Kuwait Times

Jobless dad-of-six welcomes Finland’s basic income trial

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HELSINKI: For just one hour of work, Juha Jarvinen had to fill out piles of paperwork only to see his unemployme­nt insurance docked. But with Finland’s universal basic income test, he’s hoping for a fresh start. As of Jan 1, a two-year experiment will see 2,000 unemployed Finns receive a monthly unconditio­nal payment of 560 Euros ($590). If the test is successful, the plan will be rolled out nationwide, though the exact amount and conditions remain vague at this stage. Finland’s pro-austerity, centre-right government wants to test whether the guaranteed income, perhaps somewhat counter intuitivel­y, spurs the jobless to get off the couch and find work.

Jarvinen, a 37-year-old father of six, will receive the money no strings attached, in addition to his monthly child allowance benefits of 800 Euros. The big difference compared to unemployme­nt insurance is that if he finds a job he is free to earn as much money as he can, and it won’t affect his universal basic income. The Finnish Social Insurance Institutio­n (KELA) insists none of the test participan­ts will lose out financiall­y during the experiment. Jarvinen is enthusiast­ic, convinced the guaranteed income will be a game-changer.

“Five years ago my business went bankrupt and ever since I’ve wanted to become an entreprene­ur again,” he said. But each time he was tempted to take odd jobs to make a little extra cash, there was no incentive for him to work since his unemployme­nt insurance would have been reduced by the same amount. Describing the period after his bankruptcy as a “humiliatio­n”, Jarvinen ended up turning down small jobs, holding out instead for a full-time job with a proper salary. His family has had to scrape by with his wife’s salary from her nursing job, his modest unemployme­nt benefits, and their child allowance benefits.

But they’ve had to do without extras, in a country home to one of the most generous cradle-to-grave welfare states but where the cost of living is high. Designed as an incentive to help the unemployed get a foot back in the labor market, the universal basic income experiment has received broad backing across Finland’s political spectrum. The public is however more divided. Left-wing voters support the idea-some even say the amount is too low-while those on the right see a risk of complacenc­y.

The national confederat­ion of employee unions, SAK, says it fears a sale on labor. “We’re not in favor of labor markets where decent wages are not paid and employees’ living is partly financed by social security. In practice, that’d be a subsidy to the companies,” SAK chairman Jarkko Eloranta says. Euro zone member Finland is slowly recovering from a three-year recession that ended in 2015, but its unemployme­nt rate is still relatively high at 8.7 percent and, more worryingly, every third unemployed person has been out of work for over a year. — AFP

 ??  ?? HELSINKI: This file photo shows a client entering the Employment Agency in Helsinki, Finland. — AFP
HELSINKI: This file photo shows a client entering the Employment Agency in Helsinki, Finland. — AFP

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