> but the psychology is completely different to if basic income was actually universal and expected to continue in the long-term.
Would it though? Do people really trust their governments that much?
Poor people who this would be most applicable to tend to deal with the government a lot more than UBI proponents so their trust levels are probably different.
Social security wasn't taken away and probably never will be. How's it doing? What's it's 30yr outlook? You don't need to just trust that the program will exist, but that it will be useful on a timeline long enough that you can eschew investing in skills that make money. How many greeks do you think would trust their government to do that? What about the brits?
But of course policy minutia that can make or break programs are unimportant compared to cheap internet comments.
>> Social security wasn't taken away and probably never will be.
In the US, the "trick" is usually just to extend the age at which you get social security. Life expectancy is not universally equal, they vary widely based on gender, race, economics. For some subsets of our population Social security has essentially be eliminated for half the cohort because it starts past the average life expectancy.
Would it though? Do people really trust their governments that much?
Poor people who this would be most applicable to tend to deal with the government a lot more than UBI proponents so their trust levels are probably different.