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Universal basic income has backing from the tech industry

One of Silicon Valley’s favorite ideas isn’t really tech-driven. The universal basic income — “cash aid from the government, no strings attached” — is the tech industry’s solution to the anticipated wave of job losses created by the rise of artificial intelligence, NPR said. That’s why OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has spent the last few years funding an experiment in giving people free money. “Do people sit around and play video games,” he asked in a blog post, “or do they create new things?” Now we have some answers.

New results from Unconditional Income Study found that giving $1,000 a month to people in Illinois and Texas “improved financial flexibility without disincentivizing workforce participation,” Fast Company said. Recipients had a safety net, in other words, but still wanted to work — though they worked a little less. But skepticism still dies hard. “There is this resilient myth that cash no strings promote attacheds laziness,” said New York University’s Juliana Uhuru Bidadanure.

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