A basic-income scheme is part of the platform of the Green Party in the US. I don’t know exactly what they want done with the rest of the welfare system, though.
My first google US hit. Promising. Not only basic income, but coupled with reducing corporate welfare. And the numbers don’t seem crazy - $600-$800. I consider probably the majority of the arguments used appealing to libertarians. I didn’t expect much common ground at all.
This is pie-in-the-sky promises with no hard numbers or, actually, much of any economic analysis. Instead there’s a lot of handwaving about cutting government spending and corporate welfare, introducing flat tax (!), etc.
It’s one page on a web site. How much detail did you expect? They do refer to their party platform. Did you read that to look for details?
They say:
Economists have calculated that we can afford a universal basic income of $800 or more by cutting government, starting with corporate welfare and other programs that become superfluous.
Certainly a footnote would have been useful here. Maybe there is one in their party platform. But you can eyeball government spending and do some basic math yourself. $800 isn’t crazy talk, if you’re actually replacing other health and welfare programs.
I liked the basic principles they expressed—reduce government subsidies and tax carve outs. It surprised me to see the Greens come out in favor of that. I didn’t have high expectations in the first place.
A basic-income scheme is part of the platform of the Green Party in the US. I don’t know exactly what they want done with the rest of the welfare system, though.
http://www.gp.org/greenpages/content/volume8/issue3/oped5.php
My first google US hit. Promising. Not only basic income, but coupled with reducing corporate welfare. And the numbers don’t seem crazy - $600-$800. I consider probably the majority of the arguments used appealing to libertarians. I didn’t expect much common ground at all.
Not.
This is pie-in-the-sky promises with no hard numbers or, actually, much of any economic analysis. Instead there’s a lot of handwaving about cutting government spending and corporate welfare, introducing flat tax (!), etc.
It’s one page on a web site. How much detail did you expect? They do refer to their party platform. Did you read that to look for details?
They say:
Certainly a footnote would have been useful here. Maybe there is one in their party platform. But you can eyeball government spending and do some basic math yourself. $800 isn’t crazy talk, if you’re actually replacing other health and welfare programs.
I liked the basic principles they expressed—reduce government subsidies and tax carve outs. It surprised me to see the Greens come out in favor of that. I didn’t have high expectations in the first place.