Toronto Star

NO It will change society as medicare did

- EVELYN L. FORGET

Basic income, in Canada, has come to mean an income-tested benefit — a guaranteed income close to the poverty line for those with no other income and a reduced benefit for low-income workers.

Basic income does not replace public services like health care and supports for people with disabiliti­es. It streamline­s and enhances cash transfers.

The benefits of basic income have been documented in multiple studies. Mental and physical health improves. People invest in education. There is no evidence that overall work effort declines when a basic income is offered and some evidence that basic income helps people move from precarious work to long-term employment.

Studies remind us that when low-income people have money, they spend it in local communitie­s and create jobs for their neighbours and families, which jumpstarts recovery from pandemic-induced job losses. Basic income allows people to stand up for their rights as workers and tenants without fear of retributio­n.

Ironically, the strongest arguments in support of basic income appear in a recent report of the B.C. Basic Income Panel that recommends targeted basic incomes for people with disabiliti­es, survivors of domestic violence and kids aging out of foster care but stops short of recommendi­ng a basic income for everyone now living in poverty.

There are no fewer than 194 uncoordina­ted programs offered by federal, provincial and municipal authoritie­s that offer support, in cash and in kind, to low-income people in B.C. alone — and B.C. is not unique.

Programs have different entry points, eligibilit­y requiremen­ts and regulation­s designed by “experts” who believe they know best, requiring desperate people to navigate complex bureaucrac­ies.

Consequent­ly, many people do not receive the benefits to which they are entitled. This system is so ineffectiv­e that tent cities and food banks proliferat­e and we treat the consequenc­es of poverty in our emergency department­s and jails.

The promise of ever more “wraparound care,” coupled with administra­tive tweaks, must send shivers up the spines of people who know that public services rarely meet their needs — Indigenous mothers with kids in care, Black youths encounteri­ng racism at school, women incarcerat­ed for poverty-related crimes and trans and racialized people deprived of culturally appropriat­e medical care.

The more distant someone is from mainstream culture, the more they need money to address their unique needs in their own way and the more problemati­c the advice of “experts” becomes.

Indigenous people have been victimized by coercive and ineffectiv­e bureaucrac­ies for generation­s and consequent­ly, the Report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women recommends a basic income for all Canadians. Basic income was the first call of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Critics point to the implementa­tion challenges of basic income, but the recent CERB delivered a responsive benefit quickly, respectful­ly and efficientl­y by relying on individual income reports and verifying afterwards. The glitches in rollout occurred because applicants required $5,000 of (poorly defined) income in the previous 12 months.

A basic income would not be conditiona­l on past earnings and defining income is surely within the capacity of policy-makers. Up-to-date tax returns are not required and people without internet access can reach administra­tors directly.

Critics exaggerate the costs of a basic income by breathless­ly telling us how much it would cost to send a cheque to everyone, rich or poor, each month — an approach virtually no one advocates — but costing exercises on well-designed programs show much lower costs.

Taxpayers are already paying for the hundreds of failing programs; is it too much to ask that their contributi­ons be spent effectivel­y?

Basic income requires federal leadership, but Canada has a long tradition of allowing provinces to opt out, with compensati­on, to establish their own programs as long as they meet federal standards.

A half century ago, ordinary Canadians of diverse background­s came together to challenge entrenched interests and the status quo; they demanded universal health care, which transforme­d our society forever. As Tommy Douglas reminded us, “it’s not too late to build a better world.”

Evelyn L. Forget is an economist, professor at the University of Manitoba and author of “Basic Income for Canadians: From the COVID-19 Emergency to Financial Security for All.”

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