If universal basic income would allow all these people to "pursue their passion" then how come we don't see all welfare recipients "pursuing their passion"?
And who would do the jobs that nobody wants? Who would pick crops in the hot sun? Who would clean the restroom when someone shits all over the floor? There's a lot of jobs that people do that they don't like simply because they need the money.
The second question is a common question of UBI. Wages still work the same way, and like a minimum wage, a UBI would put upward pressure on all wages. You'd get somebody to do any of those jobs provided the additional income was worth it. Just like now; if the price is right, most people will do anything. Except instead of the baseline being nothing but the breadline, the baseline is some financial threshhold. Obviously its effects are dependent on the size of the UBI, which could be anywhere from supplemental to whatever.
The first question is a bit more nuanced, but I'll defend my position best as I can.
As far as what "pursuing their passion" is, I'd generalize it away from such hyperbole to a simpler idea of "doing what they want." More freedom from the limitations of circumstance.
We often associate "pursuing a passion" with meeting a threshhold of freedom. Saving enough money to quit, saving enough money to go to grad school, uni, or college, or trade school, or taking time off, or starting your own business, getting the house. To the extent that we consider "pursuing a passion" a matter of "meeting a personal threshold or goal," I'd consider welfare helps people achieve their goal of "survive long enough to find stability."
I will also ask: does getting a raise make you lazy?
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