I certainly DON'T intend this as a political discussion. It's actually a very interesting SOCIOLOGICAL discussion.
The concept of Universal Basic Income (UBI) has been thrown about by many and I have always be very suspicious of the results that seem to be intended (I have a slightly cynical view of basic human behavior). As someone here has noted a few times: with the eventually advent of massive automation and AI, some sort of UBI (think Star Trek like society) will likely need to happen at some point.
One of the general findings seems to be that the extra money was essentially turned into additional leisure time.
There is actually a sub-discussion here also, in a more of a meta-analysis form. The reporting on this is... interesting. Below are three links to article, writing about the SAME study, that seem to have entirely different angles on the study (I included some basic, may not be ideal, summaries of the study noted in each article).
Please do pull better, more representative quotes, if you can.
The New York Post seemingly talks more directly to the results (or is this not the basic finding?):
Those answers pretty much align with common sense: When people get free money, they work a bit less and play a bit more....
...Presumably, giving money to people making more money would have smaller effects on work. However, if “universal” benefits were funded through higher taxes, many higher earners would also face a new work disincentive.At any rate, these results have — at great expense — confirmed what always seemed likely: Unconditional cash transfers reduce work while benefiting recipients in generally short-term ways.
https://nypost.com/2024/07/24/opinion/no-strings-cash-leaves-the-poor-worse-off-study/
Scientific American almost seems to come to an entirely different conclusion, or they are just talking around the basic results?
Taken as a whole, the evidence suggests that when their most basic needs are met, people start to build a firmer financial foundation for themselves and their family. Scientific American spoke with Kimberlin to learn more about these basic income pilot programs and how this unconditional, guaranteed aid impacts people’s life.
Wired also seem to talk around the basic results a bit:
The initial results from what OpenResearch, an Altman-funded research lab, describes as the most comprehensive study on “unconditional cash” show that while the grants had their benefits and weren’t spent on items such as drugs and alcohol, they were hardly a panacea for treating some of the biggest concerns about income inequality and the prospect of AI and other automation technologies taking jobs.
https://www.wired.com/story/sam-altmans-big-basic-income-study-is-finally-out/