• SplashJackson@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    “Announce it to big celebration and then put in the fine print that it’s only for single-parent households making less than $100 a year”

    They’ve been pulling a lot of this shit lately, like that dental program a while back

  • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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    9 hours ago

    Under the nuclear family approach, children over 18 living with their parents are considered separate families and can qualify independently, regardless of their parents’ income. This raises equity concerns because it may result in disproportionate benefits for high-income families.

    In contrast, the economic family definition uses the combined income of all related individuals living in the same household, providing a more comprehensive and equitable basis for assessing eligibility.

    So, if my daughter lives in my house, we’re all related, and thus one economic family.

    But, if my daughter moves into my neighbor’s house, and their son moves into my house, we’re now four economic families?

    How about once a month, we just direct deposit the same amount into the bank account of each and every person over the age of 18?

    • hemko@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 hours ago

      How about once a month, we just direct deposit the same amount into the bank account of each and every person.

      FTFY. Kids still cost a lot to raise

    • abff08f4813c@j4vcdedmiokf56h3ho4t62mlku.srv.us
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      4 hours ago

      I had previously moved more towards a negative income tax approach rather than a universal basic income. The latter seems to be consistently found to be too expensive to implement universally, and how does it make sense to give the basic income to someone who’s currently a billionaire or even a millionaire? (Ok, if a former millionaire loses it all and ends up deep in debt, that’s a bit different, but that’s why I’m limiting to current millionaires.)

      That’s why I found this,

      which found it is possible to halve previously projected costs while maintaining or even increasing its poverty-reduction impact.

      To be so intriguing. Alas,

      The PBO, therefore, confirms the P.E.I. report’s conclusion that it is possible to roughly halve the cost of a basic income program for Canada and each province by using the economic family definition instead of the nuclear family.

      Basically, the use of the artificial “economic family” standard is what justifies giving lower payments to these folks. So the proposal saves money by … refusing to spend extra money.

      Since housing is so expensive right now, many more are living together than we’d normally see otherwise, so I think today’s “economic families” are a bit artificially inflated. If a UBI based on this did go through, I’d expect folks to start moving out of their parents homes to qualify for additional basic income - which would legitimately help them afford their new places, but also cause the programme’s costs to skyrocket.

      I don’t think the above was accounted for properly. Don’t get me wrong, I’d love to see a UBI or an NIT come to fruition, and Canada does have a working example of this from the past: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mincome

      But having a badly designed proposal tried and failed would hurt the movement, so we have to look at these ideas closely. Ultimately, I don’t see that the “economic family” concept makes sense, and without it the cost of the programme doubles. Perhaps it still works, but be prepared to fund it at double the stated level, don’t let that rise catch us by surprise.

      • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        Universal: Everyone gets it, no means testing, no bureaucracy and the cost associated with that.

        Basic: You are not buying caviar and exotic holidays, just enough to live and pay rent.

        Income: Therefore taxed.

        E.g. If UBI is 1000 a month it will likely push people into a higher tax bracket therefore their after tax income will not be 1000 more and for the richest they should be taxed more than they revive from the UBI. Basically we need to sort out a proper taxation system before this can be implemented.

        • Universal: Everyone gets it, no means testing, no bureaucracy and the cost associated with that.

          Basic: You are not buying caviar and exotic holidays, just enough to live and pay rent.
          Agreed.
          Income: Therefore taxed.
          Minor quibble - technically a concept of non-taxable income does exist, see https://www.taxtips.ca/glossary/non-taxable-income.htm for some examples. But agreed on the main point (that UBI is and should be taxable).

          E.g. If UBI is 1000 a month it will likely push people into a higher tax bracket therefore their after tax income will not be 1000 more

          In fact it might all be taxed away for those who are actually rich.

          and for the richest they should be taxed more than they … [receive] … from the UBI.

          I’d go a couple of steps further. Those rich enough (so not just the richest but perhaps everyone who’s even slightly rich) should have the UBI fully taxed away. Another way to put this is that their taxes after UBI should = taxes before UBI + cash value of UBI

          Basically we need to sort out a proper taxation system before this can be implemented.

          So if this was just some kind of accounting gimmick then this would be perfect.

          The issue from what I understand is that real money - the 1000 in your example - has to be sent into the richest person’s bank account (or equivalent money-receiving receptacle) before getting retrieved by being taxed back. Perhaps we could do something like saying UBI is paid out annually and only given the day before taxes are due to be paid in order to minimize the amount of time this money is floating out there - but the issue is that it still costs real money to pay everyone, even the richest of the rich, this UBI, only to claw it back again in full later. (At most, some higher middle class folks might gradually get less and less than the full amount of the negative income tax/basic income, until we get to zero.)

          So it’s not the most efficient way to handle money. By contrast, with a NIT we avoid needing to have that extra cash to move around - we’d only have to give the basic income to those who wouldn’t qualify for this claw back. That frees up funds, real money. The catch is that we’d need some bureaucracy to deal with it - but by making it part of the income tax, the existing taxation bureaucracy can deal with it, hopefully minimizing this aspect of the cost. We’d likely have some costs here anyways as part of the “sorting out a proper taxation system” prereq for a true UBI, and the hope is that a NIT wouldn’t cost more than that.

  • Blurntout@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    Hi friends I didn’t actually click the link so my skepticism may be unfounded. But I have a few concerns open to criticism or validation lol

    In a primarily private sector “market” supply chain etc does basic income not just put downward pressure on wages in the form of a pseudo business subsidy ick.

    Or if everyone has the same level of income before labour income **without pricing control **we end up just raising the floor on the cost of living? Sure there are long tails where only nice to have things get more expensive but in aggregate.

    I’m 100% for wealth redistribution and believe heavily in public goods so please don’t at me as a capitalist pig 🐽. Maybe I’m missing the mark but adding more money into our under served areas of society without thoughtful discussion about financial literacy and about where that money inevitability ends up we’ve already lost the plot on the program lol

    Thank you if you made it to the end of my poorly punctuated run on mess ❤️

    • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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      3 hours ago

      There have been experimental deployments of Universal Basic Income, one of which lasted five years and involved an entire town, and none of those things ever materialized.

      • Blurntout@lemmy.ca
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        2 hours ago

        Thank you for your comment. I’m confident a towns economic capacity is of no consequence to the interconnected nature of national economics unfortunately. But am also woefully ignorant lol

    • alsimoneau@lemmy.ca
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      5 hours ago

      Not super well informed on the subject, but the idea is that money looses it’s value the more you have. If you’re struggling to make ends meet, even a small amount of additional income helps a ton, but if you’re already stable, that same amount is inconsequential.

      Now for the increase in prices, again “cost of living” is not a single thing, so it can’t increase uniformly across the board and affect everyone the same way. The various products have to stay competitive with each other and your local farmer doesn’t suddenly need more income either. So I dont expect essentials to get a massive price bump. The one thing we have to be careful with is rent, and that’s already an issue.

      • Blurntout@lemmy.ca
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        34 minutes ago

        I understand the principle behind the concept but believe it lacks depth and is a bandaid for a systemic problem. If you’re struggling to make ends meet there’s been a failure giving you more money isn’t going to solve.

        You’re 100% right the cost of living is far to broad to make assumptions about which areas it would impact at scale but the net idea of you increase monetary supply and capitalism does what it does best.

        It sounds good in a vacuum but when you take a step back and think about it in aggregate at national scale with monopolistic national supply chains that are poorly regulated I might add see fixing the price of bread 😂 it’s going to be something we can pat ourselves on the back for but is a big nothing burger :(

      • gusgalarnyk@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        We need to ban (or tax out of existence) the concept of owning a house you don’t stay in. Landlords should be illegal, what value they provide to society is so marginal and so minimal that it would be an overwhelmingly net positive.

        That tackles one of the largest worries against a universal income.

        • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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          3 hours ago

          Rental housing makes sense for people who aren’t intending to stay where they are in the long term (young single people or people whose situation is in flux in some way). If you’re expecting to move on, lumbering yourself with an expensive asset that will take years to pay for and may require months to unload when you no longer need it isn’t smart.

          It may make sense to restrict rentals to multi-unit buildings, and also restrict the number of buildings or units under the same owner, but having none at all causes more problems than it solves.

          • gusgalarnyk@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            Sure, we can allow some small percentage of the overall housing to be owned by businesses whose sole purpose is providing a good rental housing experience for those in transit. But that’s fundamentally different than parasitic landlords whose only job is owning a property and periodically scheduling the cheapest maintenance workers to do actual work they can.

            This isn’t your governments legislation branch, I’m not proposing a 100 page documentation. I’m simply suggesting a policy direction which is housing should be for housing, not for investment or for rent collection. If someone makes money off of someone they should provide a meaningful service and I think if housing wasn’t an investment vehicle the entire system would look so radically different people can’t imagine what a system without some landlords existing would look like.

            Imagine everyone owned their house, it wasn’t expensive, selling one was like selling a car, but you could sell to the government if need be at no meaningful loss and the government sold them back to people like a service for just such a situation.

            Idk man, it’s not that hard.

        • Kelsenellenelvial@lemmy.ca
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          3 hours ago

          Housing is one of the most expensive purchases most people will ever make. Are you saying everybody must be able to commit to that to have a place to live?

          • Blurntout@lemmy.ca
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            30 minutes ago

            When you look at housing as a cash flow expenditure that most people pay in perpetuity the only defining factor being who’s name is on the mortgage the whole thing is criminal lol

          • gusgalarnyk@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            Imagine if owning a house was the same price as buying a car. That a loan was a 3 year ordeal not a 30.

            60 years ago a janitor salary could buy a house in their 20s. Landlords only making house more expensive, not less - and exponentially so.

            • Kelsenellenelvial@lemmy.ca
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              2 hours ago

              That’s an issue, but it’s not the whole issue. You’re not going to get a reasonable home down to the price of a budget vehicle. It’s not just home prices alone that have gone up over 60 years, it’s most essential goods combined with stagnating wages that means people need to spend a greater portion of their of their income on basic essentials and don’t have as much left to save for future big purchases.

              Don’t get me wrong, homes need to be more affordable, but arbitrary reductionist ideas like let’s ban landlords don’t really work.

              Some other ideas might be to increase minimum wages, yes this increases inflation but the people at the lower end of the wage scale still come out ahead. Have a crown corp for housing, even if it needs to be subsidized. Give people affordable and reasonable quality options and make private industry have to compete against that. Some better benefits for tradespeople, like lower the exemption on the trade tools tax credit to make construction more affordable. Though there’s a weird thing that happens where companies bring in big crews of apprentices for cheap labour and then lay-off the journeypeople so they don’t have to pay Journeyperson wages. I guess this keeps costs lower, but it’d be nice to see something combat this so there’s better job prospects for people that complete their apprenticeships.

              • gusgalarnyk@lemmy.world
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                58 minutes ago

                You’re saying a large complex issue has many ways of tackling it to improve it? And that some random 3 paragraph response suggesting we improve the system by trying anything isn’t a full write up on the exact policy choices we should implement down to the letter of the law?

                /s

                Yes, obviously improving wages would help people afford things. Yes, helping construction workers improve their process would help make housing costs cheaper. There’s a thousand easy to implement ideas that would help the problem. ONE of those is “don’t treat housing like an investment vehicle akin to stocks”. Housing should be for housing, not for the wealthy to make a steady stream of income off of relatively poorer people. Landlords serve no function except for in a society where owning and trading homes is an expensive, slow, and bureaucratic process. Landlords are simply a means for money to transfer from the less wealthy to the more wealthy. They are an unnecessary cost that inflates the price of housing to the benefit of an extremely small number of people.

                To be extremely clear, this is not the only solution. This may not even be a silver bullet. I am not listing the 1000 page legal proposal you can implement in your country tomorrow. My goal is to simply shift the common perception of landlords from “they totally have to exist and wow I love giving them money every month for absolutely nothing - boy owning things sure seems like a burden, thankfully I’ll never have to worry about that because I couldn’t afford to own something even if I wanted to” to “of course landlords are bad for society.” Or even “landlords are by and large capitalistic parasites that slow progress towards a more equitable society by draining people with less wealth of their means of becoming wealthy. Society doesn’t need them, even if you can think of reasons to have temporary housing there are better means than some rich person raising the rent every year on you.”

  • tlekiteki@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 hours ago

    Simplicity makes it more difficult for paper-pushers to game the system to help the rich. So any suggestion to complicate it oughta be taken skeptically.

  • toastmeister@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    This sounds really good, for a country that has been growing inflation adjusted per capita GDP the last decade that can afford it.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bOXgOLCm54A

    Canada just announced its increasing immigration for the elderly as well, from India and Pakistan. This party will do the same as its done the last decade, capital swallowing while overburdening our infrastructure and services.