Las Vegas Review-Journal

A ‘free money’ experiment

Finland finds program ‘unsustaina­ble’

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Alarge study of the “universal basic income” handout in Finland found exactly what you’d expect. Giving people “free” money makes them marginally happier but not noticeably more productive.

In 2017, Finland selected 2,000 unemployed residents to receive 560 euros a month — approximat­ely $600 — for two years. Researcher­s wanted to test the results of a policy now eagerly pushed by American progressiv­es that calls for providing every adult a guaranteed minimum income courtesy of the taxpayers. The Finland experiment was the first UBI study to be nationwide, randomized and authorized by statute.

UBI proponents theorize that having a guaranteed stream of income will produce a host of benefits for individual­s and society. Andrew Yang, who based his long-shot Democratic presidenti­al bid on giving Americans $1,000 a month, believes institutin­g the policy would increase employment. Many welfare programs reduce benefits as participan­ts earn more money. That’s a real problem. If a welfare program is poorly designed, a person can lose more by working than going on the dole. That creates a perverse incentive to stay unemployed.

Yang also claimed that UBI would increase entreprene­urship. The theory is that people would take more business risk if they knew they’d have a source of income to fall back on if things went south. It’s also theorized that free money would improve recipients’ physical and mental health and increase worker bargaining power.

It’s an idea that has attracted interest for people ranging from Sen. Bernie Sanders to Mark Zuckerberg to conservati­ve economist Charles Murray.

But in Finland, the projected boost in employment never came. UBI recipients worked an average of only five more days in a year.

This shows that for some unemployed people “the problems related to finding employment are not related to bureaucrac­y or to financial incentives,” Kari Hämäläinen, chief researcher at the VATT Institute for Economic Research, said. This suggests that the best way to help most healthy adults find work is to encourage them to change their personal behavior, not ply them with cash.

The study did find that participan­ts “experience less mental strain than the control group. They also had a more positive perception of their economic welfare.” You would hope so. But that’s a far cry from the promised economic benefits.

“This was a big carrot, and we can see it didn’t fully work,” Mr. Hämäläinen said. Expanding the program nationwide would require a substantia­l tax increase, Mr. Hamalainen said, meaning it “would be unsustaina­ble.”

The universal basic income is an interestin­g theory that keeps crashing headlong into the brick wall of reality.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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