rainbow wrote:Beatsong wrote:
which makes quite clear that they have not, in fact, accounted for those "issues".
The whole point is that the BI should just cover survival. The individuals have the choice then if they want luxuries, they must go out and do some work to pay for these.
Why do you find this so difficult?
Well I'm not sure exactly what you mean by "survival" - whether it's literally just not quite dying - but that's not what those advocating it on this thread and elsewhere have suggested. They seem to suggest it would provide "decency" and "dignity" for all etc. etc. I would dispute, however, that much beyond literal survival is possible on in the UK on £80 a week without a whole lot of other benefits also being in place.
In fact I'd dispute that doling out cash is the best way to ensure the most basic level of survival anyway. That starts much more effectively by having a robust healthcare system free at the point of use, and a housing policy providing subsidised social housing to those who need it. Then the two most key areas of survival are taken care of without being subject to the whims of the market. Both of these areas that have been badly underfunded in recent years, and that I would like to see the UK government devoting a lot more money to. Politics is about priorities, and they're not going to have the money to do that while they're already having to massively increase taxes to give cash to people who don't need it.
Anyhow, my point in this last discussion was not what the BI should provide or how well it would provide it - it was that it would provide less for the poorest section of society than they are currently getting now. Many people rely on more than £80 per week worth of benefits, in many cases despite the fact that they ARE working. UBI at this level would make those people poorer.