Basic Income is often promoted as an idea that will solve inequality and make people less dependent on capitalist employment. However, it will instead aggravate inequality and reduce social programs that benefit the majority of people. At its Winnipeg 2016 Biennial Convention, the Canadian Liberal Party passed a resolution in support of “Basic Income.” The
Does that apply to the 11.8 million residents who aren’t German citizens?
What happens to people who allow their compulsory insurance to lapse (eg, by missing payments)? Don’t people sometimes end up getting the minimum-necessary emergency care but also acquiring substantial debt with it, like in the US?
(I do think the healthcare outcomes in Germany are better overall, but I don’t think Germany’s health care system is actually much more “universal” than the US currently.)
Are you sure? Look at this table listing numerous German UBI proposals, and hit ctrl-f and search for the word “replace”. Almost all of them actually involve replacing existing social programs.
This document is pretty old but is still prominently linked from the the Netzwerk Grundeinkommen, who i think remains a major force in the UBI movement. If there are some UBI proposals that explicitly reject cutting existing social programs to fund themselves, I haven’t seen them. All of the ones with serious political inertia that I’ve looked at seem to match the description in the original article.
Of course. Very much of course. This is absolutely normal and expected in Germany, and if it would be any other way, people would be outraged. And I’m not exaggerating. I’m not sure if people from the US or other (socially bad) places can believe that.
Never heard of one single example. I think this is extremely rare, and it has to be some really fucked up sitaution where you did everything wrong that can be done wrong.
As I said, it’s about replacing needless bureaucracy. It’s not the payments that are to be cut. It’s not the social service that is to be cut. Just the way of distribution. It’s a simplification and streamlining, not a reduction. It’s a gain for people who receive it.
None of the UBI proposals explain their funding that way. This is a big misunderstanding from the author. If that is the understanding of the author, he has absolutely no idea what he’s talking about, and has no clue of German society.
That was a rhetorical question. In reality, no, non-citizens who can’t afford payments on their private health insurance (many/most of whom don’t even qualify to pay for the so-called “public” options) can have their residence permits revoked and be deported.
It is social services (including some payments) that are proposed to be cut. Did you ctrl-f “replace” on that table i linked, and see all the things they’re talking about cutting? The notion that replacing working social programs with UBI will “replace bureaucracy” and not reduce the quality of outcomes for the poorest people is absurd. As the linked article says:
It should be a real one, because you don’t know how it is. You are misinformed. Extremely misinformed.
You very obviously have no idea how Germany works. I seriously can’t overstate how ridiculous and wrong this statement is. This is so fucked up and off the rails… holy shit.
I think this is one of the relevant statutes that links up-to-date health insurance payments with immigration status?
You literally just linked to applicable law and asked me if that is applicable law. Just make your point. But better make it a good and informed one, and not just one based on your misconceptions and a machine translation.
What do you think my misconception is exactly? Do you think this site’s description of the situation regarding compulsory health insurance is also mistaken, or is it saying something different than I am?
A very simple answer: Yes, you need insurance. And yes, it will be paid for you if you can’t pay it yourself. If you are a resident (not a visitor), you always get it. Always. Believe me.
Dude, you’re simply grasping straws. I asked you to make a point, and you chose to ignore that, because you don’t have one. I already told you. You are faaaaaaaaaaaar off the rails.
I’m sorry, but I have the feeling that you are unable to believe that the US is in contrast to other countries a cluster fuck. There are a lot of problems in Europe and Germany, but health care is not one of them. At least not in the sense you’re trying to argue here. There’s room for improvement, but the health care system of Germany is a few levels above the situation in the US.
I’m sorry. I hope you can acknowledge reality and find some motivation in there to improve the situation in the US. Because everyone should have universal healthcare, on the whole planet.
Awesome! i think there are a lot of people who would love to know how… can you shed any light on how to apply?
i’m guessing you don’t know any German residents that have had health insurance-related difficulties? (i do… including citizens of other EU countries who upon moving to Germany were tricked or forced into the private system and then not allowed to switch back to paying for the public one. At least EU citizens don’t risk deportation if they screw up at the bureaucracy game, but, they too are still not-always-insured and still need to worry about affording health care.)
I agree with you about that! As I said earlier, it does have better outcomes than the US. But that is a far cry from your original statement (No one here needs to “afford health care”. It’s already universal.).
If what Germany has today counts as “universal” by being compulsory, then the US had universal healthcare too (from 2014 to 2019). Also “no one needs to afford” is just… 🤷 🤦