I've wanted to discuss this topic for a couple of years now, but I'm lazy, but I haven't had the time to write it. I've dropped various parts of this discussion. But the economic system is about to get smacked in the face with AI technology.
But luckily, this guy comes off with a very good discussion on it and what is probably the best solution for the North American economy. It's very interesting that UBI has gone from being a Utopian idea in the days of Henry VIII and the lunatic fringe, to a theory of one way to handle the inevitability of automation at some future date. In the 1960s and 70s Canada we had pilots where we used a negative income tax model. The discussion has changed dramatically in 2010; in 2010 the question was "Can we do Universal Basic Income" to now where it's "Will we have to do Universal Basic Income to keep up with the technological advancement?"
The guy in the video (Andrew Yang) is discussion a credit system, where the government straight up gives out the funds, and then breaks down how to afford it. Then explains the economic benefit from a consumer standpoint which will increase the tax revenue (it's basic economics, put money in the hands of the poorest Americans, and nearly 100% of goes back into the American economy).
On the topic of having little to no worry of starvation or losing your home. It makes it easier to dedicate that time and mental bandwidth to developing new skills, new dreams, and ultimately new income streams. Many younger people are making tremendous bank with their youtube businesses, and that's just one example of the direction the economy is going.
It's a fact, we are already replacing jobs with AI today. That AI is going to improve tremendously. A few years ago self-driving cars were science fiction, now we're seeing more and more of them almost by the month.
Anyway, rather than reading it from me, I'll let this far more eloquent and detailed guy talk with Joe Rogan on the topic:
But luckily, this guy comes off with a very good discussion on it and what is probably the best solution for the North American economy. It's very interesting that UBI has gone from being a Utopian idea in the days of Henry VIII and the lunatic fringe, to a theory of one way to handle the inevitability of automation at some future date. In the 1960s and 70s Canada we had pilots where we used a negative income tax model. The discussion has changed dramatically in 2010; in 2010 the question was "Can we do Universal Basic Income" to now where it's "Will we have to do Universal Basic Income to keep up with the technological advancement?"
The guy in the video (Andrew Yang) is discussion a credit system, where the government straight up gives out the funds, and then breaks down how to afford it. Then explains the economic benefit from a consumer standpoint which will increase the tax revenue (it's basic economics, put money in the hands of the poorest Americans, and nearly 100% of goes back into the American economy).
On the topic of having little to no worry of starvation or losing your home. It makes it easier to dedicate that time and mental bandwidth to developing new skills, new dreams, and ultimately new income streams. Many younger people are making tremendous bank with their youtube businesses, and that's just one example of the direction the economy is going.
It's a fact, we are already replacing jobs with AI today. That AI is going to improve tremendously. A few years ago self-driving cars were science fiction, now we're seeing more and more of them almost by the month.
Anyway, rather than reading it from me, I'll let this far more eloquent and detailed guy talk with Joe Rogan on the topic: