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Universal basic income in the United Kingdom

Universal basic income is a subject of much interest in the United Kingdom. There is a long history of discussion yet it has not been implemented to date. Interest in and support for universal basic income has increased substantially amongst the public and politicians in recent years.[1]

Political parties that include universal basic income on their agenda include: the Green Party of England and Wales, the Scottish National Party (SNP), and the Scottish Greens. Support for universal basic income is widespread amongst opposition politicians, including Labour, SNP, Liberal Democrats, and Plaid Cymru,[2] many of whom were among the 170 MPs and Lords who signed a proposal calling on the government to introduce a universal basic income during the coronavirus pandemic.[2]

A public poll by YouGov in 2020 found that in the view of coronavirus pandemic 51% of the public in the United Kingdom support a universal basic income, with 24% unsupportive.[1][3] A public petition on the UK government website that ran for six months from 16 March 2020 to 16 September 2020 calling for universal basic income during the course of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom raised over 114,000 signatures.[4]

History (from Thomas Paine to the year 2000) edit

Thomas Paine: Agrarian Justice edit

Thomas Paine, an English-American philosopher and revolutionary, proposed a system whereby all citizens, when reaching adulthood, should be given an equal amount of money from the state. The idea was developed in Agrarian Justice, published 1797. The basic philosophical idea behind the proposal, explained in the book, was the contention that in the state of nature, "the earth, in its natural uncultivated state... was the common property of the human race". His contemporary and fellow pamphleteer, Thomas Spence, responded with a proposal that more closely fits the contemporary definition of basic income.[5]

Speenhamland edit

The Speenhamland system was a form of poverty relief in England at the end of the 18th century and during the early 19th century. It started in the village of Speenhamland, but soon spread to most parts of the country. William Pitt the Younger tried to have the system implemented nationally but failed. Although it has one similarity to basic income, in that theoretically everyone was eligible, it was means-tested and it included work conditions and supervision that made it very different from basic income.[6]

1920s and 1930s edit

 
C.H. Douglas, an early British proponent of basic income and monetary reform

Even though basic income and related ideas had been proposed a few times before the 1920s (most notably Bertrand Russell in 1918[7]), it was not until then that a social movement seems to have started around the idea. Valter Van Trier has described this movement, which started in United Kingdom, in his book Every One A King.

The idea of basic income was revived prominently by Dennis Milner and his wife Mabel Milner in their pamphlet Scheme for a State Bonus: A rational method of solving the social problem published in 1918. Following this publication, the so-called "State Bonus League was formed in july of the same year. The League pushed the idea inside the Labour Party, which dedicated several hearings at the National Congress in 1920 and 1922, but the idea was eventually rejected.[8]

At the same time Major C.H. Douglas, a British engineer and social philosopher, developed a new economic philosophy which he labelled Social Credit. At the heart of the philosophy was a firm belief in the importance of individual freedom, but also that the monetary system had to be changed so that the market system could function properly. In short he combined monetary reform and basic income.

1940s edit

The Beveridge report, published in 1942, stated that social insurances should be the main system in society for economic security. Besides that the report also proposed a selective system for those without access to social insurances. Beveridge himself did not like means-testing and selectivism, because it created high marginal tax rates for the poor, but he nevertheless thought that it was a necessary complement. After the war the "Beveridge-model" became the guiding principle for the welfare state, both in Britain and internationally. Lady Juliet Rhys Williams proposed the "New Social Contract" as an alternative to the Beveridge Report. In short she proposed basic income in the form of a negative income tax, except that she also recommended a work test.

1950s – 2000 edit

In 1972 the Cabinet of Edward Heath put forward a proposal for a tax-credit scheme which resembled a citizen's income in some ways but did not cover the whole of the population. In 1979 child benefit which is a citizen's income for children in all but name was introduced.

21st century debate and development edit

 
Caroline Lucas, 2019
 
John McDonnell, 2016
 
English theoretical physicist, cosmologist and author Stephen Hawking was a supporter of a universal basic income.[9][10]

A system of universal basic income is supported by the Green Party of England and Wales,[11][12] the Scottish National Party[13] and the Scottish Greens.[14] For a period the Liberal Democrats also accepted it as official policy, but modified their support before members voted to adopt it as party policy in September 2020.[15] In March 2023, a majority of members of the Liberal Democrats at the party's Spring Conference voted in favour of adopting a "Guaranteed Basic Income" (GBI) instead of a universal basic income as the Liberal Democrats official policy.[16]

In January 2016, the sole MP of the Green Party of England and Wales, Caroline Lucas, tabled a motion in the British Parliament, calling on the Government to commission research into the effects of a universal basic income and examine its feasibility to replace the UK's existing social security system.[17]

Former Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell is said to be a supporter of universal basic income[18] and on 16 February 2016 said that universal basic income is "an idea we want to look at".[19] Writing in The New Statesman on 17 February, Labour MP Jonathan Reynolds argues in its favour, (1) as a policy for coping with "inevitable but fundamental economic change," (2) as an alternative to "the bewildering complexity of our welfare system" when "people move frequently into and out of work", and (3) as a "platform from which [people] might fulfil their potential".[20] Labour Party MP, Clive Lewis, has also stated his support for universal basic income.[21]

In March 2020, a combined total of over 170 opposition politicians from MPs and Lords, called for the UK government to implement a universal basic income during the coronavirus pandemic in the United Kingdom.[22][23][24] However, the Conservative government and then Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, both rejected the calls.[25][26]

On 25 September 2020, the Liberal Democrats adopted at their party conference a policy of supporting UBI.[27][28]

In mid-May 2021, after the 2021 Senedd election in which Welsh Labour won half the seats in the Welsh Parliament, Mark Drakeford, leader of Welsh Labour and First Minister of Wales, announced that a universal basic income scheme would be trialled in Wales. Plaid Cymru supported a Welsh pilot for a universal basic income in their manifesto going into the election and the Welsh Liberal Democrats also made an election commitment to support a trial, while the Welsh Conservatives rejected the idea. Recipients of the income would be given independent financial advice and support throughout the pilot who are "regularly reminded of their end point on the pilot so that appropriate plans can be made for their transition out of the pilot."[29][30][31] As of June 2023, the pilot is ongoing with the final results expected to be thoroughly evaluated at the end of the trial.[32]

In a poll of 2,184 adults in Great Britain in November 2021 by Savanta ComRes, 44% of respondents stated their support for a universal basic income, compared to 23% who stated that they oppose it.[33]

Recent reports edit

In 2015 the London-based RSA (Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce) launched its own proposal for Basic Income entitled Creative Citizens, Creative State.[34] It advocated replacing a swathe of UK means-tested benefits with a single universal payment as a response to the changing landscape of work and an ageing population.

In March 2019, the New Economics Foundation (NEF) produced the report Nothing Personal: Replacing the personal tax allowance with a Weekly National Allowance. The report maintained that if the Government abolished the personal allowance of income tax and replaced it with a weekly cash payment of £48 a week it could lift 200,000 families out of poverty. The proposed policy swap would shift £8bn currently spent on tax allowances for the 35% highest income families to the remaining 65% of families.[35] However, the report was critical of the notion of a universal basic income, ie, a guaranteed income for all citizens.

Approximately a week after the report by the NEF, the think tank Compass published a report written by economists Stewart Lansley and Howard Reed.[36] Entitled Basic Income for All: From Desirability to Feasibility it suggested the government could make tax-free payments of £60 to every adult, £175 for those over 65 and £40 for each child under 18, regardless of other income. This would be designed to cut rising levels of poverty and inequality across the United Kingdom. Their report suggested the cost of reworking the tax and benefits system would be £28bn, less than the aggregate cuts to benefits since 2010 and the changes would return social security spending back to the level of a decade ago to help cover the costs of the UBI.[37] Lansley and Reed followed up this report with a second in 2019, that took a closer look at the financial possibilities of universal basic income in the UK.[38] In Basic Income for All: From Desirability to Feasibility, Lansley and Reed claim that "a meaningful basic income of, for example, over £10,000 per year could be paid to a family of four. Sums at this level, paid without condition, would significantly improve the living standards and life chances of millions of people and ... are affordable."

In May 2019, a report by Professor Guy Standing, commissioned by the Progressive Economic Forum and forwarded to John McDonnell (the acting Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer) suggested different models for piloting basic income.[39] Standing's report (Basic Income as Common Dividends: Piloting a Transformative Policy. A Report for the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer) cites a "perfect storm" of factors that lead to the need for a basic income: Broad ethical justifications for basic income, which Standing cites as "social justice, security, freedom and solidarity" are now working in combination with urgent socio-economic demands. "A growing proportion of people," the report states, "are in the precariat, living bits-and-pieces lives, relying on low wages and incomes that are increasingly volatile and unpredictable and on inadequate and uncertain benefits in times of loss of earnings power."[39] Echoing William Beveridge's 1942 report suggesting the need for a Welfare State in the UK, Standing states there are eight modern giants, stretching form inequality, debt through to neo-fascism, that basic income could help tackle. The report is also highly critical of current UK welfare schemes, mainly Universal Credit, which he states are unfair for large families, have high administrative costs and limit personal freedom.[39]

 
Guy Standing, author of Basic Income: And How We Can Make It Happen and Basic Income as Common Dividends: Piloting a Transformative Policy

The report deals with the most common objections to a basic income. To the objection that basic income is not affordable, Professor Standing said there are 1,156 tax reliefs in the UK at the moment and if they were scrapped that would pay for a basic income. "If we phased out those tax reliefs the total revenue foregone by the Treasury from tax reliefs is £420bn per year and that's their own estimates, not mine," he added.[40][39] He also suggests "a more general Commons Permanent Fund, in which a national investment fund would be built mainly from levies on commercial intrusions into the commons, boosted by contributions from a land-value tax, eco taxes, digital information levies and several others."[39]

In July 2022, data was published from polling by YouGov that suggested that a plurality of British people support a universal basic income.[41]

In November 2023, The Trussell Trust calculated that a single adult in the UK in 2023 needs at least £29,500 a year to have an acceptable standard of living, up from £25,000 in 2022. Two partners with two children would need £50,000, compared to £44,500 in 2022. 29% of the UK population – which works out to 19.2 million people – belong to households that bring in below the minimum standard.[42]

Proposed pilots edit

Until July 2022 there were no regional universal basic income pilots running in the UK. In 2018, the Scottish Government agreed to provide £250,000 to undertake initial research on the feasibility of a basic income pilot, making use of experience and expertise from four areas of the country: Glasgow, Edinburgh and the regions of Fife and North Ayrshire. [43][44] The project determined that such a pilot was feasible.[45] Making use of the term Citizen's Basic Income (CBI), the writers of the report recommended that pilot should be "a randomised controlled study, with two study areas where the whole community receives a CBI".[46] One study area should receive a high payment, the other receiving a lower payment. The goal of the pilot would be to "understand the impact of CBI on poverty, child poverty and unemployment, as well as health and financial wellbeing, and experience of the social security system."[46] The report was clear in its preference for a pilot that met all the characteristics of a universal basic income - ie, that the communities should receive the income as money (rather than as a voucher), as a regular payment, given to all individuals within the defined community, and that it should be unconditional.

However, the report also noted that there were "substantive and complex legislative and delivery barriers to piloting a CBI", given that Scottish Parliamentary powers were limited in their ability to make the needed changes to the social security system (which were determined at the UK Parliament in Westminster).[46] The current constitutional and legal set up "would place significant restrictions on the pilot model design and potentially compromise learnings."[47] The Scottish Government of 2022 therefore decided to focus on a Minimum Income Guarantee (MIG)[48]

The Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce has also produced a report examining some of the benefits and challenges of a basic income system in the region of Fife.[49] And in 2019, the council of Sheffield agreed to work on ensuring that "UBI can be implemented successfully in Sheffield”.[50] The council of Liverpool has also shown enthusiasm for experimenting with a basic income.[51]

In October 2020, Wales' Future Generations Commissioner Sophie Howe recommended that a universal basic income and a shorter working week should be piloted by the next Welsh Government.[52]

A 2023 report produced by the think tank Autonomy proposed a trial of basic income of £1,600 a month in Jarrow, in north-east England, and East Finchley, in north London.[53] The proposed trial would involve 30 people and would last two years.[54][55]

Pilots edit

The Welsh government established a basic income project in 2022, focussed on those leaving care, a group that was identified as one that could benefit from extra financial help. "From 1 July 2022, more than 500 people leaving care in Wales will be offered £1600 each month (before tax) for two years to support them as they make the transition to adult life." The £20 million pilot is running for three years.[56][57] The figure after tax is £1,280 a month for those aged 18-years-old and over leaving care in Wales.[58][59]

Critics edit

There are also several critics on both the right and left of British politics. The former Conservative MP Nick Boles said in 2017 that talk of a universal basic income as a response to the rise of robots is "dangerous nonsense". The main argument against basic income for the Conservatives, he said, should be that it is morally wrong. In his online book "Square Deal" he writes: "Mankind is hard-wired to work. We gain satisfaction from it. It gives us a sense of identity, purpose and belonging ... we should not be trying to create a world in which most people do not feel the need to work."[60][61]

Ian Goldin, Professor of Globalisation and Development at the University of Oxford, has written against UBI claiming it "will lead to higher inequality and poverty" and "undermine social cohesion."[62] Various pressure groups and think tanks share such suspicions. A report by DPAC (Disabled People Against Cuts) consider that "the need to finance universal basic income payments could lead to even more pressure to save money by restricting eligibility [for welfare payments for the disabled] than under the current system.[63] The New Economics Foundation concluded that "UBI is an individualistic, monetary intervention that undermines social solidarity and fails to tackle the underlying causes of poverty, unemployment and inequality", it instead favours a guaranteed minimum income and a "National Energy Guarantee" (NEG).[64][65]

Academic debate edit

 
Carole Pateman, 2015

Several British academics have been involved in the basic income debate. Among them the following:

  • Stephen Hawking, an English theoretical physicist, cosmologist, and author was a supporter of a universal basic income.[9][10]
  • James Meade, a left-leaning economist and winner of the 1977 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, took part in the basic income discussion from time to time. In his last books Full Employment Regained and Agathopia he returned to the question.
  • Guy Standing has been very active in the debate since the 1980s. He is now especially well known for his theory about the so-called precariat, a new social class which he thinks is growing because of globalisation, and that this development is yet another strong argument for why basic income should be implemented.[66][67][68]
  • Carole Pateman, a British political scientist, has declared that she sees basic income as a fundamental human right. For the system to reach its full potential, however, it is important that the level is not set too low.

In media edit

The documentary The Cost of Living: Does Britain Need a Basic Income? – a companion piece to the film The Future of Work and Death – was released on Amazon Prime on 8 October 2020.[69][70][71] The documentary explores the feasibility of a basic income in Britain and ultimately asks if the cost of living can be subsidised, should it be subsidised?[72] It features welfare advisors, philosophers, economists and many basic income advocates including Guy Standing, George Monbiot, David Graeber and A. C. Grayling. The film received an online premiere screening during the COVID-19 lockdowns hosted by The Green Party.[73]

Organisations edit

The organisation Basic Income UK is "a collective of independent people promoting unconditional basic income as a progressive social policy for the United Kingdom, and beyond".[74]

"The Citizen's Basic Income Trust promotes debate on the desirability and feasibility of a Citizen's Income by publishing a newsletter and other publications, maintaining a library of resources, and responding to requests for information".[75] In February 2021, it launched an educational podcast exploring various ways on how UBI could tackle social issues. The trust was founded in 1984 as the Basic Income Research Group and later changed its name to CIT. The current director is Malcolm Torry, who is also the general manager of Basic Income Earth Network (BIEN).

Founded in Sheffield in 2016, the UBI Lab Network is made up of "a growing number of grassroots groups set up to examine the idea’s potential impact within a certain area and explore the launching of pilot schemes."[76]

Chaired by Willie Sullivan, the Citizen's Basic Income Network Scotland "is a new organisation set up to raise awareness of the benefits that a Basic Income would bring to Scotland".[77]

See also edit

References edit

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  22. ^ Stone, Jon (20 March 2020). "Coronavirus: Over 170 MPs and Lords call for universal basic income during pandemic". The Independent. Retrieved 24 May 2020.
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  69. ^ "The Cost of Living - Review". One Room With A View. 4 September 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
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External links edit

  • Basic Income Conversation
  • Basic Income UK
  • Citizen’s Basic Income Trust
  • UBI Podcast - Let's Try UBI by Citizen's Basic Income Trust

universal, basic, income, united, kingdom, universal, basic, income, subject, much, interest, united, kingdom, there, long, history, discussion, been, implemented, date, interest, support, universal, basic, income, increased, substantially, amongst, public, po. Universal basic income is a subject of much interest in the United Kingdom There is a long history of discussion yet it has not been implemented to date Interest in and support for universal basic income has increased substantially amongst the public and politicians in recent years 1 Political parties that include universal basic income on their agenda include the Green Party of England and Wales the Scottish National Party SNP and the Scottish Greens Support for universal basic income is widespread amongst opposition politicians including Labour SNP Liberal Democrats and Plaid Cymru 2 many of whom were among the 170 MPs and Lords who signed a proposal calling on the government to introduce a universal basic income during the coronavirus pandemic 2 A public poll by YouGov in 2020 found that in the view of coronavirus pandemic 51 of the public in the United Kingdom support a universal basic income with 24 unsupportive 1 3 A public petition on the UK government website that ran for six months from 16 March 2020 to 16 September 2020 calling for universal basic income during the course of the COVID 19 pandemic in the United Kingdom raised over 114 000 signatures 4 Contents 1 History from Thomas Paine to the year 2000 1 1 Thomas Paine Agrarian Justice 1 2 Speenhamland 1 3 1920s and 1930s 1 4 1940s 1 5 1950s 2000 2 21st century debate and development 2 1 Recent reports 2 2 Proposed pilots 2 3 Pilots 2 3 1 Critics 3 Academic debate 4 In media 5 Organisations 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory from Thomas Paine to the year 2000 editThomas Paine Agrarian Justice edit Thomas Paine an English American philosopher and revolutionary proposed a system whereby all citizens when reaching adulthood should be given an equal amount of money from the state The idea was developed in Agrarian Justice published 1797 The basic philosophical idea behind the proposal explained in the book was the contention that in the state of nature the earth in its natural uncultivated state was the common property of the human race His contemporary and fellow pamphleteer Thomas Spence responded with a proposal that more closely fits the contemporary definition of basic income 5 Speenhamland edit The Speenhamland system was a form of poverty relief in England at the end of the 18th century and during the early 19th century It started in the village of Speenhamland but soon spread to most parts of the country William Pitt the Younger tried to have the system implemented nationally but failed Although it has one similarity to basic income in that theoretically everyone was eligible it was means tested and it included work conditions and supervision that made it very different from basic income 6 1920s and 1930s edit nbsp C H Douglas an early British proponent of basic income and monetary reformEven though basic income and related ideas had been proposed a few times before the 1920s most notably Bertrand Russell in 1918 7 it was not until then that a social movement seems to have started around the idea Valter Van Trier has described this movement which started in United Kingdom in his book Every One A King The idea of basic income was revived prominently by Dennis Milner and his wife Mabel Milner in their pamphlet Scheme for a State Bonus A rational method of solving the social problem published in 1918 Following this publication the so called State Bonus League was formed in july of the same year The League pushed the idea inside the Labour Party which dedicated several hearings at the National Congress in 1920 and 1922 but the idea was eventually rejected 8 At the same time Major C H Douglas a British engineer and social philosopher developed a new economic philosophy which he labelled Social Credit At the heart of the philosophy was a firm belief in the importance of individual freedom but also that the monetary system had to be changed so that the market system could function properly In short he combined monetary reform and basic income 1940s edit The Beveridge report published in 1942 stated that social insurances should be the main system in society for economic security Besides that the report also proposed a selective system for those without access to social insurances Beveridge himself did not like means testing and selectivism because it created high marginal tax rates for the poor but he nevertheless thought that it was a necessary complement After the war the Beveridge model became the guiding principle for the welfare state both in Britain and internationally Lady Juliet Rhys Williams proposed the New Social Contract as an alternative to the Beveridge Report In short she proposed basic income in the form of a negative income tax except that she also recommended a work test 1950s 2000 edit In 1972 the Cabinet of Edward Heath put forward a proposal for a tax credit scheme which resembled a citizen s income in some ways but did not cover the whole of the population In 1979 child benefit which is a citizen s income for children in all but name was introduced 21st century debate and development edit nbsp Caroline Lucas 2019 nbsp John McDonnell 2016 nbsp English theoretical physicist cosmologist and author Stephen Hawking was a supporter of a universal basic income 9 10 A system of universal basic income is supported by the Green Party of England and Wales 11 12 the Scottish National Party 13 and the Scottish Greens 14 For a period the Liberal Democrats also accepted it as official policy but modified their support before members voted to adopt it as party policy in September 2020 15 In March 2023 a majority of members of the Liberal Democrats at the party s Spring Conference voted in favour of adopting a Guaranteed Basic Income GBI instead of a universal basic income as the Liberal Democrats official policy 16 In January 2016 the sole MP of the Green Party of England and Wales Caroline Lucas tabled a motion in the British Parliament calling on the Government to commission research into the effects of a universal basic income and examine its feasibility to replace the UK s existing social security system 17 Former Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell is said to be a supporter of universal basic income 18 and on 16 February 2016 said that universal basic income is an idea we want to look at 19 Writing in The New Statesman on 17 February Labour MP Jonathan Reynolds argues in its favour 1 as a policy for coping with inevitable but fundamental economic change 2 as an alternative to the bewildering complexity of our welfare system when people move frequently into and out of work and 3 as a platform from which people might fulfil their potential 20 Labour Party MP Clive Lewis has also stated his support for universal basic income 21 In March 2020 a combined total of over 170 opposition politicians from MPs and Lords called for the UK government to implement a universal basic income during the coronavirus pandemic in the United Kingdom 22 23 24 However the Conservative government and then Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak both rejected the calls 25 26 On 25 September 2020 the Liberal Democrats adopted at their party conference a policy of supporting UBI 27 28 In mid May 2021 after the 2021 Senedd election in which Welsh Labour won half the seats in the Welsh Parliament Mark Drakeford leader of Welsh Labour and First Minister of Wales announced that a universal basic income scheme would be trialled in Wales Plaid Cymru supported a Welsh pilot for a universal basic income in their manifesto going into the election and the Welsh Liberal Democrats also made an election commitment to support a trial while the Welsh Conservatives rejected the idea Recipients of the income would be given independent financial advice and support throughout the pilot who are regularly reminded of their end point on the pilot so that appropriate plans can be made for their transition out of the pilot 29 30 31 As of June 2023 the pilot is ongoing with the final results expected to be thoroughly evaluated at the end of the trial 32 In a poll of 2 184 adults in Great Britain in November 2021 by Savanta ComRes 44 of respondents stated their support for a universal basic income compared to 23 who stated that they oppose it 33 Recent reports edit In 2015 the London based RSA Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts Manufactures and Commerce launched its own proposal for Basic Income entitled Creative Citizens Creative State 34 It advocated replacing a swathe of UK means tested benefits with a single universal payment as a response to the changing landscape of work and an ageing population In March 2019 the New Economics Foundation NEF produced the report Nothing Personal Replacing the personal tax allowance with a Weekly National Allowance The report maintained that if the Government abolished the personal allowance of income tax and replaced it with a weekly cash payment of 48 a week it could lift 200 000 families out of poverty The proposed policy swap would shift 8bn currently spent on tax allowances for the 35 highest income families to the remaining 65 of families 35 However the report was critical of the notion of a universal basic income ie a guaranteed income for all citizens Approximately a week after the report by the NEF the think tank Compass published a report written by economists Stewart Lansley and Howard Reed 36 Entitled Basic Income for All From Desirability to Feasibility it suggested the government could make tax free payments of 60 to every adult 175 for those over 65 and 40 for each child under 18 regardless of other income This would be designed to cut rising levels of poverty and inequality across the United Kingdom Their report suggested the cost of reworking the tax and benefits system would be 28bn less than the aggregate cuts to benefits since 2010 and the changes would return social security spending back to the level of a decade ago to help cover the costs of the UBI 37 Lansley and Reed followed up this report with a second in 2019 that took a closer look at the financial possibilities of universal basic income in the UK 38 In Basic Income for All From Desirability to Feasibility Lansley and Reed claim that a meaningful basic income of for example over 10 000 per year could be paid to a family of four Sums at this level paid without condition would significantly improve the living standards and life chances of millions of people and are affordable In May 2019 a report by Professor Guy Standing commissioned by the Progressive Economic Forum and forwarded to John McDonnell the acting Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer suggested different models for piloting basic income 39 Standing s report Basic Income as Common Dividends Piloting a Transformative Policy A Report for the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer cites a perfect storm of factors that lead to the need for a basic income Broad ethical justifications for basic income which Standing cites as social justice security freedom and solidarity are now working in combination with urgent socio economic demands A growing proportion of people the report states are in the precariat living bits and pieces lives relying on low wages and incomes that are increasingly volatile and unpredictable and on inadequate and uncertain benefits in times of loss of earnings power 39 Echoing William Beveridge s 1942 report suggesting the need for a Welfare State in the UK Standing states there are eight modern giants stretching form inequality debt through to neo fascism that basic income could help tackle The report is also highly critical of current UK welfare schemes mainly Universal Credit which he states are unfair for large families have high administrative costs and limit personal freedom 39 nbsp Guy Standing author of Basic Income And How We Can Make It Happen and Basic Income as Common Dividends Piloting a Transformative PolicyThe report deals with the most common objections to a basic income To the objection that basic income is not affordable Professor Standing said there are 1 156 tax reliefs in the UK at the moment and if they were scrapped that would pay for a basic income If we phased out those tax reliefs the total revenue foregone by the Treasury from tax reliefs is 420bn per year and that s their own estimates not mine he added 40 39 He also suggests a more general Commons Permanent Fund in which a national investment fund would be built mainly from levies on commercial intrusions into the commons boosted by contributions from a land value tax eco taxes digital information levies and several others 39 In July 2022 data was published from polling by YouGov that suggested that a plurality of British people support a universal basic income 41 In November 2023 The Trussell Trust calculated that a single adult in the UK in 2023 needs at least 29 500 a year to have an acceptable standard of living up from 25 000 in 2022 Two partners with two children would need 50 000 compared to 44 500 in 2022 29 of the UK population which works out to 19 2 million people belong to households that bring in below the minimum standard 42 Proposed pilots edit Until July 2022 there were no regional universal basic income pilots running in the UK In 2018 the Scottish Government agreed to provide 250 000 to undertake initial research on the feasibility of a basic income pilot making use of experience and expertise from four areas of the country Glasgow Edinburgh and the regions of Fife and North Ayrshire 43 44 The project determined that such a pilot was feasible 45 Making use of the term Citizen s Basic Income CBI the writers of the report recommended that pilot should be a randomised controlled study with two study areas where the whole community receives a CBI 46 One study area should receive a high payment the other receiving a lower payment The goal of the pilot would be to understand the impact of CBI on poverty child poverty and unemployment as well as health and financial wellbeing and experience of the social security system 46 The report was clear in its preference for a pilot that met all the characteristics of a universal basic income ie that the communities should receive the income as money rather than as a voucher as a regular payment given to all individuals within the defined community and that it should be unconditional However the report also noted that there were substantive and complex legislative and delivery barriers to piloting a CBI given that Scottish Parliamentary powers were limited in their ability to make the needed changes to the social security system which were determined at the UK Parliament in Westminster 46 The current constitutional and legal set up would place significant restrictions on the pilot model design and potentially compromise learnings 47 The Scottish Government of 2022 therefore decided to focus on a Minimum Income Guarantee MIG 48 The Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts Manufactures and Commerce has also produced a report examining some of the benefits and challenges of a basic income system in the region of Fife 49 And in 2019 the council of Sheffield agreed to work on ensuring that UBI can be implemented successfully in Sheffield 50 The council of Liverpool has also shown enthusiasm for experimenting with a basic income 51 In October 2020 Wales Future Generations Commissioner Sophie Howe recommended that a universal basic income and a shorter working week should be piloted by the next Welsh Government 52 A 2023 report produced by the think tank Autonomy proposed a trial of basic income of 1 600 a month in Jarrow in north east England and East Finchley in north London 53 The proposed trial would involve 30 people and would last two years 54 55 Pilots edit The Welsh government established a basic income project in 2022 focussed on those leaving care a group that was identified as one that could benefit from extra financial help From 1 July 2022 more than 500 people leaving care in Wales will be offered 1600 each month before tax for two years to support them as they make the transition to adult life The 20 million pilot is running for three years 56 57 The figure after tax is 1 280 a month for those aged 18 years old and over leaving care in Wales 58 59 Critics edit There are also several critics on both the right and left of British politics The former Conservative MP Nick Boles said in 2017 that talk of a universal basic income as a response to the rise of robots is dangerous nonsense The main argument against basic income for the Conservatives he said should be that it is morally wrong In his online book Square Deal he writes Mankind is hard wired to work We gain satisfaction from it It gives us a sense of identity purpose and belonging we should not be trying to create a world in which most people do not feel the need to work 60 61 Ian Goldin Professor of Globalisation and Development at the University of Oxford has written against UBI claiming it will lead to higher inequality and poverty and undermine social cohesion 62 Various pressure groups and think tanks share such suspicions A report by DPAC Disabled People Against Cuts consider that the need to finance universal basic income payments could lead to even more pressure to save money by restricting eligibility for welfare payments for the disabled than under the current system 63 The New Economics Foundation concluded that UBI is an individualistic monetary intervention that undermines social solidarity and fails to tackle the underlying causes of poverty unemployment and inequality it instead favours a guaranteed minimum income and a National Energy Guarantee NEG 64 65 Academic debate edit nbsp Carole Pateman 2015Several British academics have been involved in the basic income debate Among them the following Stephen Hawking an English theoretical physicist cosmologist and author was a supporter of a universal basic income 9 10 James Meade a left leaning economist and winner of the 1977 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences took part in the basic income discussion from time to time In his last books Full Employment Regained and Agathopia he returned to the question Guy Standing has been very active in the debate since the 1980s He is now especially well known for his theory about the so called precariat a new social class which he thinks is growing because of globalisation and that this development is yet another strong argument for why basic income should be implemented 66 67 68 Carole Pateman a British political scientist has declared that she sees basic income as a fundamental human right For the system to reach its full potential however it is important that the level is not set too low In media editThe documentary The Cost of Living Does Britain Need a Basic Income a companion piece to the film The Future of Work and Death was released on Amazon Prime on 8 October 2020 69 70 71 The documentary explores the feasibility of a basic income in Britain and ultimately asks if the cost of living can be subsidised should it be subsidised 72 It features welfare advisors philosophers economists and many basic income advocates including Guy Standing George Monbiot David Graeber and A C Grayling The film received an online premiere screening during the COVID 19 lockdowns hosted by The Green Party 73 Organisations editThe organisation Basic Income UK is a collective of independent people promoting unconditional basic income as a progressive social policy for the United Kingdom and beyond 74 The Citizen s Basic Income Trust promotes debate on the desirability and feasibility of a Citizen s Income by publishing a newsletter and other publications maintaining a library of resources and responding to requests for information 75 In February 2021 it launched an educational podcast exploring various ways on how UBI could tackle social issues The trust was founded in 1984 as the Basic Income Research Group and later changed its name to CIT The current director is Malcolm Torry who is also the general manager of Basic Income Earth Network BIEN Founded in Sheffield in 2016 the UBI Lab Network is made up of a growing number of grassroots groups set up to examine the idea s potential impact within a certain area and explore the launching of pilot schemes 76 Chaired by Willie Sullivan the Citizen s Basic Income Network Scotland is a new organisation set up to raise awareness of the benefits that a Basic Income would bring to Scotland 77 See also editTony Atkinson Ailsa McKayReferences edit a b Stone Jon 27 April 2020 Public support universal basic income The Independent Retrieved 28 April 2020 a b Stone Jon 20 March 2020 Over 170 MPs and Lords call for universal basic income during pandemic The Independent Retrieved 28 April 2020 Thinking about the financial impact of a crisis like the Coronavirus pandemic to what extent if at all would you support or oppose the government introducing the following permanent measures PDF Report YouGov Retrieved 12 May 2020 TOTAL SUPPORTIVE 51 TOTAL UNSUPPORTIVE 24 Labour MP The pandemic reinforces the case for a Universal Basic Income Left Foot Forward 28 September 2020 Retrieved 9 October 2020 Marangos John January 2006 Two arguments for Basic Income Thomas Paine 1737 1809 and Thomas Spence 1750 1814 History of Economic Ideas Block Fred Somers Margaret 2003 In the Shadow of Speenhamland Social Policy and the Old Poor Law PDF Politics amp Society 1 41 History of basic income BIEN BIEN Archived from the original on 21 June 2008 Retrieved 27 May 2017 Who framed social dividend https www uantwerpen be images uantwerpen container1244 files TEW 20 20Onderzoek Working 20Papers SESO 1989 SESO 1989 006 20 230 pdf a b Brooks Libby 25 December 2017 Scotland united in curiosity as councils trial universal basic income The Guardian Retrieved 4 October 2020 Universal basic income is according to its many and various supporters an idea whose time has come The deceptively simple notion of offering every citizen a regular payment without means testing or requiring them to work for it has backers as disparate as Mark Zuckerberg Stephen Hawking Caroline Lucas and Richard Branson a b Henley Jon 12 January 2018 Money for nothing is Finland s universal basic income trial too good to be true The Guardian Retrieved 13 February 2021 With the likes of Mark Zuckerberg Stephen Hawking Elon Musk and Bernie Sanders all proponents of a universal basic income UBI model Finnish officials and participants have been inundated with media requests from around the globe correspondent Peter Walker Political 22 May 2017 Green party outlines plan for caring Britain in manifesto launch The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 30 August 2019 UK Green parties call for UBI in election manifestos BIEN Retrieved 12 September 2019 SNP conference backs universal basic income for independent Scotland The Independent 15 March 2016 Retrieved 15 March 2016 Scottish Greens George Vic Miller Stewart eds 1994 Social Policy Towards 2000 Squaring the Welfare Circle London Routledge p 95 ISBN 1136138528 Davenport Hannah 18 March 2023 Liberal Democrats vote for a Guaranteed Basic Income Left Foot Forward Retrieved 24 July 2023 Stone Jon 20 January 2016 British parliament to consider motion on universal basic income The Independent Retrieved 24 May 2020 United Kingdom Basic income supporter John McDonnell becomes shadow chancellor Basic Income Earth Network 18 September 2015 Retrieved 18 March 2016 Labour Party considering universal basic income policy shadow chancellor John McDonnell says The Independent 17 February 2016 Retrieved 18 March 2016 How I learnt to stop worrying and love Basic Income The New Statesman 17 February 2016 Retrieved 18 March 2016 Q amp A with Labour MP Clive Lewis Green World 22 September 2020 Retrieved 14 November 2022 But there are other things I m in favour of which are things like Universal Basic Income moving to a four day working week reducing the working week which when crossed over with the rise of technology you can begin to see an alternative for what our society looks like Stone Jon 20 March 2020 Coronavirus Over 170 MPs and Lords call for universal basic income during pandemic The Independent Retrieved 24 May 2020 More than 100 UK opposition politicians call for universal basic income after lockdown Financial Times Retrieved 24 May 2020 Booth Robert Stewart Heather 19 March 2020 Calls for UK basic income payment to cushion coronavirus impact The Guardian Retrieved 24 May 2020 Ali Taz 12 May 2020 Government rejects idea of universal basic income in the future Yahoo News Retrieved 24 May 2020 Cowburn Ashley Buchan Lizzy 24 March 2020 Coronavirus Chancellor rejects widespread calls for universal basic income saying government not in favour The Independent Retrieved 24 May 2020 Walker Peter 2 October 2020 Covid 19 has legitimised once radical ideas in UK say Green leaders The Guardian Retrieved 2 October 2020 Davey Ed 25 September 2020 Lib Dems back universal basic income Liberal Democrats official website Retrieved 2 October 2020 Williams James 15 May 2021 Universal basic income to be tested in Wales BBC News Retrieved 15 May 2021 Morris Steven 14 May 2021 Wales to launch pilot universal basic income scheme The Guardian Retrieved 15 May 2021 https www gov wales basic income pilot care leavers overview scheme https www bbc co uk news uk 65806599 Mahmood Basit 24 November 2021 EXCLUSIVE Voters support a universal basic income Left Foot Forward Retrieved 8 March 2022 Creative Citizens Creative State Archived from the original on 26 March 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Scrap personal allowance and replace with a new weekly cash payment New Economics Foundation 11 March 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2019 Basic Income for All From Desirability to Feasibility Compass www compassonline org uk Retrieved 30 August 2019 Partington Richard 18 March 2019 Universal basic income would cost less than value of benefit cuts since 2010 The Guardian Retrieved 8 May 2019 Basic Income for All From Desirability to Feasibility Compass www compassonline org uk Retrieved 12 September 2019 a b c d e Standing Guy Basic Income As Common Dividends Report Launch with Guy Standing Progressive Economic Forum Retrieved 29 August 2019 Basic income of 48 a week in UK urged BBC News 7 May 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2019 van der Merwe Ben 5 July 2022 Brits support universal basic income by 20 point margin New Statesman Retrieved 1 September 2023 Este Jonathan 10 November 2023 How much income is needed to live well in the UK in 2023 At least 29 500 much more than many households bring in The Conversation Retrieved 12 November 2023 What s happening in Scotland Basic Income Scotland Archived from the original on 30 July 2019 Retrieved 30 July 2019 Scotland is planning to pilot a universal basic income The Independent 2 January 2017 Archived from the original on 17 August 2017 Retrieved 24 August 2017 Income Basic 15 March 2021 Exploring the feasibility of a Citizens Basic Income Pilot in Scotland Basic Income Retrieved 1 May 2023 a b c Assessing the Feasibility of Citizens Basic Income Pilots in Scotland Final Report Prepared by the Citizens Basic Income Feasibility Study Steering Group June 2020 https www basicincome scot data assets pdf file 0024 175371 Draft Final CBI Feasibility Main Report June 2020 pdf Minimum Income Guarantee Steering Group background on minimum income guarantee and basic incomes August 2021 meeting paper www gov scot Retrieved 1 May 2023 Minimum Income Guarantee Steering Group background on minimum income guarantee and basic incomes August 2021 meeting paper www gov scot Retrieved 1 May 2023 Minimum Income Guarantee is similar to but distinct from a Universal Basic Income UBI with two key differences firstly that a UBI is for everyone irrespective of income and individual needs e g disability while a MIG is means tested and targeted to those on low incomes and secondly that a MIG recognises that there is a role for business to help raise incomes not just the welfare state RSA A Basic Income for Scotland RSA www thersa org Retrieved 30 July 2019 Gold Harry 12 June 2019 Sheffield council backs universal basic income trial The Guardian Retrieved 12 September 2019 United Kingdom Liverpool s mayor and councillors bent on trying UBI BIEN Retrieved 12 September 2019 Davies Cemlyn 19 October 2020 Pilot universal basic income and shorter working weeks in Wales BBC News Retrieved 19 February 2021 A BIG LOCAL BASIC INCOME PROPOSAL FOR A LOCALLY LED BASIC INCOME PILOT Autonomy Retrieved 7 October 2023 Hussen Dahaba Ali 4 June 2023 Universal basic income of 1 600 a month to be trialled in two places in England The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on 4 June 2023 Retrieved 4 June 2023 Clark Kevin 8 November 2022 The radical payments scheme which could be trialled in Jarrow to fight the cost of living crisis Shields Gazette Archived from the original on 25 November 2022 Retrieved 4 June 2023 Wales pilots Basic Income scheme GOV WALES 27 June 2022 Archived from the original on 28 June 2022 Retrieved 4 June 2023 Basic income pilot for care leavers overview of the scheme GOV WALES www gov wales 15 February 2023 Retrieved 7 October 2023 Mestrum Francine 17 July 2023 Basic income What is it and what it isn t The Wales Centre for Public Policy Retrieved 8 December 2023 Basic income pilot for care leavers overview of the scheme gov wales Welsh Government 24 August 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2023 Tory MP condemns universal basic income on moral grounds The Guardian 28 December 2017 Grantham MP begins online book Grantham Matters 29 October 2017 Retrieved 4 June 2023 Goldin Ian 11 February 2018 Five reasons why universal basic income is a bad idea Financial Times Retrieved 12 September 2019 New DPAC Report on Universal Basic Income DPAC dpac uk net 31 January 2019 Retrieved 12 September 2019 Coote Anna There are fairer ways to spread prosperity than universal basic income New Economics Foundation Chapman Alex Kumar Chaitanya 25 August 2023 Delivering a National Energy Guarantee neweconomics org The New Economics Foundation Retrieved 8 December 2023 Britain s labour figures hide the real hours we work every day The Guardian 19 August 2012 Guy Standing the precariat is growing Angry Why the precariat requires a basic income Conference at Ljubljana The Cost of Living Review One Room With A View 4 September 2020 Retrieved 18 December 2022 Moore Alicia 12 September 2020 The Cost of Living Documentary Film Review UK Film Review Retrieved 18 December 2022 Cost of Living An interview with basic income documentarians BIEN Basic Income Earth Network basicincome org Retrieved 18 December 2022 Blacknell Sean Walsh Wayne 8 October 2020 The Cost of Living Documentary retrieved 18 December 2022 saradryden 30 March 2021 Universal Basic Income Green Living Room Retrieved 18 December 2022 About us Basic Income UK official website Retrieved 12 December 2017 Citizen s Income An unconditional nonwithdrawable income paid to every individual as a right of citizenship Retrieved 8 January 2019 Our generation s NHS support grows for universal basic income The Guardian 10 August 2020 Retrieved 25 March 2021 Citizen s Basic Income Network Scotland SC046356 Citizen s Basic Income Network Scotland SC046356 Retrieved 27 May 2017 External links editBasic Income Conversation Basic Income UK Citizen s Basic Income Trust UBI Podcast Let s Try UBI by Citizen s Basic Income Trust Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Universal basic income in the United Kingdom amp oldid 1188984124, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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