Second bolded bit is the topic at hand. The example was just what motivated me to make this thread - so yeah, you're fighting a massive strawman here.
Not a strawman to use an example
you gave. If you would like to distance yourself from the example
you gave, because you consider it so obviously ridiculous and unworkable that it's easy to tear down, that's fine. If you'd prefer to focus on:
a redistribution of income: A basic income, for example, or progressive taxation which goes negative on the lower end of the scale.
...we can certainly do that instead.
I
once again, as I have done several times already, request
clarification of the manner of income redistribution you would like to discuss.
The results would largely depend on the manner and amount of redistribution. For example, if you somehow managed to implement a $1000/mo UBI, I predict that the most significant price adjustment that would result be that housing prices in expensive areas would drop as some portion of people moved out of those areas.
Some prices are responsive to income. Some aren't. For example, let's compare Houston to Austin, Texas.
Austin, Texas * Average income: $56,351
* Price of a gallon of milk: $2.17
* Median house:$234,800
Houston, Texas * Average income: $46,353
* Price of a gallon of milk: $2.19
* Median house: $125,700
~20% higher average income in Austin, but over 80% higher housing prices, whereas milk is about the same. This is not an unusual case. More income
sometimes results in higher prices for
some things, but definitely not all things. Adding UBI to the mix would likely not change that. The ocassionally stated objection that "handing out money to everyone would result in prices raising to match, and therefore there would be no benefit" is simply not accurate, and there's a lot of evidence to corroborate that it's not accurate.
But yes, some prices would change. I think housing would be the big one, because a UBI type of program disconnects income to area. People who live in an expensive place like San Fransisco, can't simply buy a cheaper house in Texas because their
job is in San Fransisco. Whereas milk is a thing that if local merchants try to raise the price to ridiculous levels, they can have it delivered from out of the area.
They generally can't do that with their job.
Once you hand people money that's not tied to location, that gives them greater ability to move around. $50,000/yr is not very much in San Fransisco. Adding $1000/mo UBI to make it $62,000/yr is still not very much. But $12000/yr is plenty of money is some other places.
Imagine if you, right now, were receiving $1000/mo. The money is simply handed to you, no work requirement at all. You can go anywhere and do anything you want with it. And what if what you wanted, was to backpack through Europe? $1000/mo is plenty enough money to do that. You could sell your house and your car, and go do the thing that maybe you've dreamed of being able to do. And not as a paltry 1 month vacation. You could do it for
years and turn it into a lifestyle if you wanted. What if what you want is to buy a boat and sail across the world? $1000/mo is plenty enough money to do that.
There are many entirely valid lifestyles, in fact...lifestyles that people
dream of, that can very easily be lived on $1000/mo, if that income is disconnected from location and to the working lifestyle. And some number of people tired of going into their high-pressure high-paying office job every day, would take those options.
And for those who don't, remember that a basic income would be paid to everyone. So, what if instead of taking your $1000/mo, you and your girlfriend get together with your best friend and his girlfriend, and among you take your $4000 and buy an old mansion on 5 acres in somewhere cheap like Kentucky. You each pitch in $500/mo and have the remaining $500/mo to live and party on. You don't have jobs, so you don't need a car. No car payment, no gas, no insurance. You share utilities and an internet connection. Maybe that leaves $400/mo to have fun with. Or maybe you each pitch in $100 and share a car if you want. That still leaves $300.
That's enough discretionary money to lead a decent lifestyle. It's more than a lot of people making $50,000+ in an expensive have. And for those who have more, it still might be a choice, for example, between having only $200-$400 in purely discretionary money every money and all the time in the world to enjoy it, or $1000 discretionary money per month, while working 60 hours a week and being too stressed in their free time to enjoy it very much.
So I think a significant number of people would take those kinds of options. A lot of people would move out of expensive cities. Housing prices in those cities would drop. And milk and other goods would not become so expensive as to make it all "even out and not matter."