Yes, I'm sure I want to keep using this same topic. Has it really been more than 4 months!?
Heading back towards the topic a recent Australian survey shows that the covid epidemic has increased support for the idea of a Universial Basic Income (to 58% up from about 50-51%, if memory serves).
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-11/survey-says-most-australians-welcome-universal-basic-income/12970924
In a bit of an overstatement the article opens with:
Nearly two-thirds of Australians say they would support the introduction of a universal basic income (UBI), according to a new poll.
Personally I think the political class has missed a huge opportunity to more to a UBI during the coronavirus epidemic, since the economy is already disrupted the opportunity cost of the transition is much much lower.
It should be noted that those groups that are most strongly opposed to UBI include (or are basically) the politicians, journalists and business people which is why despite decent popular support it is consistently trashed as an idea.
Why is it notable that people who oppose UBI are the ones that have to pay for it (politicians and business people)? I guess maybe it's notable that "journalists" are opposed, unless this meant "the media companies."
The more I think about UBI, the more I think it won't do anything unless we have a simultaneous change to other structural elements of the economy that weaken rent-seeking and other wealth-concentrating activities. I also think that if you had those protections in place, we wouldn't need UBI in the first place.
So my "vote" would be to work to fix those systems, not try and cover over it by shuffling around dollars. The main new thought that triggered this is the other thread talking about two-earner households, and why households still struggle with all the adults working. That right there is a big piece of the evidence that supports the idea that you can't just give (at least the middle class) more money and have it not get eaten up by "inflation."
The
only way to increase buying power is to have supply of goods and services increase faster than demand. (Similarly, the only way to have a "basic income" is to guarantee that the supply of goods and services remains at least constant with respect to population growth.)
This hints at a solution: instead of just throwing money around, we need incentives for people to invest in new production, not in rent-seeking. Essentially something that charges capital holders who are not using their capital to increase productivity or at least buffer against shocks. What you
don't want is a system that penalizes capital holders from being productive.
So put teeth back in the trust-busting legislation and enforcement, reduce copyright and other intellectual property duration, tax gains from "buying low and selling high" heavily. Levy fines or something if you increase rent but refuse to build new properties. Stuff like that.