Financing Basic Income Addressing the Cost Objection /
Financing Basic Income Addressing the Cost Objection / [electronic resource] :
edited by Richard Pereira.
- 1st ed. 2017.
- XIII, 116 p. 2 illus. online resource.
- Exploring the Basic Income Guarantee, 2662-3803 .
- Exploring the Basic Income Guarantee, .
1. Introduction; Richard Pereira -- 2. Foundations for a Basic Income Guarantee: Affordability through Program Redundancies; Richard Pereira -- 3. Cost Feasibility of Basic Income in Europe: A Financing Case Study from Switzerland; Albert Jörimann -- 4. Building up BIG: Land Rent in Australia as a Significant Financing Source; Gary Flomenhoft -- 5. Conclusion; Richard Pereira.
This Palgrave Pivot argues that basic income at a decent level is, in fact, affordable. The contributors approach the topic from the perspectives of three different countries-Canada, Switzerland, and Australia-to overcome objections that a universal program to keep all citizens above the poverty line would be too expensive to implement. They assess the complex array of revenue sources that can make universal basic income feasible, from the underestimated value of public program redundancies to new and so far unaccounted publicly owned assets.
9783319542683
10.1007/978-3-319-54268-3 doi
Public finance.
Finance, Public.
Welfare economics.
Public Economics.
Public Finance.
Social Choice/Welfare Economics/Public Choice/Political Economy.
HJ9-9940
336
1. Introduction; Richard Pereira -- 2. Foundations for a Basic Income Guarantee: Affordability through Program Redundancies; Richard Pereira -- 3. Cost Feasibility of Basic Income in Europe: A Financing Case Study from Switzerland; Albert Jörimann -- 4. Building up BIG: Land Rent in Australia as a Significant Financing Source; Gary Flomenhoft -- 5. Conclusion; Richard Pereira.
This Palgrave Pivot argues that basic income at a decent level is, in fact, affordable. The contributors approach the topic from the perspectives of three different countries-Canada, Switzerland, and Australia-to overcome objections that a universal program to keep all citizens above the poverty line would be too expensive to implement. They assess the complex array of revenue sources that can make universal basic income feasible, from the underestimated value of public program redundancies to new and so far unaccounted publicly owned assets.
9783319542683
10.1007/978-3-319-54268-3 doi
Public finance.
Finance, Public.
Welfare economics.
Public Economics.
Public Finance.
Social Choice/Welfare Economics/Public Choice/Political Economy.
HJ9-9940
336