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Is a Citizen’s Income Behaviourally Feasible?

In: The Feasibility of Citizen's Income

Author

Listed:
  • Malcolm Torry

Abstract

This feasibility test requires households’ situations to improve after implementation, which they would in relation to the secure financial floor that a Citizen’s Income would create, the loss of bureaucratic intrusion into intimate relationships and household activity, the greater ability to turn increased earned income into increased disposable income, an increasing range of options in the labour market, a reduction in administrative complexity, increased social cohesion, and so on. A problem is that the test can only be applied after a Citizen’s Income scheme’s implementation. Evidence from natural and constructed experiments suggests that the test would be passed. If implementation were to be one age group at a time, then behavioural feasibility tested after one implementation could generate the psychological feasibility required for the next.

Suggested Citation

  • Malcolm Torry, 2016. "Is a Citizen’s Income Behaviourally Feasible?," Exploring the Basic Income Guarantee, in: The Feasibility of Citizen's Income, chapter 0, pages 143-166, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:etbchp:978-1-137-53078-3_7
    DOI: 10.1057/978-1-137-53078-3_7
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    Cited by:

    1. Chrisp, Joe & Garcia-Lazaro, Aida & Pearce, Nick, 2023. "Technological chance and growth regimes: Assessing the case for universal basic income in an era declining labour shares," FRIBIS Discussion Paper Series 01-2023, University of Freiburg, Freiburg Institute for Basic Income Studies (FRIBIS).
    2. Martinelli, Luke & O'Neill, Kathryn, 2019. "A comparison of the fiscal and distributional effects of alternative basic income implementation modes across the EU28," EUROMOD Working Papers EM14/19, EUROMOD at the Institute for Social and Economic Research.

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