35/26 Report of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights
Document Type: Final Report
Date: 2017 Mar
Session: 35th Regular Session (2017 Jun)
Agenda Item: Item3: Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to development
GE.17-04619(E)
Human Rights Council Thirty-fifth session
6-23 June 2017
Agenda item 3
Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights,
including the right to development
Report of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights
Note by the Secretariat
The Secretariat has the honour to transmit to the Human Rights Council the report of
the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, Philip Alston, prepared
pursuant to Council resolution 26/3. The Special Rapporteur notes that the fundamental
values of the international human rights system are under attack in new and diverse ways in
2017. One widely shared explanation is the rapidly growing sense of economic insecurity
afflicting large segments of many societies.
The Special Rapporteur suggests that the human rights community has had little to
offer in response. Indeed, there is a risk that rather than seeking creative ways in which to
address the problem of economic insecurity the human rights system will proceed in
zombie mode. It will keep marching straight ahead on the path mapped out long ago, even
as the lifeblood drains out of the enterprise.
The report is premised on the view that the human rights movement needs to address
and respond to the fundamental changes that are taking place in economic and social
structures at the national and global levels. In this setting, one of the most vibrant proposals
is to replace or supplement existing social protection systems with a universal basic income
(“basic income”). This proposal has recently drawn attention from governments, scholars,
and practitioners in various fields. In its comprehensive and ideal form, a basic income is
explicitly designed to challenge most of the key assumptions underpinning existing social
security systems. Rather than payments being partial, they guarantee a floor; instead of
being episodic, payments are regular; rather than being needs-based, they are paid as a flat
rate to all; they come in cash, rather than as messy in-kind support; they accrue to every
individual, rather than only to needy households; rather than requiring that various
conditions be met, they are unconditional; rather than excluding the well off, they are
universal; and instead of being based on lifetime contributions, they are funded primarily
from taxation. And simplicity of design promises minimal bureaucracy and low
administrative costs.
The principal purpose of the report is to reflect on the desirability of advocating a
basic income approach to social protection when viewed from the perspective of
international human rights law. Basic income offers a bold and imaginative solution to
pressing problems that are about to become far more intractable as a result of the directions
United Nations A/HRC/35/26
2
in which the global economy appears inexorably to be heading. While there are many
objections, relating to affordability in particular, the concept should not be rejected out of
hand on the grounds that it is utopian. In today’s world of severe economic insecurity,
creativity in social policy is necessary.
The report calls for acknowledgement of the fact that economic insecurity represents
a fundamental threat to all human rights. It calls for the rights to work, social security, and
an adequate standard of living to be accorded prominence on the human rights agenda.
Linked to this is the need to acknowledge the central role of the State, of fair and
progressive fiscal policies, and of redistributive justice. Most importantly, the debates over
social protection floors and basic income need to be brought together. They have thus far
been kept largely separate, in a counterproductive and ultimately self-defeating way.
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Report of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights
Contents
Page
I. Introduction ................................................................................................................................... 4
II. Introducing basic income .............................................................................................................. 6
A. Characteristics of a full basic income ................................................................................... 6
B. A brief history of the concept ............................................................................................... 7
C. The twenty-first century resurgence ..................................................................................... 8
D. Forms of basic income .......................................................................................................... 10
III. Similarities and differences with other schemes ........................................................................... 11
A. Negative income tax ............................................................................................................. 11
B. Global basic income ............................................................................................................. 12
C. The welfare state ................................................................................................................... 12
D. Cash transfers........................................................................................................................ 13
E. Social protection floors ......................................................................................................... 14
IV. Basic income and poverty ............................................................................................................. 15
V. Affordability .................................................................................................................................. 16
VI. Conclusion .................................................................................................................................... 17
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I. Introduction1
1. The present report is submitted in accordance with Human Rights Council resolution
26/3 and is the third report submitted to the Council by Philip Alston in his capacity as
Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights.
2. The focus of the present report is on the idea of replacing or supplementing existing
social protection systems with a universal basic income (“basic income”). 2 In recent
months, this proposal has drawn increased attention from governments, scholars, and
practitioners in a range of different fields, and four major books on the subject have been
published in rapid succession. 3 As a report of the Government of India concluded, if
“thinkers on both the extreme left and right” have all become basic income supporters, then
it is “a powerful idea” which must be discussed seriously, even if that report concludes that
the time has not yet come for its implementation. 4 Before exploring the details of the
concept and its relationship to human rights, consideration needs to be given to the context
in which the proposal has attracted such attention.
3. The fundamental values of the international human rights system are under attack in
new and diverse ways in 2017. While competing explanations have been proffered, one that
is included in most lists is that there is a rapidly growing sense of economic insecurity
afflicting large segments of many societies. There is an increasing feeling of being exposed,
vulnerable, overwhelmed and helpless, and of being systematically marginalized, both
economically and socially. This situation, which previously seemed to be a fate reserved
only for those living in low-income countries or in extreme poverty in high- and middle-
income countries, now afflicts not just the unemployed and the underemployed, but also the
precariously employed and those likely to be rendered unemployed in the foreseeable future
as a result of various developments. Many of these individuals previously enjoyed a
modicum of security and respect and felt that they had a stake in the overall system of
government. As the new insecurity has ballooned and affected ever-greater numbers, many
mainstream political parties have either remained oblivious, or have offered solutions that
have only exacerbated the problems, further undermining faith in electoral democracy.
4. The neoliberal policies encapsulated in the 1980s-era Washington Consensus can be
seen, especially in retrospect, to have greatly exacerbated economic insecurity, whether or
not that was the intent. The State was assumed to be intrinsically inefficient and corruption-
prone, and this led to constant pressure to shrink all those parts of it that provided social
and basic economic services to the populace, while vindicating and reinforcing the State in
its role as the regulator facilitating and legitimizing the privatization of the economy. Social
security and social protection was transformed, including through the explicit policies of
the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, into a minimalist notion of “social
safety nets” designed to avoid the very worst outcomes and make the State look beneficent
while empowering officials dedicated to devising ever more efficient “targeting”
mechanisms and to rooting out overinclusion while playing down underinclusion. The
objectives of promoting tax reform and prudent fiscal policies turned into a race to the
bottom to set the lowest individual and corporate tax rates, attracting businesses through
expensive exemptions, turning a blind eye to illegal or unconscionably evasive tax
practices, and eliminating estate taxes and other measures that would bring about even
minimal redistribution. Privatization was promoted even in relation to what were once seen
1 The Special Rapporteur is grateful to Christiaan van Veen and Anna Bulman for their invaluable
assistance in the preparation of the report.
2 The concept is also known as citizen’s income, basic income guarantee, and guaranteed annual
income.
3 Philippe van Parijs and Yannick Vanderborght, Basic Income: A Radical Proposal for a Free Society
and a Sane Economy (Harvard University Press, 2017); Rutger Bregman, Utopia for Realists: How
We Can Build the Ideal World (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017); Thomas Straubhaar, Radikal Gerecht
(Körber Stiftung, 2017); and Andy Stern, Raising the Floor: How a Universal Basic Income Can
Renew Our Economy and Rebuild the American Dream (Public Affairs, 2016).
4 Government of India, Economic Survey 2016-2017 (2017), chap. 9, p. 195.
5
as basic State functions, such as prisons, education and security. In some States, even the
justice system has been partly privatized, whether through onerous court fees for the poor
or the channelling of consumer and other complaints into private arbitration.
5. For its part, the human rights community has had all too little to offer in response to
the profound challenges associated with deep economic insecurity. The human rights to an
adequate standard of living, to work and to social security have been very low on the list of
priorities of the major human rights groups and of the principal international and regional
human rights organizations, with the exception of the International Labour Organization
(ILO). The reasons for this include long-standing arguments that economic issues belong on
the agenda of economic rather than human rights bodies, a perception that human rights
specialists are not qualified to engage with issues that are presented as technical matters of
economic policy, a preference to avoid addressing issues involving redistribution of income
or expenditure from a human rights perspective, and the assumption that if civil and
political rights are protected, respect for economic and social rights will automatically
follow.
6. A related problem in the context of the Human Rights Council is the “siloing” of
issues, whereby food, health, education, water, and other rights concerns are dealt with in
separate silos that stand side by side but are rarely integrated. The Council debates the
reports of the individual special procedures mandate holders sequentially and each mandate
holder focuses on one particular piece of a large jigsaw puzzle. But there is rarely an
occasion to examine the overall picture.
7. There is a strong risk that when confronted with the challenge of addressing
economic insecurity the human rights system will proceed in zombie mode. It will keep
marching straight ahead on the path mapped out long ago, even as the lifeblood drains out
of the enterprise. Its supervisory and monitoring organs will address themselves ever more
insistently to State actors that have made themselves marginal, and they will continue to
demand respect for standards that have long since been overtaken by the grim realities of
global supply chains. For the most part, the human rights machinery is cumbersome,
lacking in agility, and poorly placed to develop new thinking in such contexts. But it will
need to do so if it is to remain relevant.
8. The present report is premised on the view that the human rights movement needs to
address and respond to the fundamental changes that are taking place in economic and
social structures at the national and global levels. These include, among others:
(a) The increasingly precarious nature of employment in the age of Uber,
Airbnb, outsourcing, subcontracting, zero-hours contracts and the like;
(b) The fact that traditional forms of labour market regulation are becoming ever
less relevant to the emerging economy, and that an insistence on their continuing normative
validity, however strongly justified, is increasingly impotent in the face of the evolution of
global supply chains and other developments based on worker insecurity;
(c) The likelihood that vast swathes of the existing workforce will be made
redundant by increasing automation and robotization, accompanied by the ever-greater
concentration of wealth in the hands of the technology elites and the owners of capital;
(d) The rapid and seemingly unstoppable growth in inequality across the globe,
captured by Oxfam’s statistic that the richest 1 per cent of humanity already controls as
much wealth as the remaining 99 per cent,5 and by the detailed national-level economic
analyses of Thomas Piketty and others;6
(e) The ascent of a new neoliberal agenda, which involves further fetishization of
low tax rates, demonization of the administrative State, deregulation as a matter of
5 Oxfam, “An economy for the 99%”, briefing paper, January 2017.
6 Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, “Distributional national accounts: methods
and estimates for the United States”, National Bureau of Economic Research working paper series,
Working Paper No. 22945 (2016).
6
principle, and the privatization of remaining State responsibilities in the social sector, risks
leaving the State in no position to protect or promote social rights meaningfully.
II. Introducing basic income
A. Characteristics of a full basic income
9. In its comprehensive and ideal form, a basic income is explicitly designed to
challenge most of the key assumptions underpinning existing social security systems.
Rather than a system where there are partial payments, basic income guarantees a floor;
instead of being episodic, payments are regular; rather than being needs-based, they are
paid as a flat rate to all; they come in cash, rather than as messy in-kind support; they
accrue to every individual, rather than only to needy households; rather than requiring that
various conditions be met, they are unconditional; rather than excluding the well off, they
are universal; and instead of being based on lifetime contributions, they are funded
primarily from taxation. And simplicity of design promises minimal bureaucracy and low
administrative costs.
Guaranteed floor
10. The income is “basic” in the sense that it is designed to guarantee a “floor” on which
every recipient can stand.7 Because people’s needs are highly individualized and context-
dependent, the amount that any specific individual requires will depend on factors such as
local housing and living costs, the person’s health status, and whether there is any form of
support network in place. But in its pure form, basic income would generally be assumed to
be a uniform amount, which does not reflect those differentials. There are, however,
different versions of the concept that envisage adjusting the amount over time, providing
less money for children and more for the elderly, or adjusting for geography.8 The basis on
which the floor is calculated and the amount to be paid will, of course, vary greatly from
one country to another. Thus, while a national referendum on basic income in Switzerland
proposed a payment of SwF 2,500 per month per adult, a South African initiative envisages
a grant of US$15 per person per month, indexed to inflation.9
Regular payments
11. Under a basic income system, regular payments would be made to recipients, for
example on a monthly basis. Predictability and continuity ensure that redistributive and
poverty-reducing goals are met, whereas one-time only payments or lump sums do not
ensure a consistent floor.
Cash
12. Basic income is intended as a cash grant; not as in-kind support such as food,
vouchers or shelter. This means that individuals must have a means by which to receive the
income, such as a bank account, or a cell phone capable of managing electronic payments.
This might be problematic where neither banking infrastructure nor cell phone coverage are
strong, and will also be difficult for groups such as the homeless, people fleeing domestic
violence, and persons with psychosocial disabilities.10
7 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, p. 9.
8 Ibid., pp. 10 and 11.
9 “Towards A SADC-wide basic income grant: where are we now”. Available from
http://spii.org.za/sadcbigcampaign/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/SADC-BIG-Newsletter-Issue-1-
2016.pdf.
10 See, for example, James P. Mulvale and Sid Frankel, “Next steps on the road to basic income in
Canada”, Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, vol. 43, No. 3 (2016), pp. 27-50, citing on p. 41
Jurgen De Wispelaere and Lindsay Stirton, “The politics of unconditional basic income: bringing
bureaucracy back in”, Political Studies, vol. 61, No. 4 (2013), p. 915.
7
Individual
13. Whereas many aspects of existing social protection systems flow to the household,
basic income would go directly to each individual. Some proposals do, however, diverge
from this principle and envisage reduced payments which take account of the overall family
or household situation.
Unconditional
14. The absence of conditionality is a key dimension for most basic income proponents.
This means that no conditions, such as children’s attendance at school or proof of job
searches, must be met before the income is paid. People are thus not compelled to accept
unpleasant or unattractive jobs. The latter would be filled either by machines, or by people
attracted by a higher pay level.11
Universal
15. A full basic income is considered a universal entitlement that is automatically paid
ex ante to all in a society, regardless of income, wealth, age and gender. It does not require
means testing and is not restricted to specific categories of recipients. This idea is troubling
to many, who question why the “haves” should receive as much as the “have nots”.
Common responses are that any form of means testing to determine eligibility requires a
large and inefficient bureaucracy to evaluate claims, creates a burden on disadvantaged
people to prove their financial need, stigmatizes the target group, and undermines the
freedom to not work — as compared to means-tested welfare that is reduced as people work
and earn more. One option for retaining universality but responding to this unfairness
critique is a progressive taxation system that effectively takes back much of the basic
income payment from high earners. Some challenge the viability of that approach in a
world in which elite tax avoidance and evasion schemes are rife.12
16. The universality dimension is often assumed to apply only to citizens or those with a
minimum period of legal residence in the country, although some schemes require only
fiscal residence. These limits raise important questions in terms of migrant workers,
undocumented workers and asylum seekers.
B. A brief history of the concept
17. Proposals for a form of basic income have been floated by thinkers for centuries.13
Proponents of the idea trace its historical origins back to Sir Thomas More’s Utopia (1516),
Johannes Vives’s On Assistance to the Poor (1526), and the works of the Marquis de
Condorcet, Charles Fourier, Victor Considerant, John Stuart Mill, Bertrand Russell, George
Cole, Herbert Simon, and various other political scientists, economists, and public
intellectuals. Perhaps the most detailed and specific early set of plans for basic income and
related social protection arrangements was put forward by Thomas Paine, a key figure in
both the French and American revolutions, in The Rights of Man (1792) and Agrarian
Justice (1797).
18. In the United Kingdom, basic income proposals were prominent in the period after
both world wars. In 1918, Bertrand Russell called for an income for all, sufficient to pay for
“necessaries” in post-First World War Britain.14 And when the Beveridge plan was being
11 See, for example, Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, p. 22.
12 Francine Mestrum, “Why basic income can never be a progressive solution”, 14 April 2016.
Available from https://www.socialeurope.eu/2016/04/basic-income-can-never-progressive-solution/.
13 For summaries on the history of basic income, see Michael Tanner, “The pros and cons of a
guaranteed national income (Cato Institute, 12 May 2015), p. 4; Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic
Income: A Radical Proposal for a Free Society and a Sane Economy, chap. 4; and “History of basic
income”, available from http://basicincome.org/basic-income/history/.
14 Bertrand Russell, Roads to Freedom: Socialism, Anarchism and Syndicalism (Unwin, 1918), p. 127.
8
debated in 1943, Juliet Rhys-Williams proposed a basic income approach instead of
Beveridge’s contributory welfare state plan.15
19. In the United States of America in the 1960s, Milton Friedman advocated a negative
income tax, a concept that bears a close resemblance to a basic income.16 In the late 1960s,
Martin Luther King Jr. called for a guaranteed income as the solution to poverty. And by
the end of that decade, Richard Nixon, the then President, came close to implementing a
universal income supplement, but the scheme was defeated in the Senate by conservatives
who thought the programme was too expensive and by liberals who thought the benefit was
too low.
C. The twenty-first century resurgence
20. In recent years, there has been a strong resurgence in support for the idea of a basic
income. Its advocates include philosophers, economists, politicians, Silicon Valley
entrepreneurs, trade union leaders, futurists and others, and in addition to concerted
promotional efforts by civil society groups, support has come from within governments in
countries as diverse as Finland and India. Most strikingly, basic income proponents come
from many different positions on the political spectrum, ranging from libertarians to
socialists.
21. Scholars from different disciplines have played a key role in debating the merits of
the concept and it is appropriate to undertake a brief review of their contributions. The most
active proponent is a Belgian philosopher, Philippe van Parijs. In a highly influential paper
in 1991 he focused on the fairness of making basic income unconditional, thus making it
available even to those who opt to spend their life surfing waves.17 Invoking the philosophy
of John Rawls, he argued that “a defensible liberal theory of justice, that is, one that is truly
committed to an equal concern for all and to non-discrimination among conceptions of the
good life, does justify, under appropriate factual conditions, a substantial unconditional
basic income”. 18 Others have strongly contested this element in the case for a basic
income.19 In a recent book, Van Parijs and Vanderborght go beyond the philosophical
dimensions to explore the concept’s history, economic justifications and politics.20
22. While Van Parijs and Vanderborght write in the liberal-egalitarian tradition,21 basic
income also has strong support from libertarians. Matt Zwolinski argues that in order to
justify the system of property rights, it is necessary, as John Locke wrote, to leave “enough,
and as good, in common for others”.22 Thus, a State-financed social safety net might be
necessary. For that purpose, a basic income scheme would be preferable to the welfare state
because the latter incentivizes wasteful competition among interest groups and is costly and
invasive.23 He avoids addressing questions of the design and implementation of a basic
income system but is supportive of the approach developed by another libertarian, Charles
Murray.24
15 Juliet Rhys-Williams, Something to Look Forward To: A Suggestion for a New Social Contract
(Macdonald, 1943); and Sir William Beveridge, Social Insurance and Allied Services, HMSO Cmnd
6404 (1942).
16 Discussed further in part III, section A, below.
17 Philippe van Parijs, “Why surfers should be fed: the liberal case for an unconditional basic income”,
Philosophy and Public Affairs (spring 1991), p. 101.
18 Ibid., p. 102.
19 David Piachaud, “Citizen’s income: rights and wrongs” (Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion,
London School of Economics, 2016).
20 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income.
21 Ibid., p. 109.
22 Matt Zwolinski, “Property rights, coercion, and the welfare state”, The Independent Review (spring
2015), p. 519.
23 Ibid., pp. 524-526.
24 Ibid., p. 527.
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23. Murray’s principal book is entitled In Our Hands: A Plan to Replace the Welfare
State.25 He calls for a “guaranteed income” to replace the welfare state which he sees as
degrading “the traditions of work, thrift and neighbourliness” while also spawning “social
and economic problems that it is powerless to solve”. He rails against the “new cultural
consensus” produced by the welfare state, which considers that “the purpose of life is to
while away the time between birth and death as pleasantly as possible, and the purpose of
government is to make that process as easy as possible”. He argues that a satisfying human
life “requires being enmeshed in the stuff of life”, and that by “stripping the institutions of
family and community of many of their functions and responsibilities”, the welfare state
“drains too much of the life from life”. Replacing the welfare state by a basic income would
restore the community to its place as “the locus within which human needs must be met,
and the effects could be profound”.26
24. Further support for the theory comes from the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank
in Washington, D.C., which reviews the support given to basic income by free-market and
libertarian thinkers such as Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, Robert Nozick, Charles
Murray and Matt Zwolinski. Its view is that while the idea may look good on paper, the
“further one moves from theory to implementation, the more the theoretical advantages
dissipate”.27 The main objection is affordability, since a universal basic income scheme
“would cost far more than the current welfare system”.28
25. Some authors on the left of the political spectrum have been enthusiastic supporters
of basic income. Guy Standing, a labour economist, has popularized the notion of a
“precariat”, a very large segment of the population, whose lives are “dominated by
insecurity, uncertainty, debt and humiliation. They are becoming denizens rather than
citizens, losing cultural, civil, social, political and economic rights built up over
generations”. He argues that in an ever more unequal society, the precariat’s relative
deprivation is severe.29 According to Standing, a basic income would allow people to move
in and out of the labour market more easily and would “enable citizens to accept low wages
and to bargain more strongly”.30 Standing has also been involved in important pilot projects
in India.31
26. Philosophers on the left, such as Kathi Weeks, have defended basic income from an
autonomist Marxist perspective, arguing that it “attempts to address … the realities of post-
Fordist work, to offer a measure of security in an economy of precariousness”. 32 The
philosopher Michael Howard supports basic income, claiming that it is not incompatible
with Marxism or socialism and should be combined with strategies for full employment.33
But others on the left have been critical. Alex Gourevitch argues that basic income is
neither a necessary nor a sufficient condition for eliminating authoritarian work conditions,
which he sees as the biggest challenge.34
27. Broader political support is suggested by former United States Secretary of Labor
Robert Reich, who suggests that basic income could possibly be financed out of the profits
coming from labour-replacing innovations, or perhaps even from a revenue stream
25 See https://www.aei.org/scholar/charles-murray/.
26 Charles Murray, “Guaranteed income as a replacement for the welfare state” (The Foundation for
Law, Justice and Society), p. 7.
27 Tanner, “The pros and cons of a guaranteed national income”, p. 15.
28 Ibid., p. 26.
29 Guy Standing, The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class (Bloomsbury Academic, 2011), pp. 10 and
11.
30 Ibid., p. 178.
31 Sarath Davala, Renana Jhabvala, Soumya Kapoor Mehta and Guy Standing, Basic Income: A
Transformative Policy for India (Bloomsbury Academic, 2015).
32 Kathi Weeks, The Problem with Work: Feminism, Marxism, Antiwork Politics, and Postwork
Imaginaries (Duke University Press, 2011), p. 150.
33 Michael Howard, “Basic income, liberal neutrality, socialism, and work”, Review of Social Economy
(December 2005), p. 613.
34 Alex Gourevitch, “The limits of a basic income: means and ends of workplace democracy”, Basic
Income Studies, vol. 11, No. 1 (2016), p. 17.
10
generated by the underlying intellectual property.35 And a book by the former President of
the Service Employees International Union, Andy Stern, also calls for a universal basic
income to address a new economy characterized by high unemployment, stagnant wages,
declining trade union power, and decreasing job security.36
28. Van Parijs and Vanderborght acknowledge, however, that while Green parties in
Europe and the United States are generally supportive of basic income, the concept does not
draw strong support from socialist, Christian Democrat or liberal parties.37
29. Perhaps the principal promoter of the concept has been the Basic Income Earth
Network. This organization was founded in 1986 by researchers and trade unionists linked
to the Catholic University of Louvain, in Belgium. It was originally the Basic Income
European Network, but changed its name in 2004. It consists predominantly of scholars
based in Europe and the United States.
30. Strong support has also come from technology entrepreneurs. According to media
reports, the venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, the web guru Tim O’Reilly, and “a cadre of
other Silicon Valley denizens have expressed support for” basic income, calling it the
“social vaccine of the twenty-first century”.38 Sam Altman, the president of Y Combinator,
the largest start-up “accelerator” in Silicon Valley, is funding a basic income pilot scheme
in Oakland, California.39 He believes that “people should be as free as possible to get ‘as
rich as they … want’, so long as the people at the very bottom still have all their basic
needs met”.40 GiveDirectly, funded in part by Google, also seeks to finance basic income
experiments in East Africa.41 Comments made by many of these entrepreneurs suggest that
basic income is seen as a way to sustain and legitimize a world in which employment
opportunities will be drastically reduced and to reinforce consumer demand which would
be greatly weakened without a broad-based minimum redistribution of income.
D. Forms of basic income
31. While the present report has thus far addressed a more or less generic approach to
basic income, the reality is that there are a great many variations on the theme and that
trying to distinguish them from one another, and then from other social protection schemes,
is a major challenge. Following the analysis of David Piachaud, it is helpful to divide the
various proposals into four different types:42
(a) A bonus basic income is akin to a royalty scheme in which resource-based
dividends are distributed directly to citizens annually. Funding comes directly from an
external source, such as mineral royalties. Thus, the Alaska Permanent Fund annually
distributes dividends from investment earning on mineral royalties to people who have
lived in Alaska for at least a year and intend to remain there indefinitely. 43 Some
commentators consider this to be a poor example of basic income, because it is
35 Robert Reich, “Why we’ll need a universal basic income,” 29 September 2016. Available from
http://robertreich.org/post/151111696805.
36 Stern, Raising the Floor.
37 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, pp. 193-203.
38 Jathan Sadowski, “Why Silicon Valley is embracing universal basic income,” The Guardian.
Available from https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/jun/22/silicon-valley-universal-basic-
income-y-combinator.
39 Julie Carrie Wong, “‘Fund it, not run it’: big tech’s universal basic income project has its sceptics”,
The Guardian. Available from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jun/20/y-combinator-
oakland-universal-basic-income-pilot-project.
40 Chris Weller, “The inside story of one man’s mission to give Americans unconditional free money”,
Business Insider, 27 June 2016. Available from www.businessinsider.com/inside-y-combinators-
basic-income-project-2016-6.
41 “Launch a basic income” (GiveDirectly), available from www.givedirectly.org/basic-income.
42 Piachaud, “Citizen’s income: rights and wrongs”, pp. 1-4.
43 In 2016, the dividend was $1,022. Alaska Department of Revenue, Permanent Fund Dividend
Division, Summary of Dividend Applications and Payments. See http://pfd.alaska.gov/Division-
Info/Summary-of-Applications-and-Payments.
11
predistributive as opposed to redistributive, and involves a small sum and a fluctuating
level of payment.44
(b) A partial basic income is limited, such as to a particular group of recipients.
For example, the Netherlands and New Zealand both have universal basic pensions, under
which all persons above a certain age receive an income without means testing.45
(c) A supplemental basic income involves the introduction of a modest basic
income alongside the existing social security system. Some commentators do not
distinguish between partial and supplemental income. A Finnish pilot project, for example,
describes partial income as involving a level of benefit that is “substantially lower” and not
aiming to replace other current transfers “to the same extent as in full basic income”.46
Partial and supplemental basic income approaches can also overlap. The Finnish
pilot provides €560 over a two-year period (2017-2018) to some 1,500 randomly selected
individuals who are aged between 25 and 58 years and are already receiving a labour
market subsidy or basic unemployment allowance. 47 The payment is automatic,
unconditional and not means-tested. Consistent with Van Parijs’s approach, the basic
income payment substitutes only for existing benefits that are lower than it. 48 It can
therefore be cumulated with existing earnings-related benefits and housing allowances.
Thus, the Finnish model is partial in the sense that it has been targeted at a specific
recipient group on the basis of age and income, and it is supplemental in the sense that it
does not completely replace the existing social security system. The preliminary report
concluded that the deficiencies of the partial basic income are that it would not substantially
change the current system or reduce bureaucracy, it would not solve incentive problems
arising from a generous housing allowance, and it is a low amount, especially for single
parents.49
(d) A full basic income involves the characteristics set out above in part II,
section A — namely an income that is basic, individual, cash, regular, universal and
unconditional. Nowhere in the world has such a scheme yet been implemented.
One was considered in Finland, at a level of €1,000 per month, but concern was
expressed about “possible work disincentives, conflicts with earnings-related
unemployment security, political controversies, high costs, regional differences in housing
costs and possibly the lack of legitimacy”, with the level “too high for some groups and too
low for the others”.50
III. Similarities and differences with other schemes
A. Negative income tax
32. Negative income taxes, inspired by the work of Milton Friedman, ensure that
individuals who earn below a certain threshold receive payments from the government,
rather than having to pay taxes. It is similar to basic income in that every citizen is
automatically and unconditionally eligible, but it differs from the full basic income in that
benefits phase out as incomes rise. Amounts may also be adjusted for households.
44 Jurgen De Wispelaere, “Basic income in our time: improving political prospects through policy
learning?”, Journal of Social Policy, vol. 45, No. 4 (2016), pp. 622-626.
45 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, pp. 159 and 160.
46 “From idea to experiment: report on universal basic income experiment in Finland” (Kela, 2016), p.
24.
47 “Objectives and implementation of the basic income experiment” (Kela, modified 13 January 2017),
available from www.kela.fi/web/en/basic-income-objectives-and-implementation; and “Who can get
a basic income?” (Kela, modified 28 December 2016), available from www.kela.fi/web/en/basic-
income-who-can-get.
48 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, p. 12.
49 “From idea to experiment”, p. 37.
50 Ibid., p. 24.
12
B. Global basic income
33. The concept of a basic income on a global scale has attracted little scholarly
attention, but at least two organizations, the Global Basic Income Foundation and World
Basic Income, are promoting it.51 According to the latter, a global basic income would be a
“global scheme that gathers and redistributes money, in amounts ranging from a few dollars
to over $2,000 per month, depending on circumstances”. 52 The long-term goal is
redistribution of wealth and natural resources through “collective shareholdings in global
companies, international taxes such as a carbon tax or financial transaction tax, royalties on
goods like intellectual property or the extraction of natural resources, or fees for the use of
shared goods, such as charging airlines a fee for using our shared airspace”.53 The present
report does not seek to examine the feasibility or otherwise of such an approach.
C. The welfare state
34. All developed societies have welfare states in one or other of the three principal
forms. First, welfare for the poor in the form of non-contributory means-tested
programmes. Second, social insurance, social rights and social services, which include a
wide array of institutions from contributory pension and unemployment schemes to public
education and health insurance. Third, and the least familiar, is the role of the government
in the economy, through regulatory, fiscal, monetary and labour-market policies and “in
shaping markets, promoting growth, providing employment, and ensuring the welfare of
firms and families”. While some see these three conceptions as competing, David Garland
argues that none “of these three sectors can exist in that form without the others as
structural supports”.54
35. In comparing basic income schemes with the welfare state, it is important to note
that some of the proposed forms of basic income are intended to replace the welfare state,
while others complement it or only partly replace it. Charles Murray proposes a radical
form of basic income designed to replace the welfare state,55 and to eliminate “programmes
that are unambiguously transfers — Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, welfare
programmes, social service programmes, agricultural subsidies, and corporate welfare”, but
that would keep in place State-funded education.56 But others have argued that “a basic
income should not be understood as being, by definition, a full substitute for all existing
transfers, much less a substitute for the public funding of quality education, quality health
care, and other services”.57 This approach is supported by commentators for whom basic
income schemes “would not necessarily replace contributory benefits”.58 A Canadian study
proposes that a new basic income should come on top of 33 existing income support
programmes.59
36. Most of its proponents do not envision basic income directly replacing the third
conception of the welfare state, namely the role of the government in the economy. As far
as the second conception is concerned, many proponents appear to leave public education
and social services mostly untouched. Even Murray would leave State-funded education
and child protection services in place, although individuals would have to fund their own
51 See www.globalincome.org/English/English.html and http://worldbasicincome.weebly.com/.
52 “The basics”, available from http://worldbasicincome.weebly.com/the-basics.html.
53 “How we could fund a world basic income”, available from
http://worldbasicincome.weebly.com/finding-the-money.html.
54 David Garland, The Welfare State: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2016), p. 9.
55 Charles Murray, “A guaranteed income for every American”, Wall Street Journal, 3 June 2016.
56 Murray, “Guaranteed income as a replacement for the welfare state”, p. 4.
57 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, p. 12.
58 J.A. Noguera, “Basic income and contributory pensions”, in Karl Widerquist and others, eds., Basic
Income: An Anthology of Contemporary Research (Wiley and Sons, 2013), p. 347.
59 David Macdonald, “A policymaker’s guide to basic income” (Canadian Centre for Policy
Alternatives, 2016), p. 8.
13
health insurance.60 But most basic income proposals appear to want to replace, in whole or
in part, either the existing contributory social insurance schemes, or the non-contributory
social assistance measures for the poorer groups in society, or both.
37. As for similarities, some existing non-contributory programmes in developed
countries are already close to the concept of basic income. Many European countries, for
example, have universal child-benefit systems that transfer cash to parents with few, if any,
conditions attached and that are paid from public funds to all parents with children of a
certain age, even if benefit levels might vary according to the number of children or the
income of the parents.61 The main difference between basic income and such programmes
appears to be that the latter restrict payments to specific groups such as children or the
elderly.
38. However, many social insurance and social assistance programmes that are integral
parts of the welfare state differ in crucial respects from basic income. A study of 108
countries where child benefit or family benefit schemes were anchored in national
legislation found that only 49 of them had non-contributory schemes.62 And contributory
schemes generally only cover those in formal employment. They are therefore not
universal, and often impose conditions, such as actively searching for work or undergoing
medical tests. Moreover, they often go well beyond a floor, by compensating in part or in
full for lost earnings.63
D. Cash transfers
39. The past two decades have seen a dramatic increase in cash transfer programmes in
low- and middle-income countries, including conditional cash transfers and unconditional
cash transfers. 64 The World Bank, which strongly supports conditional cash transfers,
defines them as “periodic monetary benefits to poor households that require beneficiaries to
comply with specific behavioural requirements to encourage investments in human capital
(such as school attendance, immunization, and health check-ups)”.65 Unconditional cash
transfers have no such strings attached. The largest conditional cash transfer in the world is
Bolsa Família in Brazil, with more than 70 million beneficiaries, while the largest
unconditional cash transfer is Dibao in China, with about 75 million beneficiaries. 66
Conditional cash transfers have long been considered a hallmark of Latin American
countries. While African countries have focused more on unconditional cash transfers,
conditional cash transfers have expanded in Africa in recent years, albeit with relatively
“soft” conditions attached.67
40. To understand the differences and similarities between cash transfers and basic
income, it is helpful to look at the experience in particular countries. Mexico had one of the
first conditional cash transfer programmes, PROGRESA, which was introduced in 1997. It
was greatly expanded over time and was renamed Oportunidades. It is aimed at combating
intergenerational poverty and is targeted only at poor households. The conditions are that
children do not miss more than three days of school per month and that household members
attend a medical clinic once a month. Mexico also has unconditional cash transfers, such as
the Pensión Ciudadana Universal in Mexico City, a monthly electronic transfer to senior
citizens of at least half the minimum wage, with no conditionality other than age and
60 Murray, “Guaranteed income as a replacement for the welfare state”, p. 4.
61 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, pp. 158 and 159.
62 International Labour Office, World Social Protection Report 2014/15 (2014), p. 16.
63 Noguera, “Basic income and contributory pensions”, p. 347.
64 World Bank Group, The State of Social Safety Nets 2015 (Washington, D.C., 2015), pp. 1 and 8.
65 Ibid.
66 Ibid., p. 10.
67 Ibid, p. 9.
14
residency, and Setenta y Más, another unconditional cash transfer for people over 70 years
of age who reside in smaller localities.68
41. Another famous example is the Bolsa Família in Brazil — Latin America’s largest
conditional cash transfer programme — which was introduced in 2004, building on earlier,
smaller, cash transfer programmes. Indigent and poor families wanting to receive the cash
benefit are required to visit health clinics regularly and/or to meet minimum school
attendance requirements. Brazil also has unconditional cash transfer programmes, such as
the Benefício de Prestação Continuada, which is disbursed to the elderly and to individuals
with disabilities living in low-income households. The Bolsa Família was enacted the day
after another law that established a citizen’s income for every Brazilian citizen or foreigner
residing in the country for more than five years, regardless of their socioeconomic
condition. But the latter law was never implemented and is often confused by the public
with other existing minimum income programmes.69
42. Many African countries have unconditional cash transfers in the form of “social
pensions” provided to all citizens above a certain age, without prior conditions.70 A newer
phenomenon is the introduction of universal unconditional cash transfers in the context of
subsidy reform. In 2010, the Islamic Republic of Iran introduced a “cash subsidy” of
around $45 per month payable to all Iranians living in the country, to compensate for
subsidy reductions on gasoline, gas, water and electricity. 71 Similarly, Saudi Arabia is
currently introducing a “household allowance” — a cash transfer to the poor and the middle
classes (decreasing with income) to compensate for planned subsidy reforms.72
43. Unconditional cash transfers, although without strings attached, differ from basic
income schemes in several respects. First, they are generally paid to households73 and may
vary accordingly. Second, unconditional cash transfers often target the poor or other
categories such as children or the elderly. Third, the amount of the unconditional cash
transfers often differs, depending on the recipient’s situation.
44. While Van Parijs and Vanderborght claim that such programmes are “still a long
way from an unconditional basic income”,74 others have argued that experience with these
cash transfer schemes “gives empirical support to arguments in favour of a universal
unconditional basic income”,75 and that they offer guidance for the optimal design of basic
income schemes in high-income countries. 76 Still, whether these existing cash transfer
programmes are a stepping stone to full basic income schemes remains uncertain. Lavinas
has argued that the Bolsa Família is the “antithesis” of a citizen’s income and “cannot be
seen as a starting point toward a universal and unconditional income”.77
E. Social protection floors
45. Internationally, social protection floors have been promoted in the context of the
Social Protection Floor Initiative, launched in 2009.78 This initiative culminated in the 2011
68 Pablo Yanes, “Targeting and conditionalities in Mexico: the end of a cash transfer model?”, in R.L.
Vuolo, ed., Citizen’s Income and Welfare Regimes in Latin America (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), pp.
67-85.
69 Lena Lavinas, “Brazil: the lost road to citizen’s income”, in R.L. Vuolo, ed., Citizen’s Income and
Welfare Regimes in Latin America (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), pp. 34-42.
70 Guy Standing, “How cash transfers promote the case for basic income”, Basic Income Studies (April
2008), p. 19.
71 Hamid Tabatabai, “Iran: a bumpy road toward basic income”, in R.K. Caputo, ed., Basic Income
Guarantee and Politics (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), p. 285.
72 “Blow of higher utility bills softened for low-income Saudis”, Arab News, 24 December 2016.
73 Tabatabai, “Iran: a bumpy road”, pp. 293 and 294.
74 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, p. 69.
75 Standing, “How cash transfers promote the case for basic income”, p. 2.
76 Evelyn L. Forget, Alexander D. Peden and Stephenson B. Strobel, “Cash transfers, basic income and
community-building”, Social Inclusion, vol. 1, No. 2 (2013), p. 90.
77 Lena Lavinas, “Brazil: the lost road to citizen’s income”, p. 44.
78 See A/69/297.
15
report by the Social Protection Floor Advisory Group (the “Bachelet report”) and in the
Social Protection Floors Recommendation, 2012 (No. 202). And Sustainable Development
Goal 1 advocates “appropriate social protection systems and measures for all, including
floors”.
46. Under the Social Protection Floors Recommendation, 2012 (No. 202), States should
establish and maintain social protection floors ensuring that, at a minimum, “over the life
cycle, all in need have access to essential health care and to basic income security which
together secure effective access to goods and services defined as necessary at the national
level”. This comprises essential health care, including maternity care, and basic income
security for children, for active-age adults in cases of sickness, unemployment, maternity
and disability, and for older persons. These goals may be achieved through any of the
following schemes: universal benefit, social insurance, social assistance, negative income
tax, public employment and employment support.
47. Basic income is thus not at odds with social protection floors, with universality
being a key assumption of both. While basic income proponents have suggested that the
reference to “basic income security” in recommendation No. 202 is a much broader concept
than their idea of basic income, they see social protection floors as a “significant step
toward basic income by legitimizing the idea of basic income security as an essential
ingredient for human development”.79
IV. Basic income and poverty
48. A basic income could have vastly different effects, depending on the starting point.
In wealthier countries with more established social welfare systems, there is a greater risk
that replacing existing social support schemes would leave the poor worse off. But in a
country with only a minimal social support scheme in place, any regular, unconditional
transfers to the poor and marginalized would be a net positive in the absence of more
attractive alternative schemes such as a social protection floor. Despite the importance of
the current debate in India and the pilot projects in Kenya, most of the policy debate has
focused on developed countries and their specific needs and perspectives. If the concept is
to achieve broader uptake, the debate needs to be expanded and diversified.
49. Between 1974 and 1979, a negative income tax experiment ran in the Canadian city
of Dauphin. Subsequent analysis of the data confirmed various positive effects, including a
drop in hospitalization rates, especially for mental health and accident admissions, as well
as an increase in year 12 school registrations.80
50. In Canada, two basic income approaches have been the subject of macroeconomic
modelling: a full basic income for all Canadians, and a negative income tax under which
the richest receive nothing and the poorest receive the maximum income supplement.81
Neither payment is adjusted for age. In terms of poverty, the conclusion was that:82
Cancelling existing income transfer programmes in favour of a single basic income
results either in dramatically higher levels of poverty, or ethically and politically
unsupportable compromises where seniors are pushed into poverty to lift up adults
and children. The more acceptable and feasible approach would be to set up a new
basic income on top of the 33 transfers that already exist, thus creating only winners,
though the main beneficiaries would be middle-aged Canadians.
51. However, the negative income tax option would be problematic for 18- to 29-year-
olds and for senior women. The Canadian examples demonstrate the potentially positive
79 Ian Orton, “Opinion: The UN Social Protection Floor ‘Global Fund’: An entry point for the basic
income?”, 3 June 2013. Available from http://basicincome.org/news/2013/06/opinion-the-un-social-
protection-floor-global-fund-an-entry-point-for-the-basic-income/.
80 Evelyn L. Forget, “The town with no poverty: using health administration data to revisit outcomes of
a Canadian Guaranteed Annual Income field experiment” (University of Manitoba, February 2011).
81 Macdonald, “A policymaker’s guide to basic income”, p. 6.
82 Ibid., p. 8.
16
effects of negative income tax, but warn that a basic income model that replaces existing
social support mechanisms could have seriously negative effects on the poor.
V. Affordability
52. Basic income proponents have devoted relatively little attention to the biggest
question of all, which concerns affordability.83
53. The “floor” proposed by Van Parijs and Vanderborght is not “sufficient to cover
what would be regarded as basic needs”. Although clearly reluctant to put a figure on their
proposal, they suggest an amount of 25 per cent of current gross domestic product (GDP)
per capita, which is “modest enough [to be] sustainable and generous enough for it to be
plausible that it will make a big difference”. They calculate that this would have amounted
in 2015 to $1,163 per month in the United States, $1,670 in Switzerland and $9.50 in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. They do not claim that this level is high enough to get
every household out of poverty, although the United States figure would be higher than the
official poverty line. They also emphasize that if individuals currently receive benefits
higher than the basic income, it “must be topped up by conditional supplements” so that the
total disposable incomes of poor households are not lowered vis-à-vis their current levels.84
54. But how would these expenditures be paid for? Piachaud notes that a full basic
income that “replaces social security is far more costly than social security, and this has to
be paid for from higher taxes on all incomes with far-reaching economic consequences”.85
55. The Economist, relying upon the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development’s “universal basic income calculator”, concludes that the United States could
pay every citizen $6,300 per year if it scrapped all its non-health transfer payments.86 In
other words, if it paid its citizens 25 per cent of GDP per capita ($13,956 per year) as Van
Parijs and Vanderborght propose, it would need to raise taxes to cover the difference
between $13,956 and $6,300. The Cato Institute calculated that paying 296 million United
States citizens the poverty-line amount of $12,316 per year would cost $4.4 trillion. Even if
all federal and state social assistance spending for the poor (around $1 trillion) and all
“middle-class social welfare programmes such as Social Security and Medicare”
(depending on the calculations, costing between $2.13 and $2.5 trillion) were eliminated,
there would still be a funding gap of roughly $1 trillion.87
56. Cost calculations for Canada are also revealing. If existing Canadian “de facto”
basic income programmes (such as Canada Child Benefit for children, the Guaranteed
Income Supplement for the elderly and sales tax credits for working adults), quasi-basic
income programmes, earned income tax credits, social assistance and employment
insurance were all cancelled, the savings could support a basic income for all Canadians
(depending on which programmes were scrapped) of between Can$ 2,655 and Can$ 3,565
per year, with between roughly 1.7 and 1.9 million Canadians falling below the poverty
line. Under a scenario in which all existing programmes were kept in place and a
supplemental universal basic income was paid to all Canadians of Can$ 1,000 per year,
719,000 Canadians would be taken out of poverty, but at a net cost of Can$ 29.2 billion
(equalling Can$ 40,886 per person). To pay for this, the Canadian rate of value added tax
would have to be increased from 5 per cent to 9 per cent or income taxes would have to be
increased by 20 per cent.88
83 See Jennifer Mays and Greg Marston, “Reimagining equity and egalitarianism: the basic income
debate in Australia”, Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, vol. 43, No. 3 (September 2016), p.
17; Aaron Major, “Affording Utopia: the economic viability of ‘a capitalist road to communism’”,
Basic Income Studies, vol. 11, No. 2 (2016), p. 75; “Sighing for paradise to come”, The Economist, 4
June 2016; and “The case for free money”, The New Yorker, 20 June 2016.
84 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, pp. 10-12.
85 Piachaud, “Citizen’s income: rights and wrongs”.
86 “Universal basic income in the OECD”, The Economist, 3 June 2016.
87 Tanner, p. 15.
88 Macdonald, “A policymaker’s guide to basic income”, pp. 19-21.
17
57. Finally, a simulation for the region of Catalonia, in Spain, suggests that a basic
annual income of €7,968 for those aged over 18 and of €1,594 for minors would require a
49.57 per cent flat tax rate and extra financing of €7 billion.89
58. Van Parijs and Vanderborght admit that a universal basic income at 25 per cent of
GDP per capita would result in “far higher rates of taxation because of the need to keep
funding other public expenditures”. They then proceed to point to some (relatively small-
scale) basic income experiments, negative income tax experiments and econometric
models, none of which provides a clear answer on affordability. After discussing alternative
financing models, such as taxes on capital, nature, money and consumption, they conclude
that “none of these alternative sources offers a panacea, or any robust assurance that a
generous basic income is economically sustainable, or any reason to believe that, in the
short run at any rate, we can dispense with the income tax”.90 That leads them to explore
alternatives to their core idea of a universal basic income — including a categorical basic
income, a household basic income and tax surcharge, and their preferred alternative, a
partial basic income: “one that makes no claim to being sufficient to live on if one lives
alone”.91
VI. Conclusion
59. The most committed proponents of basic income proclaim their approach to be
utopian,92 not in the sense of being unrealistic or unachievable, but as providing a
highly ambitious, sweeping, and progressive vision. Critics or sceptics who raise
objections based on unaffordability, the unacceptability of unconditionality or the
unrealistic change in mentality required will often be dismissed as unimaginative
defenders of an obviously unsatisfactory status quo.93
60. But these contrasting views accurately reflect the conclusion that emerges from
a comprehensive survey of the many different utopias the world has known, which is
that “utopias are essential but potentially dangerous”.94 In this case, the danger is that
the single-minded pursuit of basic income as a magic bullet, capable of resolving many
deeply troubling challenges, will distract attention from the deeper underlying
complexities and values. But the utopian vision may also provide the much-needed
impetus to rethink the optimal shape of social protection explicitly designed to achieve
universal realization of the human right to an adequate standard of living in the
twenty-first century. At a comparable watershed moment, Lord Beveridge introduced
his 1943 report that laid the groundwork for the British welfare state by insisting that
a “revolutionary moment in the world’s history is a time for revolutions, not for
patching”.95
61. Thus, the basic income concept should not be rejected out of hand on the
grounds that it is utopian. Policymakers at the national and international levels need
to develop the sort of creativity in social policy that is capable of matching and
responding to the technological innovations and other developments that have
brought us to this crossroads. Despite the magnitude of the challenge and the
breathtaking scope of the proposed solution, there is an option, which Van Parijs
seems to have subtly embraced, to move in an incremental fashion towards the overall
89 Jordi Arcarons, Daniel Raventos Pañella and Lluís Torrens Mèlich, “Feasibility of financing a basic
income”, Basic Income Studies, vol. 9, No. 1-2 (2014), pp. 79-93.
90 Van Parijs and Vanderborght, Basic Income, p. 137.
91 Ibid., p. 165.
92 Ibid., pp. 245-247; and Bregman, Utopia for Realists.
93 For an excellent overview of the practical and principled objections, see Piachaud, “Citizen’s income:
rights and wrongs”.
94 Lyman Tower Sargent, Utopianism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2010), p.
127.
95 Beveridge report, para. 7.
18
goal. As Anthony Atkinson has observed, inspired by Amartya Sen’s work, “the aim is
progressive reform rather than transcendental optimality”.96
62. The most prominent path chosen to date has focused on respect for labour
rights.97 But significant questions arise as to whether the tools used to tackle economic
insecurity in that context have been, or are likely to be, effective in responding to the
emerging conditions in the global labour market. For example, in its general comment
No. 18 (2005) on the right to work, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights calls on States “to reduce to the fullest extent possible the number of workers
outside the formal economy”, “to ensure that privatization measures do not
undermine workers’ rights”, and to ensure that enhanced labour market flexibility
does “not render work less stable or reduce the social protection of the worker”. All of
these important objectives are grounded in human rights law, but the question is how
best to respond to the reality that the trends in most industries seem to be heading
rapidly in the opposite direction.
63. Similarly, an ILO report entitled Decent Work in Global Supply Chains
responded to the “negative implications for working conditions” of “the dynamics of
production and employment relations within the global economy” by proposing a
series of steps such as promoting international labour standards, closing governance
gaps and promoting inclusive and effective social dialogue. 98 Unsurprisingly, after
lengthy debate on the report, the 2016 International Labour Conference expressed its
“concern that current ILO standards may not be fit for purpose to achieve decent
work in global supply chains”.99
64. It does not follow from the gap between theory and practice that labour rights
should be compromised, let alone abandoned, but it does highlight the fact that
traditional approaches might not have much traction in the face of the systematic
weakening of labour market institutions, the dramatic increase in more flexible
working conditions, and the greatly increased insecurity, including the loss of non-
wage benefits, for those who remain employed.100
65. This is where the basic income debate comes in. A focus on social protection
more broadly defined might be a more propitious entry point to tackle these issues.
Governments remain centrally responsible for ensuring appropriate levels of social
protection within their borders, they have a self-interest in promoting stability and
economic security, and they control the resources needed.
66. One of the biggest challenges in relation to basic income is to move beyond its
chameleon-like character. There are many versions of it, and each is supported by a
diverse array of actors, precisely because they see different attractions in the concept.
To assess the utility and acceptability of basic income from a human rights
perspective, it is helpful to identify the main categories of motivation.
(a) Discouraging laziness and incentivizing work;
(b) Efficiency, in terms of avoiding welfare fraud, duplicative programmes,
double-dipping, and bloated bureaucracies. As one commentator rejoiced: “we get to
fire a couple of million bureaucrats”;101
(c) Adaptation to technological advances, both in terms of compensating for
vast numbers of jobs lost in an age of automation and robotization and to ensure some
96 Anthony B. Atkinson, Inequality: What Can Be Done? (Harvard University Press, 2015), p. 236; and
Amartya Sen, The Idea of Justice (Harvard University Press, 2009).
97 For an important analysis of the challenges to labour rights in the context of economic reform and
austerity measures, see A/HRC/34/57.
98 “Decent work in global supply chains”, report IV, International Labour Conference, 105th session
(2016).
99 Resolution concerning decent work in global supply chains, adopted on 10 June 2016, para. 25.
100 Tim Vlandas and Daphne Halikiopoulou, “Why far-right parties do well at times of crisis: the role of
labour market institutions”, European Trade Union Institute working paper 2016.07, p. 5.
101 Tim Worstall, “Krugman’s argument in favour of a universal basic income”, Forbes, 5 May 2015.
19
basic redistribution of wealth in an era characterized by exponential growth in the
wealth of technology entrepreneurs;
(d) The right to work, either in the sense of promoting full employment for
the community or of the individual being able to choose satisfying work;
(e) Freedom, in the sense of the ability to make career and related choices,
or the ability to exercise political rights because of a degree of economic security;
(f) Fairness and social justice.
67. All of these motivations are persuasive on their own terms, but unless they are
integrally linked to the last category the likelihood is that what will emerge will be
another strategy designed to promote productivity and efficiency, but without concern
for the far more fundamental goals.
68. How then should human rights actors and institutions respond to the crisis of
economic insecurity and the phenomena associated with it? And where might a
campaign to achieve a basic income fit into the overall equation?
69. The starting point is to acknowledge that economic insecurity represents a
fundamental threat to human rights. It is not only a threat to the enjoyment of
economic and social rights, even though they are a principal concern. Extreme
inequality, rapidly increasing insecurity, and the domination of politics by economic
elites in many countries, all threaten to undermine support for, and ultimately the
viability of, the democratic systems of governance upon which the human rights
framework depends.102
70. Second, the right to work, the right to social security, and above all the right to
an adequate standard of living need to be given a prominent place on the human
rights community’s agenda. If these rights are marginalized, the overall agenda will
become increasingly less relevant to the most pressing and urgent questions of the day.
71. Third, contrary to the orthodoxy promoted by economic institutions and
corporate actors in recent years, there needs to be a resurgence of support for the
central role of the State, and recognition of the importance of fair and progressive
fiscal policies, and of the indispensability of policies to ensure redistributive justice.
72. Fourth, the implications for gender equality from growing economic insecurity
are almost unremittingly negative. It remains true that “the average woman’s career
remains shorter, more disrupted and less remunerative than the average man’s”,103
and the consequences flow through into social security and related arrangements.
Proponents of women’s human rights need to become more involved in debates over
social protection and basic income.
73. Fifth, proponents of a basic income need to ensure that particular schemes to
implement the concept are not narrowly linked to citizenship at the expense of all
others who are part of the community.
74. Sixth, and most important, the debates over social protection floors and basic
income need to be brought together. They have thus far been kept largely separate, in
a counterproductive and ultimately self-defeating way. It is true that there are points
of divergence between the two concepts, but they have vastly more potential if their
synergies are recognized, rather than being ignored. Among the differences are the
following: (a) the social protection floor mostly draws on experience in developing
countries,104 while basic income advocates tend to emphasize developed countries; (b)
social protection floors aim to guarantee both income security and access to essential
102 Ganesh Sitaraman, The Crisis of the Middle-Class Constitution: Why Economic Inequality Threatens
Our Republic (Knopf, 2017).
103 Anne L. Alstott, “Good for women: a response to ‘A basic income for all’ by Philippe van Parijs”,
Boston Review (2000). Available from http://bostonreview.net/archives/BR25.5/alstott.html.
104 International Labour Office, Social Protection Floor for a Fair and Inclusive Globalization: Report of
the Social Protection Floor Advisory Group (2011), p. xxii.
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social services, while basic income schemes only guarantee income; (c) the concept of
basic income security is broader than basic income cash transfers, since it also
includes in-kind transfers; (d) social protection floors focus not only on achieving
social guarantees for all, but also on gradually implementing higher standards; (e)
social protection floors are not viewed as alternatives to social insurance
institutions, 105 while some basic income proponents aim to replace existing social
insurance institutions; and (f) the Social Protection Floors Recommendation, 2012
(No. 202) is premised upon human rights, unlike most basic income schemes. But the
proponents of the two approaches have an immense amount in common, and if it is
recognized that basic income is not an idea that can be achieved in a single leap, there
could be no better and more elaborate and widely supported programme than that for
the social protection floor.
105 Ibid., p. xxviii.