The most relevant quote, in my opinion, is "Results from rural Kenya are not necessarily applicable to high-income countries."grayman wrote: ↑Mon Aug 19, 2024 3:05 am
Quick search found this:
https://www.givedirectly.org/2023-ubi-results/
I'm all for using government assistance to lift people out of extreme poverty when employment opportunities don't exist. That's what happened in this study. I'm for it. $22.50/month. Seems like a great investment.
ETA: And, in this case, many of the recipients were, in fact, employed, but many of the employed were not paid enough to raise them above the extreme poverty level. Apparently, Kenya must not have minimum wage laws. In other words, employment opportunities existed in Kenya at the time of the study, but not employment that would allow people to rise above extreme poverty. Nor was the amount of money provided by the UBI program enough to lift them out of extreme poverty. The extreme poverty line cited in the study was 33 dollars/month. The study provided 22.50.