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jbkly7 | 10 years ago

One of the differences is that a basic income eliminates the "welfare cliff". With any kind of means-tested system, there's a reduced incentive to increase your earnings because every dollar you earn reduces your benefit. With a universal basic income, there's no disincentive to work extra because you receive the benefit no matter your income, and earning an extra $5k is $5k more in your pocket rather than being offset by your benefit going down.

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zanny|10 years ago

That isn't an actual answer to the question, though. With UBI, you get a fixed amount and just end up paying more taxes to make up for getting the UBI in the first place. NIT means instead of taxing you for the amount of money they give you you just stop getting the money.

eru|10 years ago

You can set up your tax system to exactly mirror the net effects of UBI. Negative income tax is just one possible implementation of UBI.

CydeWeys|10 years ago

There is no welfare cliff in any of the alternatives that I proposed. That's why I had the phase-out over $60K of income: So that you keep most of each marginal dollar of income across the entire income spectrum.