genuineoriginal
New member
Don't be stingy.Pay everyone $24,000
Just give everyone one of these each month:
Don't be stingy.Pay everyone $24,000
I saw a while back, on Facebook, an article about an idea which is apparently fairly popular both among left-wingers and libertarians worldwide (Republicans probably aren't a big fan, but hey): a universal minimum income.
Basically, here's the idea: have the government pay everyone enough money so that they start off at an above-poverty income level.
I can't express just how much I love this idea, and just how much this would pretty much solve all kinds of social problems and political debates.
Pay everyone $24,000 of untaxable, no strings attached income and automatically adjust that amount every year based on inflation.
Abolish social security.
Abolish federal and state entitlements (except, perhaps, as an addition to the universal minimum income).
Abolish welfare.
Abolish foodstamps.
Abolish minimum wage laws.
You get the idea.
Combine this with a single payer health-care system, tuition free universities and extremely tight border controls? I can't even express in words just how supremely epic that would be.
All of a sudden, the need for unions just ends. There's no need for unions, for minimum wages or for all sorts of other government regulation about employment. All of a sudden, the employee doesn't need his employer. They can negotiate on a perfectly level playing field.
"You want me to work for you? Ok. Then treat me like a person, not like a number. Oh. You don't want to do that? That's fine. I don't need your job anyway. "
Not to mention it would simplify things a lot government wise. No need for a dozen different government agencies.
Here, people will complain about the following:
1. It would decrease productivity and take away peoples' incentives to do meaningless, inhuman work.
2. It would be unfair because pay would no longer correspond to merit.
I answer as follows:
A. 1. is going to happen with technological increases anyway.
B. 1. If the job is meaningless and inhuman, then maybe it's not worth doing in the first place.
C. 1. There's only so many jobs anyway. What's the unemployment rate again?
D. 2. Money shouldn't be a standard of personal worth. It should be a mean of acquiring the necessities of a dignified and properly human life.
E. 2. It's not even true. I'm talking about a universal minimum income. Note the key word: "minimum."
1). Why would anyone try to earn a million or more when they can only keep 100k$? Your taxes remove incentive.
2). I strongly suggest that you look very closely at what Gross Domestic Product is. It is not a liquid asset or even a real monetary asset that anybody has access to.
There is not enough money for everybody to collect $24,000 from the government each year. Your plan is nothing more than a wealth redistribution plan, take from the rich to give to the poor. Is that what God intended?You misunderstood me. Dude makes $1.5 million dollars. 90% taxes on all income over one million. That's $450,000 in taxes. On the amount below a million? Dunno.
A cursory google search tells me that the total income of all Americans in the US, in 2011, was 12.95 trillion dollars.
What you are trying to tell me, Cabinet Maker, is that there's not enough money for everyone to have an income of $24,000 a year. In point of fact, let us assume that the actual income there is to go around is $13 trillion. If everyone had an income of $24,000, by your own admission, that only comes out to, at most, in between 7-8 trillion dollars. By my reckoning, there's still $5-6 trillion left to spare.
There is not enough money for everybody to collect $24,000 from the government each year.
Your plan is nothing more than a wealth redistribution plan
take from the rich to give to the poor. Is that what God intended?
Maybe. But it doesn't solve your problem of getting person A to give most of his income to persons B through Z.You are telling me that the total income which is collected by everyone each year is less than $24,000 multiplied by the total number of adults?
Again, a cursory google search disagrees with you.
A great, GREAT many people are likely to strongly disagree with you as to redistribute income you necessarily redistribute wealth. They kind of go hand in hand.Income restribution, not wealth redistribution. To my mind, wealth is, at best, a matter of secondary importance.
Should the very first question about anything that you do in your life be, "What would Jesus want me to do?"In a question of politics, I'm not particularly interested in the religious question.
At any rate, note that this objection is not:
1. The thing cannot be done.
The objection is:
2. But Jesus said...
Maybe. But it doesn't solve your problem of getting person A to give most of his income to persons B through Z.
A great, GREAT many people are likely to strongly disagree with you as to redistribute income you necessarily redistribute wealth. They kind of go hand in hand.
Should the very first question about anything that you do in your life be, "What would Jesus want me to do?"
What about the Walton kids. They have wealth in the billions of dollars each only a few millions of which are tied up in homes, cars, planes and whatever else. Now you want to go collect most of their wealth and redistribute it. Think that will go well?The government pays people to solve that problem. They even have places to put people who refuse.
You own a massive farm. You grow x thousands of pounds of wheat every year.
Wealth: your massive farm
Income: the x thousands of pounds of wheat.
I don't want the farm. I just want most of your wheat. So long as you keep growing wheat, I couldn't care less who owns the farm.
Well, if Jesus had written a tract on political justice, I might be interested. Unfortunately, he didn't.
Moses gave the Law, but the concrete conditions of the ancient Jewish State do not reflect the concrete conditions of modern political society.
What about the Walton kids. They have wealth in the billions of dollars each only a few millions of which are tied up in homes, cars, planes and whatever else. Now you want to go collect most of their wealth and redistribute it. Think that will go well?
A lot of that income may be in the form of stock options and may not ber readily accessible to you.Money just sitting in the bank does not constitute income. I'm assuming that the $13 trillion dollars in income reported by all Americans by the aforementioned google search was not telling me about money that's been sitting in a bank for the last decade.
What happens to people who can't work, for example: I may be getting disability and the amount ends up at about 15,000 per year. That's way below 24,000 so that would be great
If somebody has gone to college to become a professional and earns 150k$ per year, under your plan that person will pay and additional $13,804 in taxes.
So I pay $13,804 more in taxes, in exchange for $24,000 extra income?
Sounds like you made a point in favor of Traditio's plan.
Trouble is, I don't think it would be extra income. But, if you do assume that it is extra income then the scenario looks like this:So I pay $13,804 more in taxes, in exchange for $24,000 extra income?
Sounds like you made a point in favor of Traditio's plan.
I think he was factoring in the $24,000 when he calculated that the total net increase in taxes would be $13,804.