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Paperback Life After Universal Basic Income A Short Story Book

ISBN: B0H1SQ6MWC

ISBN13: 9798233819964

Life After Universal Basic Income A Short Story

The Thousand-Dollar Life A Story Description Setting: A mid-sized American city, spanning the years 2027-2163.The Premise: When the United States passes the Universal Basic Income Act of 2027, every citizen begins receiving $1,000 per month from birth - deposited into a trust managed by a parent or guardian until adulthood. The story follows four children born the same year the law takes effect, in the same neighborhood, to vastly different families. We watch them grow, stumble, love, work, and age - each shaped by the $1,000 in entirely different ways.

Universal Basic Income is a policy proposal in which a government regularly provides every citizen (or adult resident) with a fixed sum of money, unconditionally - regardless of employment status, income level, or social standing.

Core Characteristics

Universal - given to everyone, not just the poor or unemployedUnconditional - no work requirements, means testing, or behavioral conditions attachedRegular - paid on a recurring basis (e.g., monthly)Cash-based - recipients decide how to spend it

The Central Idea

The goal is to guarantee a financial floor beneath every person, ensuring no one falls below a basic standard of living. Unlike traditional welfare programs, UBI doesn't require recipients to prove need or comply with specific conditions.

Common Arguments For UBI

Reduces poverty and economic insecuritySimplifies and replaces a complex web of existing welfare programsSupports people through job displacement caused by automationGives workers more bargaining power and freedom to leave exploitative jobsEnables people to pursue education, caregiving, or entrepreneurship

Common Arguments Against UBI

Potentially very expensive to fund at a meaningful scaleMay reduce the incentive to workCould fuel inflation if not carefully managedA universal payment may be inefficient compared to targeted assistance for those most in needMight be used to justify cutting existing social programs

Notable Examples & Pilots

Finland ran a two-year pilot (2017-2018) giving 560/month to unemployed citizensStockton, California piloted a program giving $500/month to residentsAlaska's Permanent Fund Dividend has paid residents an annual share of oil revenues since 1982 - often cited as the closest real-world model

UBI remains a hotly debated concept across the political spectrum, drawing interest from both the left (as a poverty-reduction tool) and the right (as a streamlined alternative to bureaucratic welfare systems).

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Format: Paperback

Condition: New

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