Because the alternative is NOT having $0. The alternative is having $20,000 or whatever for those who need it.
...note that your above-quoted-response is a response to my response to
alexandertnt's post, not a response to my response to
your post.
As such, I'm not certain whether this part of what you're saying is even relevant to what I said, or if there might have been a miscommunication due the fact that there are more than two people in this conversation.
However...to address the above-quoted section anyway:
The welfare programs are concentrated on those in need -- people with disabilities who can't work, etc.
1) This statement is ambiguous. If you're saying what I think you're saying, then you're factually incorrect, but it depends on what exactly you mean.
Unemployment insurance and
disability insurance are different programs. Unemployment does not go to disabled people. It goes to people who are recently unemployed. Note:
recently. Exactly how long it lasts
depends but 26 weeks is the "standard" duration.
2) Why are people with disabillities who can't work "more important" than people without disabilities who nevertheless are unable to find work? You appear to prefer giving
more money to
fewer people with problems rather than less money to more people with problems.
For example, let's say there are (just making up numbers to illustrate the point) 15 million healthy people out of work. And let's say there are 5 million disabled people also out of work. And let's say you have 10 billion dollars to distribute.
Why would you rather give $20,000
only to the people with disabilities, leaving the other 15 million people destitute...rather than giving $5000 to each and every one of them...such that nobody is completely destitute?
$5000 is not enough to comfortably live on. But
it is enough to eat. Why would you prefer 5 million disabled people living in houses and eating, but 15 million people starving? Why is that preferable to 20 million people homeless...but able to eat?
Do you see the issue?
if you divide the money amongst everybody, even the people who don't need it, you're just robbing from the poor and disabled to give to the rich and able and gainfully employed, dropping coverage for the people who are helpless from [just enough to get them what they need] to [a small fraction of that] and they then starve in the streets.
The purpose of giving it to everybody is to reduce bureaucratic waste. I don't have the numbers, and I suspect neither do you...but if I were to venture a guess, I suspect that the number of "rich people" in the country is probably not high enough that the numerically small number of payments going out to the would shrink the total size of the money pool enough to leave the relatively larger number of "not rich and unemployed people" people starving in the streets.
Again, as cited previously in the thread, the number for the US worked out to $5000/yr for everyone. $5000/yr is enough to eat. Yes, it's not enough to avoid homelessness. But it is enough to keep from starving.
You've just reduced their entire possible income from $750 to $10 and killed them
No. I've reduced their income to $5000/12 = $416/month. And in exchange, the 15 million people who
were getting nothing at all are now also receiving $416/month.
This scenario is simplified. Some of those 15 million would presumably have been receiving unemployment insurance. However, stepping away from the made up numbers from before and checking something real...current
U-6 unemployment rates, it's at 12.6% right now. Some quick math...319 million in the US, that's 40 million...whereas only
12.8 million people are receiving any welfare program. That leaves ~28 million people who are not receiving money from these programs at all.
With basic income, the 12.8 million currently receiving money would receive less: $5000/yr instead of whatever they're getting now. But the 28 million currently receiving nothing would
also be getting that same $5000/yr.
SSI disability payments, for example, require rigorous applications processes that usually include half a dozen denials, and require involvement of lawyers, even if you're like, missing all your limbs. And despite that, they still only provide about $750 in my area
Exactly.
The social security administration
employs 65,000 people and has over 1300 offices. How much of their budget is eaten up by all that rigorous testing and bureaucracy? If there were a single, simple rule like "every US citizen over age 18 gets a check" that could be handled by a single office with probably fewer than 100 people. No rigorous applications, no denials, no lawyers...just, you're a citizen over age 18? Check automatically gets mailed to you.
Now, if you want to claim that the previously-discussed "disincentive to work" issue obviously doesn't apply to people making over...let's say $50,000/yr...and that therefore those people don't need to receive the $5000...ok, that might be reasonable.
But the moment you do that, you suddenly need to create infrastructure capable of verifying income. How much? MAybe a lot, maybe not very much. It's debatable. If that's a direction you want to go...we can address it. But I think it's not a point you're making, so forgive me if I don't go chasing down answers to questions you're not asking.
Basic income cannot happen without HUGE amounts of additional government funding being introduced that currently doesn't exist. If you can come up with such a source of multiplying our tax dollars by a factor of 2-3x, then we can start talking about it. That's what is required.
Factually incorrect. The math has been done, and the number worked out to roughly $5000/person per year with
no tax increases at all. Forgive me if I don't go tracking down that link again. Yes, $5000/yr is not enough to "fully feed, clothe and house everyone." But it doesn't claim to do that.
The purpose of basic income is not to "fully feed, clothe and house everyone." The purposes are to:
1) Provide a "minimal functional income" to eliminate extreme poverty for everyone, rather than exclusively the disabled or recently out of work
2) Provide a general smoothing out and possible eventual solution to the problem of long term technological unemployment
3) Eliminate bureaucratic waste such that more benefits money goes to actual people
4) Eliminate the "disincentive to work" problem that exists with certain other possible systems
And a few other things.
It does accomplish these things.