps the population was skewed toward women who were dependent on partner income because they make up a larger part of that income demographic. But it won’t be explored because it is instantly and inaccurately explained away as systemic sexism. It is intellectually lazy.

Bender•1h ago
It seems this is an issue that has risen and fallen a few times since 1797 in the United States of America [1] so it seems there may not be a complete answer to the question at hand and there may be some unwritten or underlying challenges not yet addressed if this keeps coming up. I think the better questions would be what have we not done differently in the last 228 years that would move this forward or what have we done to paint ourselves into a corner?

My own personal concern would be what impact UBI would have on existing social security that everyone in the US has spent their entire adult life paying into. Social Security is neither a benefit nor a welfare program. It is a paid for security blanket that all working people in the USA have paid into with no option to opt out. Would social security go away and would I get all my money back?

[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_basic_income_by_coun...