Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Generation Z should fear a guaranteed income

- By Allison Schrager Allison Schrager is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist.

It’sa simple, utopian idea. If we give everyone a monthly check, we can eliminate poverty and do away with the inefficien­cies of our cumbersome and flawed welfare state. Minneapoli­s is the latest city to give a “universal basic income” (UBI) a try. It’s offering $500 a month for 18 months to 150 of its low-income residents with no work or spending restrictio­ns.

But others worry it’s not so simple. Auniversal basic income would be expensive, and what if it discourage­s people to work, which could inadverten­tly increase inequality and lead to social instabilit­y? A new paper suggests the skeptics may be right: UBI may cause more harm than good for a veryhigh cost.

Testing UBI is not easy. What makes UBI universal and basic is that everyone gets the money, and the flow of cash is predictabl­e and long-lasting. UBI advocates point to a few experiment­s that show giving people checks doesn’tcause them to work less.

But the Minneapoli­s experiment and other studies aren’t truly UBI because they’re short term; the payments only last a year or two. And that impermanen­ce fundamenta­lly changes how peoplewill respond. Most financial and work decisions are based on the outlook for lifetime income, not a few dozen months of extra cash.

How the payments are structured is also important. Another widely cited study looks at income paid each year from the Alaska Permanent Fund. The economists estimate the payments haven’t caused Alaskans to decrease work, and may even encourage beneficiar­ies to do more part-time work. But the permanent fund isn’t true UBI either because payments are based on the state’s oil revenues and thusvary significan­tly year to year. So the permanent-fund payments actually increases Alaskans’ income risk, which is the opposite of what UBI is supposedto do.

Advocates might say these studies are close enough. But close is not enough in this case. Claiming the models represent UBI is like saying a fixed-rate consol bond is a close approximat­ion to a two-year bond or a dividend-paying stock. We know from finance that these types of assets have completely different values and can therefore elicit completely different behavior on the part of investors in termsof risk taking and wealth effects.

A new study from the National Bureau of Economic Research takes a different approach to evaluating UBI. The economists reviewed lottery winners over a five-year period. Lottery winners are a good test for UBI because lottery winnings are large enough that the income they generate can be life-changing. The economists estimate the average winnings are equivalent to an extra $7,800 a year, similar to UBI proposals. Lottery winnersare also chosen at random, which makesfor a good experiment.

Contrary to unlocking creativity, motivation and entreprene­urship, the economists estimate lottery winners are unlikely to start a successful business. They also estimate that winners worked less and were more likely to change jobs to one paying a lower wage. The economists also observed many winners moved soon after the lottery, usually to a more rural area. But few moved to a higher-quality neighborho­od, in terms of college attainment of neighbors, average income and other metrics that are a proxy for opportunit­ies available to them or their children. There was one positive effect: lottery winners are more likely to marry and less prone to divorce.

You may think living in the country and working less isn’t so bad. Working a lower-paid job can sometimes offer other benefits, like flexibilit­y and time with your children. But there are costs. Working less at a lessdemand­ing job often means you forgo learning new skills and wage increases. This may not be a big deal for people in middle age. But it can leave young people who are still establishi­ng their careers and acquiring skills much worse off. Most wage increases occur in your 20s and 30s, and if you miss out on those years, odds are you won’tcatch up.

Our current welfare system is imperfect. But the fact that it makes payments contingent on earnings, age or even having a child is a better alternativ­e. First of all, it’s much cheaper because you don’t have to give money to the many people who don’t need it. Second, guaranteed money (or money you get no matter what happens) is worth much more than income that only pays off some of the time. The more money we give people, the bigger impact it will have on their behavior,and often not in a good way.

The challenge of UBI is this: Once it’s offered, it’s very difficult to take it away, and doing so can leave people worseoff than they started.

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