I know that is not what this research is about, it is why I start with 'it is skipped on in research about UBI', I would like what you believe is true to be actually true but there hasn't been any research into that as far as I know. All research is about the impact it has on individuals and maybe their family but not on how it impacts social structures. If UBI turns out to be good for individual people but has a negative impact on how people treat each other, I might not want it. In the current system there are places where beggars earn more than an average wage and there are places were they're neglected and basically starve to death if it isn't for a few small organisations. If an entire country switches from individual benefits bases on their situation to a general UBI for everyone, that might have a big impact on the people who are on the bottom of society. It is naive to 'imagine' it will only bring good things. I'm not saying this because I don't like UBI, I'm saying that because when and if it is implemented the government/society as a whole will have to deal with all effects, not only the positive ones.
That might also be an issue of culture. I suppose it would affect different people differently but I highly doubt that most people would become bad to each other when they are less stressed and have more stability.
True, but often as far as I know research like that is about how people respond to sudden changes and local crises, not necessarily how they would react in a different social system. But I do also expect people to treat each other better if the conditions of their lives are better.
The studies I happen to know about focussed on population density and resource abundance/scarcity. While not an exact analog I think they do give a decent estimate of this situation
I know that is not what this research is about, it is why I start with 'it is skipped on in research about UBI', I would like what you believe is true to be actually true but there hasn't been any research into that as far as I know. All research is about the impact it has on individuals and maybe their family but not on how it impacts social structures. If UBI turns out to be good for individual people but has a negative impact on how people treat each other, I might not want it. In the current system there are places where beggars earn more than an average wage and there are places were they're neglected and basically starve to death if it isn't for a few small organisations. If an entire country switches from individual benefits bases on their situation to a general UBI for everyone, that might have a big impact on the people who are on the bottom of society. It is naive to 'imagine' it will only bring good things. I'm not saying this because I don't like UBI, I'm saying that because when and if it is implemented the government/society as a whole will have to deal with all effects, not only the positive ones.
That might also be an issue of culture. I suppose it would affect different people differently but I highly doubt that most people would become bad to each other when they are less stressed and have more stability.
That however, has been studied
True, but often as far as I know research like that is about how people respond to sudden changes and local crises, not necessarily how they would react in a different social system. But I do also expect people to treat each other better if the conditions of their lives are better.
The studies I happen to know about focussed on population density and resource abundance/scarcity. While not an exact analog I think they do give a decent estimate of this situation