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Saturday, September 19, 2020

UBI

https://ethicalunicorn.com/2020/04/07/universal-basic-income-explained-can-it-work-is-it-a-good-idea/

Sunday, July 19, 2020

https://www.thevenusproject.com/

https://www.thevenusproject.com/ The VENUS

https://www.thevenusproject.com/learn-more/documentaries/

https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/06/asia/china-mongolia-bubonic-plague-intl-hnk-scli-scn/index.html

www.gigmasters.com


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https://youtu.be/rvpTmiVhcxU


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Wednesday, July 15, 2020

UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME


https://www.facebook.com/462155437257810/posts/1948522991954373/


https://www.usgoldbureau.com/silver/silver-barsUBI.com ANDREW YANG

The government has billions in unclaimed money, and drug money which can be used to fund UBI(UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME).
 

https://youtu.be/YPFdDfXszjM

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/29/why-andrew-yangs-push-for-a-universal-basic-income-is-making-a-comeback.html

https://youtu.be/rvpTmiVhcxU


 https://www.thestar.com/business/opinion/2020/04/18/when-it-comes-to-a-universal-basic-income-the-issue-isnt-affordability-its-culture.html

https://www.forbes.com/billionaires/


https://www.facebook.com/462155437257810/posts/1935529979920341/?d=null&vh=e


ELON MUSK hi

Open in app https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2020-04-29-universal-basic-income-grant-when-nothing-is-affordable-we-had-better-choose-the-best-unaffordable-solution/ Jasper Dodson GoodDollar You have 2 free stories left this month. Upgrade for unlimited access. Everything You Need To Know About Universal Basic Income— In 11 Minutes GoodDollarHQ GoodDollarHQ Feb 17 · 11 min read Image for post What Exactly Is Universal Basic Income? Universal basic income (UBI) is a model for providing every person with an unconditional sum of money — regardless of employment status, income or resources. It is designed to enable a baseline standard of living and improve wealth inequality. Why Am I Hearing So Much About UBI Lately? In recent years, UBI has captured the imagination of academics, tech visionaries (Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and others) and various politicians — right across the political divide, crucially — mostly because fears of greater wealth inequality across the globe are growing. Traditionally, UBI policies have been aimed at mitigating the economic effects of income and wealth inequality. 

This application has become even more relevant considering the rising inequalities reported in both developing economies and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. It’s no coincidence that the number-one goal (out of 17) of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals is “end poverty in all its forms everywhere”. Additionally, goal 10 is “reduce inequality within and among countries”. Paradoxically, technology is advancing the argument to embrace UBI by enabling it through innovation, and also by effectively making large swathes of the global workforce redundant. Indeed, by 2030 up to 800 million workers — one-fifth of the world’s workforce — are likely to have their roles displaced by automatons and because of artificial intelligence (AI), according to a 2017 McKinsey Global Institute report. The so-called “technological unemployment” looming on the horizon comes at a time when financial wealth inequality is rising. A recent House of Commons Library report calculated that the richest 1 per cent of people on the planet are on course to control as much as two-thirds of the world’s wealth by 2030. And in January 2020 Oxfam calculated that the planet’s richest 162 billionaires — including Facebook’s Zuckerberg — have the same wealth as the poorest half of the world. Image for post Who Are The Biggest Names Backing UBI? Given the trend towards greater wealth inequality, there is little surprise that the clamour to explore UBI is becoming louder. Andrew Yang, the 40-something founder of Venture for America and a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, has anchored his campaign to dethrone Donald Trump with UBI. “Let’s put humanity first,” he advises. “It’s time for universal basic income.” Yang believes UBI is imperative for his country’s long-term success. “In the next 12 years, one out of three American workers are at risk of losing their jobs to new technologies,” he writes on his campaign website. Similarly, Andrew Ng, another young, influential American entrepreneur, reacted to Mr Trump’s presidential triumph in 2016 by posting on Twitter: “More than ever, we need basic income to limit everyone’s downside, and better education to give everyone an upside.” Ng, Co-Founder of online learning platform Coursera, is one of a growing number of forward-thinking business leaders who promote UBI as a means to combat poverty. Pierre Omidyar, the American billionaire Founder of eBay, has gone further and backed a UBI project. In June 2017 it was announced that his Omidyar Network had invested $493,000 (£386,000) in GiveDirectly, a UBI pilot giving out free money to Kenyans. (For more information on UBI experiments in practice, check out the resources on The Essential UBI Reading List.) Meanwhile, both Zuckerberg, Facebook’s Chief Executive, and serial entrepreneur Musk — tech visionaries elevated to 21st-century pop-star status, and two of the most recognisable people on the planet — have espoused the virtues of UBI while acknowledging the unstoppable rampage of technology. Zuckerberg has stated that UBI can spark innovation, through empowering people. “We should have a society that measures progress not just by economic metrics like GDP, but by how many of us have a role we find meaningful,” the Facebook founder said. “We should explore ideas like universal basic income to give everyone a cushion to try new things.” Whether the motivations are combating poverty, concerns about technological unemployment, or a need to redefine the meaning of work, UBI is gaining momentum and moving into the mainstream of thought leaders. The number of luminaries promoting UBI as a bold social-economic paradigm is increasing all the time. Image for post What Is The History Of UBI? UBI has been theorised about, in one form or another, for at least five centuries. London-born Renaissance humanist Sir Thomas More hinted at the manifold benefits of an unconditional basic income in his controversial 1516 masterpiece Utopia, about an imaginary, ideal island state. Through the narrative, More, who would later become Lord Chancellor, argued that applying UBI would be a cleverer way of fighting theft rather than sentencing thieves to death (and, in turn, would result in fewer murders). The concept of UBI has been written about, and built upon, in the centuries since Utopia. English-born American political activist Thomas Paine, for example, wrote about it in the 17th century. Payments, he suggested, should be made “to every person, rich or poor … because it is in lieu of the natural inheritance, which, as a right, belongs to every man, over and above the property he may have created, or inherited from those who did.” Over 200 years later Karl Marx imagined a post-capitalist industrial economy of such collective wealth that it would leave all people free to “hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening and criticise after dinner”. According to Marxism, the emphasis “should not be on redistributing the wealth that has already been created in society (through taxation and welfare, etc.), but rather on having collective and democratic control over the means by which new wealth is created — that is, the means of production. “If such a rational plan of production was implemented, then questions of taxation, inheritance, redistribution, welfare, and so on, would quickly disappear.” Image for post How Does UBI Work In Practice? While a majority of the OECD countries have experimented with small-scale, targeted welfare programmes, none have hitherto made unconditional payments a fundamental part of their offering. However, the rising popularity of UBI programmes in contemporary discourse reflects a rapidly changing political landscape. Pleasingly, there is an ever-growing list of UBI pilot schemes and experiments that have enjoyed positive results. Here we mention some — but far from all — of them. Here it’s important to note that research is being done at leading academic institutions and many trials have been done, but all findings are just initial. Further, there is not just one, universally accepted approach to UBI, but rather, multiple modes of application. Arguably the first real-world application of large-scale UBI was pioneered by Herbert Hoover, president of America from 1929 to 1933. Before he was sworn into office, and after the First World War, Hoover led the American Relief Administration, which provided food to the inhabitants of Central Europe and Eastern Europe. In the immediate aftermath of the war, the program delivered more than four million tons of relief supplies to 23 war-torn European countries. At its peak, the programme employed 300 Americans, more than 120,000 Russians and fed 10.5 million people daily. That mission and its smaller-sized predecessors — the United States Food Administration and the Committee for Relief in Belgium (both also headed by Hoover) — are thought to be the first global aid programmes operating at such a scale. UBI had been theoretical until that point. More recently, GiveDirectly, an American charity, has undertaken a randomised control trial in Kenya — this is believed to be the largest-scale UBI experiment in a third-world country. For the $30-million project, approximately 21,000 people receive some type of cash transfer, with more than 5,000 enjoying long-term basic income, in over 100 villages selected on the basis of extreme poverty. The hope is this experiment will be able to capture the community-level effects of basic income — rather than on an individual level. On the GiveDirectly website, a long list of chronological testimonials highlights how a little money can go a long way and is especially life-changing for those most in need. Tusade, one recipient of UBI, after accepting a second payment of $449, wrote: “Some improvement in the hygiene and sanitation has been realised in my family.” James, who received an initial payment of $467, commented: “The biggest difference in my daily life is that I have bought a bull for ploughing.” As mentioned above, the Omidyar Network — headed by Pierre Omidyar, the American billionaire Founder of eBay — has invested $493,000 in the UBI project. A blog post on the Omidyar Network website made the point that “it is clear that cash transfers have an important role to play in alleviating poverty and empowering people”. Similar projects have been completed in, among other nations, Canada and Finland. Regarding the latter, the Finnish government began a two-year trial UBI scheme for 2,000 unemployed people that gave each individual €560 a month. And between 2011 and 2014 a basic income pilot — funded by UNICEF and the Self Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) — was conducted in Madhya Pradesh. The trial provided monthly payments to 6,000 residents of randomly selected villages, to another group of tribal communities, and to a control group. Payments were made in addition to subsidised public services such as the distribution of food and fuel to people on low incomes. Elsewhere, Sam Altman, a 30-something tech luminary, is determined to take on the challenge of bringing UBI to the American public. The former president of Y Combinator — the largest and most well-known startup accelerator in Silicon Valley — and chief executive of OpenAI has said he wants to “totally restructure how society works”. Under Altman’s guidance, Y Combinator has funded a $60 million, five-year UBI research project in Oakland, which is expected to continue until 2024. Image for postImage for post What Are The Biggest Challenges For UBI? Even though the idea of UBI is centuries’ old, it has failed to take off at scale. This is due, in part, to insufficient support in mainstream media and politics. Perhaps one of the reasons for this is the difficulty of implementation — and more precisely budgetary constraints — plus the need for centralised backing, until now. The results of many of the above experiments have been inconclusive. So far, all pilots have relied upon the government or local authority to help with administration and funding, and that has been problematic. Furthermore, UBI seems, well, too utopian for some, while others believe that a meritocracy, rewarding hard work, is preferable for society. An approach that tests UBI by the people, for the people, has not been done yet. Image for postImage for post Can Blockchain Technology Finally Enable UBI? What if there was an easier way to implement UBI on a global scale, without national politics and budget limits? Could the first successful application of large-scale UBI be spawned from the new innovations brought forth by digital assets and the underlying blockchain technology? Digital assets and tokenization boast the potential to create new innovations and solutions to known problems in that these new technologies now enable programmable money. For the first time, software code is being deployed to create new financial products designed to fulfil a particular design schema. New products can be created that enable a predefined set of rules. Imagine a mechanism paying a fluctuating interest rate which changes with the invested amount. The financial concept of the “yield curve”, which currently displays a changing yield according to maturity, could now have a third dimension added to it: invested amount. In the near future, we believe existing challenges to open financial mechanisms such as user experience and identification and identity will be solved by continued innovation in the field. With cryptocurrency and digital asset innovation, the value of money can be created from the faith, belief and usage of its users through aligning market incentives, and no government involvement is required. Plus, decentralised cryptos and blockchain technology is global in scope by definition. The convergence of blockchain technology, the cryptocurrency revolution, worldwide success of trials, and many thought leaders could accelerate large-scale UBI projects — and sooner, rather than later. Image for postImage for post How Can GoodDollar Enable UBI At Scale? GoodDollar is a not-for-profit initiative that explores how decentralised cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology may enable value creation and distribution, through models based on UBI with the central aim of reducing global wealth inequality. The initiative focuses on improving financial literacy and financial access globally. Thanks to the advancement and confluence of a number of technologies, such as cryptoassets and blockchain, hope is building that UBI principles can be adopted — by GoodDollar and other projects — to help the poorest people in the world achieve more financial freedom. Projects in the OpenUBI community are working hard and collaborating to deliver solutions around digital identity — ensuring a user on UBI-based systems such as GoodDollar is verifiable and unique — and governance structures. GoodDollar’s economic model employs UBI principles, and the vision is that a cryptocurrency (GoodDollar) will be distributed in a fair and transparent way, using “smart contracts” on the blockchain. The GoodDollar team is preparing to release more specifics on the GoodDollar UBI model throughout 2020. By working with other experts and ecosystem partners to develop a carefully crafted, and fully tested model — to be determined through experiments and pilots — the goal is to develop a sustainable, open system where the least advantaged receive the greatest relative benefit. Eventually, users — in the developing and developed world — will be able to contribute to a new vision for Universal Basic Income that is based on a decentralised, market incentivized design made possible by blockchain technology. Hungry for more? Check out GoodDollar’s Essential UBI Reading List. GoodDollar: Changing The Balance — For Good Do you have the skills to help the GoodDollar project? We need builders, scientists and experts in identity, privacy, and financial governance, as well as philanthropists and ambassadors. Contact us at hello@gooddollar.org, via our social media channels (Twitter, Telegram, or Facebook), check out our community website, join the OpenUBI movement, or visit our GitHub page. Our YouTube channel is worth exploring, too. Ubi Financial Inclusion Wealth Inequality 57 claps GoodDollarHQ WRITTEN BY GoodDollarHQ Follow GoodDollar is a series of ongoing experiments and research, establishing an economic framework designed to reduce global wealth inequality through UBI. GoodDollar GoodDollar Follow GoodDollar: Changing the 
Balance, For Good. See responses (2) About Help Legal Get the Medium app A button that says 'Download on the App Store', and if clicked it will lead you to the iOS App store A button that says 'Get it on, Google Play', and if clicked it will lead you to the Google Play store
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/taxes/you-might-actually-get-two-tax-checks-from-the-irs-this-year-here-s-what-you-need-to-know/ar-BB16AI0Q?li=BBnbfcN

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South Africa is getting a new universal income grant: report

South Africa will introduce a universal basic income grant as part of a range of packages to help the country’s unemployed, says minister of Social Development Lindiwe Zulu.

Zulu did not provide details of how the grant would be funded or its size, but told a virtual press briefing it would be paid ‘post-October’, Reuters reports.

This announcement follows a parliamentary briefing last week in which the Department of Social Development noted that the demand for income support will go beyond the six month period covered by the R350 Covid-19 Social Relief of Distress (SRD) grant.

The pandemic prompted president Cyril Ramaphosa to announce a temporary top-up of those grants by up to R300, including a R350 unemployment grant, in late March.

However, the country’s unemployment rate is predicted to have soared since the start of the lockdown, with estimates ranging between 400,000 – 1.5 million jobs lost. There are also concerns about what will happen when the Covid-19 grant is no longer paid out.

The Department of Social Development said last week that to address this, it is working on policy proposal on the feasibility of income support to South Africans between the ages of 18-59 who have no income support.

“This is a result of the introduction of the Special Covid-19 SRD grant that has revived the discussion of the feasibility of a Basic Income Grant (BIG) as was recommended by the Taylor Report in 2002,” it said.

The ANC has previouslyt said that it will also look at the feasibility of introducing a basic income grant as part of a series of outcomes decided upon by its National Executive Committee (NEC).

According to a document seen by Bloomberg, the ANC proposes paying a R500 monthly grant to those aged 19 to 59 who aren’t normally eligible for other aid would cost the state R197.8 billion a year.

Between 50% and 60% of the money could be recouped by levying extra taxes on those with jobs, it said.

Cost

Reuters notes that a universal grant had seemed unlikely, given soaring public debt and following an emergency budget that proposed sticking to R230 billion in spending cuts.

It added that the universal grant will target around 33 million people between the ages of 18 and 59.

South Africa’s poverty line, including non-food expenses, calculated by Statistics South Africa, is around R1,270 ($76.04). That would put the annual cost at roughly R42 billion, calculations by Reuters found.

Isobel Frye, director of the South African-based Studies in Poverty and Inequality Institute and a Minimum Wage Commissioner, said the universal grant had been discussed by government over the last 10 months, but the treasury had been reluctant to fund it.

“It was unexpected but incredibly welcome. It suggests there’s been a lot of reflection about the inadequacy of the R350 rand Covid-19 grant,” Frye said.


Read: The ANC’s plan to use South African pensions


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Sunday, July 12, 2020

Still MORE GUGU

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ADVERTORIAL Trending : 'Genius New Tech' Slashes Your Electric Bill by 90%!How Millions of Americans are Saving Hundreds of Dollars Every Month on Their Electric Bill (HINT: It's Not Solar) (Washington, D.C.) - Are you aware that you could save hundreds of dollars a month, simply by using this new tech startup’s device? It is no secret that the price of electricity is steadily increasing each year, but thanks to this new Nikola-Tesla-inspired technology, consumers can save hundreds to thousands of dollars every year on their electric bills. Just this year, a new study suggested that most Americans are be overpaying for electricity by a whopping $27.6 billion dollars per year. It's very apparent that we as Americans have an energy crisis—a lack of energy from lawmakers and the Public Utility Commission about fixing the crooked business of selling overpriced electricity to consumers. Both sides are giving each other cover to do nothing. Just this year, the Public Utility Commission sent lawmakers a report about the glorious, incredible, fantastic electricity shopping system it regulates. A problem? Not on their watch. Lawmakers who get that report from the state regulators can say, "Everything is fine. We don't need to make changes." Lawmakers refuse to introduce an electricity bill that is designed to end the deceptive marketing practices that power companies use to reap massive profits every year. The system remains a horror show of confusion, duplicity, and unnecessary complications. There's no reason why electricity companies should get the better of regulators and consumers, but they do it time and again. If you look at descriptions of more than 300 electricity plans from 55 companies, you see a jumble of garbage language, terms, conditions, and small print—your eyes bulge. And you won't learn your exact price until the bill arrives. Why does this matter? This duplicity leads to you paying more. Electricity companies also confuse shoppers with tiered pricing—different rates for different usage levels—but they make sure that the lowest prices to show up early in search results. So, to cut a long story short, Big Energy is running a massive racket, and as long as they are not regulated, they'll continue to get away with it. But the war isn't lost for the ordinary consumer. Thankfully, clever new technology can help average consumers reduce their electric bills by up to 90% a month after the first month >>> A German-based startup company has come up with a new innovative and inexpensive gadget that helps you not only lower your electric bill, but can also increase the lifespan on expensive household appliances. Within just one month, the device would pay for itself. What Is This Device? It's called Power Plus and its tech was originally created by no other than the legendary Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, and futurist, Nikola Tesla. Initially it was concealed from the general public because it offered average families the opportunity to save on their monthly energy costs. Power Plus is a small, compact, affordable, and easy-to-use plug-in unit that stops unnecessary power from entering the electrical cables and overloading the network. Power Plus is your power company's worst nightmare. They have been trying to hide Power Plus from the everyday consumer and have even banned it in retail shops. Big Energy is threatened by this device and its potential to cut into profits. However, thanks to the Internet, the secret is out, and everyday people are now reaping the rewards of less power consumption overall, as well as that used by household appliances. The bonus? Your standard blender, microwave, vacuum, or any other household appliance may last longer. In essence, Power Plus provides the opportunity for you to save up to 90% on your energy bill. That's a phenomenal savings and makes it easy to understand why Big Energy wants this device hidden from consumers for good. The benefits of Power Plus are unparalleled, and researchers are convinced this device could spell the end of unaffordable power bills that can cripple the average wage-earner at the end of the month. Scientists initially spent many months trying to debunk claims of efficacy, but those studies now prove that Power Plus should be commonplace in every household. How Does it Work? It's easy to connect, simply plug into the outlet closest to your breaker box. That is all you need to do, once plugged in the green LED indicates it is powered on and working. If your home is large it is beneficial to place 1 unit close to the breaker box and another as far away from it as possible. It is as simple as that. and it's suitable for both standard homes and apartments connected to an electrical grid. Once you've plugged it in, Power Plus will get to work. Within a few days, it will begin to make efficient use of your energy while allowing you to reap the rewards of a more robust household appliance life-cycle. In just a short time, you will have made your money back on your initial purchase. Appliances always draw more power than they need to run due to inefficiencies and noise on the sine wave. Power Plus reduces this noise therefor decreases the amount of electricity wasted. It does not change what the meter reads or steal extra power from anywhere, it just uses the energy more efficiently therefor needing less of it. Can Big Energy Actually Stop This? Now that you know the first truth—that power companies massively overcharge their customers—you should also know the second truth (one that almost no one is aware of): your utility company's power is overloading circuits and shortening the lifespans of your expensive household appliances in the process. So, you're set to lose more than just money from your wallet. When Power Plus was discovered overseas, power companies then spent millions likely your money from years of overpaying) to stop the product from reaching retail store shelves. It would spell the end of their profiteering, so it was important that they kept it out of the public eye. However, the questionable legality of such a move put a stop to this, and now close to 150,000 households worldwide are experiencing lower power bills, all because of an inconspicuous plug-in device. Is This Device Actually Legal? Power Plus is absolutely 100% legal; you're at no legal risk for owning this excellent electricity-saving device because simply put, you're not breaking any laws. Of course, power companies are not happy with the situation, so they are trying their best to hide Power Plus from the public eye. How Much is it Going to Cost Me? You're probably thinking, given what this tech can do, it probably has to cost a fortune. False! Power Plus is on sale at the moment for under $40! Make sure you get yours while you can, due to recent media attention and mounting pressure from Big Energy, these handy little gadgets may become impossible to find in the near future. Can I Buy This Device? You can buy it directly from the company's partner website by clicking here >>> Note: Due to recent media attention the demand for this device has increased significantly, we cannot guarantee inventory at this time. Lower Your Energy Costs Now that you've been informed about this brilliant invention, we're pleased to announce the company has allowed us to give a special discount to all of our readers. To get your special discounted pricing all you need to do is to follow these 3 steps: Here's How You Do It: Step 1: Order Power Plus today to take advantage of the special discount. Step 2: When you receive it, open the package and plug it into your wall. Step 3: Once plugged in, give the device some time to optimize your electricity use. Here's a tip: Power Plus is a great gift because it will save everybody who receives it a ton of money! "Remember, we cannot guarantee inventory at this time due to the demand skyrocketing right now. It's been reported a lot of people are buying multiple devices at once to resell them for a profit." : READER RESULTS "My son told me about Power Plus and showed me his electric bill a couple of months after installing a few of them in his 2000 sqft ranch. He was getting a 58% reduction in energy costs. I decided to go with the recommended 1 Power Plus device for every 500 sqft. My home is about 2600sqft, so I got 5 of them. I was in shock when I got my energy bill the following the month.. an 83% reduction in energy costs!!! I'm not blowing smoke!!! This device flat out works. " Brian Johnson New York, NY "As an electrician, I know devices and home appliances draw more power than they use. However, it's the power you have to pay for. Power Plus handles these inefficiencies by improving the power stream. That way you only pay for the electricity you consume. " John Spender Austin, TX Special Offer Step 1: CLICK HERE to Check Availability Power Plus stock is limited. (CLAIM YOURS NOW BEFORE THEY'RE ALL GONE) Note: Millions of Americans are using POWER PLUS to save $100's every month!  Stock update: ALMOST GONE. Power Plus Still Available as of: Saturday, July 11, 2020 Start saving with Power Plus Today! Power Plus Still Available as of: Saturday, July 11, 2020 Take advantage of our EXCLUSIVE LINK and save up to 50% on your order! Privacy Policy Terms and Conditions © 2017 Copyright. All Rights reserved. THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT AND NOT AN ACTUAL NEWS ARTICLE, BLOG, OR CONSUMER PROTECTION UPDATE.



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Tuesday, September 29, 2015

JAY5000

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WMUSICJBD@INSTABLOG.COM Open in app You have 2 free stories left this month.  Upgrade for unlimited access. Everything You Need To Know About Universal Basic Income— In 11 Minutes GoodDollarHQ Feb 17 · 11 min read What Exactly Is Universal Basic Income? Universal basic income (UBI) is a model for providing every person with an unconditional sum of money — regardless of employment status, income or resources. It is designed to enable a baseline standard of living and improve wealth inequality. Why Am I Hearing So Much About UBI Lately? In recent years, UBI has captured the imagination of academics, tech visionaries (Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and others) and various politicians — right across the political divide, crucially — mostly because fears of greater wealth inequality across the globe are growing. Traditionally, UBI policies have been aimed at mitigating the economic effects of income and wealth inequality. This application has become even more relevant considering the rising inequalities reported in both developing economies and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. It’s no coincidence that the "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">number-one goal (out of 17) of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals is “end poverty in all its forms everywhere”. Additionally, "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">goal 10 is “reduce inequality within and among countries”. Paradoxically, technology is advancing the argument to embrace UBI by enabling it through innovation, and also by effectively making large swathes of the global workforce redundant. Indeed, by 2030 up to 800 million workers — one-fifth of the world’s workforce — are likely to have their roles displaced by automatons and because of artificial intelligence (AI), according to "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">a 2017 McKinsey Global Institute report. The so-called “technological unemployment” looming on the horizon comes at a time when financial wealth inequality is rising. "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">A recent House of Commons Library report calculated that the richest 1 per cent of people on the planet are on course to control as much as two-thirds of the world’s wealth by 2030. And in January 2020 "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">Oxfam calculated that the planet’s richest 162 billionaires — including Facebook’s Zuckerberg — have the same wealth as the poorest half of the world. Who Are The Biggest Names Backing UBI? Given the trend towards greater wealth inequality, there is little surprise that the clamour to explore UBI is becoming louder. Andrew Yang, the 40-something founder of Venture for America and a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, has anchored his campaign to dethrone Donald Trump with UBI. “Let’s put humanity first,” he advises. “It’s time for universal basic income.” Yang believes UBI is imperative for his country’s long-term success. “In the next 12 years, one out of three American workers are at risk of losing their jobs to new technologies,” "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">he writes on his campaign website. Similarly, Andrew Ng, another young, influential American entrepreneur, reacted to Mr Trump’s presidential triumph in 2016 by"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> posting on Twitter: “More than ever, we need basic income to limit everyone’s downside, and better education to give everyone an upside.” Ng, Co-Founder of online learning platform Coursera, is one of a growing number of forward-thinking business leaders who promote UBI as a means to combat poverty. Pierre Omidyar, the American billionaire Founder of eBay, has gone further and backed a UBI project. In June 2017 it was announced that his Omidyar Network had invested $493,000 (£386,000) in"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> GiveDirectly, a UBI pilot giving out free money to Kenyans. (For more information on UBI experiments in practice, check out the resources on "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">The Essential UBI Reading List.) Meanwhile, both Zuckerberg, Facebook’s Chief Executive, and serial entrepreneur Musk — tech visionaries elevated to 21st-century pop-star status, and two of the most recognisable people on the planet — have espoused the virtues of UBI while acknowledging the unstoppable rampage of technology. Zuckerberg has stated that UBI can spark innovation, through empowering people. “We should have a society that measures progress not just by economic metrics like GDP, but by how many of us have a role we find meaningful,”"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> the Facebook founder said. “We should explore ideas like universal basic income to give everyone a cushion to try new things.” Whether the motivations are combating poverty, concerns about technological unemployment, or a need to redefine the meaning of work, UBI is gaining momentum and moving into the mainstream of thought leaders. The number of luminaries promoting UBI as a bold social-economic paradigm is increasing all the time. What Is The History Of UBI? UBI has been theorised about, in one form or another, for at least five centuries. London-born Renaissance humanist Sir Thomas More hinted at the manifold benefits of an unconditional basic income in his controversial 1516 masterpiece Utopia, about an imaginary, ideal island state. Through the narrative, More, who would later become Lord Chancellor, argued that applying UBI would be a cleverer way of fighting theft rather than sentencing thieves to death (and, in turn, would result in fewer murders). The concept of UBI has been written about, and built upon, in the centuries since Utopia. English-born American political activist Thomas Paine, for example, wrote about it in the 17th century. Payments, he suggested, should be made “to every person, rich or poor … because it is in lieu of the natural inheritance, which, as a right, belongs to every man, over and above the property he may have created, or inherited from those who did.” Over 200 years later"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> Karl Marx imagined a post-capitalist industrial economy of such collective wealth that it would leave all people free to “hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening and criticise after dinner”. "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">According to Marxism, the emphasis “should not be on redistributing the wealth that has already been created in society (through taxation and welfare, etc.), but rather on having collective and democratic control over the means by which new wealth is created — that is, the means of production. “If such a rational plan of production was implemented, then questions of taxation, inheritance, redistribution, welfare, and so on, would quickly disappear.” How Does UBI Work In Practice? While a majority of the OECD countries have experimented with small-scale, targeted welfare programmes, none have hitherto made unconditional payments a fundamental part of their offering. However, the rising popularity of UBI programmes in contemporary discourse reflects a rapidly changing political landscape. Pleasingly, there is an ever-growing list of UBI pilot schemes and experiments that have enjoyed positive results. Here we mention some — but far from all — of them. Here it’s important to note that research is being done at leading academic institutions and many trials have been done, but all findings are just initial. Further, there is not just one, universally accepted approach to UBI, but rather, multiple modes of application. Arguably the first real-world application of large-scale UBI was pioneered by Herbert Hoover, president of America from 1929 to 1933. Before he was sworn into office, and after the First World War, Hoover led the"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> American Relief Administration, which provided food to the inhabitants of Central Europe and Eastern Europe. In the immediate aftermath of the war, the program delivered more than four million tons of relief supplies to 23 war-torn European countries. At its peak, the programme employed 300 Americans, more than 120,000 Russians and fed 10.5 million people daily. That mission and its smaller-sized predecessors — the"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> United States Food Administration and the"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> Committee for Relief in Belgium (both also headed by Hoover) — are thought to be the first global aid programmes operating at such a scale. UBI had been theoretical until that point. More recently, "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">GiveDirectly, an American charity, has undertaken a randomised control trial in Kenya — this is believed to be the largest-scale UBI experiment in a third-world country. For the $30-million project, approximately 21,000 people receive some type of cash transfer, with more than 5,000 enjoying long-term basic income, in over 100 villages selected on the basis of extreme poverty. The hope is this experiment will be able to capture the community-level effects of basic income — rather than on an individual level. On the GiveDirectly website, a long list of chronological testimonials highlights how a little money can go a long way and is especially life-changing for those most in need. Tusade, one recipient of UBI, after accepting a second payment of $449, wrote: “Some improvement in the hygiene and sanitation has been realised in my family.” James, who received an initial payment of $467, commented: “The biggest difference in my daily life is that I have bought a bull for ploughing.” As mentioned above, the Omidyar Network — headed by Pierre Omidyar, the American billionaire Founder of eBay — has invested $493,000 in the UBI project. A blog post on the Omidyar Network website made the point that “it is clear that cash transfers have an important role to play in alleviating poverty and empowering people”. Similar projects have been completed in, among other nations, Canada and Finland. Regarding the latter, the Finnish government began a two-year trial UBI scheme for 2,000 unemployed people that gave each individual €560 a month. And between 2011 and 2014 a basic income pilot — funded by UNICEF and the Self Employed Women’s Association (SEWA) — was conducted in Madhya Pradesh. The trial provided monthly payments to 6,000 residents of randomly selected villages, to another group of tribal communities, and to a control group. Payments were made in addition to subsidised public services such as the distribution of food and fuel to people on low incomes. Elsewhere, Sam Altman, a 30-something tech luminary, is determined to take on the challenge of bringing UBI to the American public. The former president of "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">Y Combinator — the largest and most well-known startup accelerator in Silicon Valley — and chief executive of "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">OpenAI has said he wants to “totally restructure how society works”. Under Altman’s guidance, Y Combinator has funded a $60 million, "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">five-year UBI research project in Oakland, which is expected to continue until 2024. What Are The Biggest Challenges For UBI? Even though the idea of UBI is centuries’ old, it has failed to take off at scale. This is due, in part, to insufficient support in mainstream media and politics. Perhaps one of the reasons for this is the difficulty of implementation — and more precisely budgetary constraints — plus the need for centralised backing, until now. The results of many of the above experiments have been inconclusive. So far, all pilots have relied upon the government or local authority to help with administration and funding, and that has been problematic. Furthermore, UBI seems, well, too utopian for some, while others believe that a meritocracy, rewarding hard work, is preferable for society. An approach that tests UBI by the people, for the people, has not been done yet. Can Blockchain Technology Finally Enable UBI? What if there was an easier way to implement UBI on a global scale, without national politics and budget limits? Could the first successful application of large-scale UBI be spawned from the new innovations brought forth by digital assets and the underlying blockchain technology? Digital assets and tokenization boast the potential to create new innovations and solutions to known problems in that these new technologies now enable programmable money. For the first time, software code is being deployed to create new financial products designed to fulfil a particular design schema. New products can be created that enable a predefined set of rules. Imagine a mechanism paying a fluctuating interest rate which changes with the invested amount. The financial concept of the “yield curve”, which currently displays a changing yield according to maturity, could now have a third dimension added to it: invested amount. In the near future, we believe existing challenges to open financial mechanisms such as user experience and identification and identity will be solved by continued innovation in the field. With cryptocurrency and digital asset innovation, the value of money can be created from the faith, belief and usage of its users through aligning market incentives, and no government involvement is required. Plus, decentralised cryptos and blockchain technology is global in scope by definition. The convergence of blockchain technology, the cryptocurrency revolution, worldwide success of trials, and many thought leaders could accelerate large-scale UBI projects — and sooner, rather than later. How Can GoodDollar Enable UBI At Scale? "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">GoodDollar is a not-for-profit initiative that explores how decentralised cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology may enable value creation and distribution, through models based on UBI with the central aim of reducing global wealth inequality. The initiative focuses on improving financial literacy and financial access globally. Thanks to the advancement and confluence of a number of technologies, such as cryptoassets and blockchain, hope is building that UBI principles can be adopted — by "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">GoodDollar and other projects — to help the poorest people in the world achieve more financial freedom. Projects in the OpenUBI community are working hard and collaborating to deliver solutions around digital identity — ensuring a user on UBI-based systems such as GoodDollar is verifiable and unique — and governance structures. GoodDollar’s economic model employs UBI principles, and the vision is that a cryptocurrency (GoodDollar) will be distributed in a fair and transparent way, using “smart contracts” on the blockchain. The GoodDollar team is preparing to release more specifics on the GoodDollar UBI model throughout 2020. By working with other experts and ecosystem partners to develop a carefully crafted, and fully tested model — to be determined through experiments and pilots — the goal is to develop a sustainable, open system where the least advantaged receive the greatest relative benefit. Eventually, users — in the developing and developed world — will be able to contribute to a new vision for Universal Basic Income that is based on a decentralised, market incentivized design made possible by blockchain technology. Hungry for more? Check out "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">GoodDollar’s Essential UBI Reading List. "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">GoodDollar: Changing The Balance — For Good Do you have the skills to help the GoodDollar project? We need builders, scientists and experts in identity, privacy, and financial governance, as well as philanthropists and ambassadors. Contact us at "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">hello@gooddollar.org, via our social media channels ("); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">Twitter,"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> Telegram, or"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> Facebook), check out our "); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);">community website, join the"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> OpenUBI movement, or visit our"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> GitHub page. Our"); background-size: 1px 1px; background-position: 0px calc(1em + 1px);"> YouTube channel is worth exploring, too. UbiFinancial InclusionWealth Inequality 57claps WRITTEN BY GoodDollarHQ Follow GoodDollar is a series of ongoing experiments and research, establishing an economic framework designed to reduce global wealth inequality through UBI. GoodDollar Follow GoodDollar: Changing the Balance, For Good. See responses (2) AboutHelpLegal Get the Medium app

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