The Palm Beach Post

Finns to try ‘basic income’ plan

Advocates say it will boost employment, not sap will to work.

- Peter S. Goodman

OULU, FINLAND — No one would confuse this frigid corner of northern Finland with Silicon Valley. Notched in low pine forests just 100 miles below the Arctic Circle, Oulu seems more likely to achieve dominance at herding reindeer than at nurturing technology startups.

But this city has roots as a hub for wireless communicat­ions, and keen aspiration­s in innovation. It also has thousands of skilled engineers in need of work. Many were laid off by Nokia, the Finnish company once synonymous with mobile telephones and more recently at risk of fading into oblivion.

While entreprene­urs are eager to put these people to work, the rules of Finland’s generous social safety net effectivel­y discourage this. Jobless people generally cannot earn additional income while collecting unemployme­nt benefits or they risk losing that assistance. For laid-off workers from Nokia, simply collecting a guaranteed unemployme­nt check often presents a better financial propositio­n than taking a leap with a startup in Finland, where a shaky technology industry is trying to find its footing again.

Now, the Finnish government is exploring how to change that calculus, initiating an experiment in a form of social welfare: universal basic income. Early next year, the government plans to randomly selec t roughly 2,000 unemployed people — from white-collar coders to blue-collar construc tion workers. It will give them benefits automatica­lly, absent bureaucrat­ic hassle and minus penalties for amassing extra income.

The government is eager to see what happens next. Will more people pursue jobs or start businesses? How many will stop working and squander their money on vodka? Will those liberated from the time-sucking entangleme­nts of the unemployme­nt system use their freedom to gain education, setting themselves up for promising new careers? These areas of inquiry extend beyond economic policy, into the realm of human nature.

The answers — to be determined over a two-year trial — could shape social welfare policy far beyond Nordic terrain. In communitie­s around the world, officials are exploring basic income as a way to lessen the vulnerabil­ities of working people exposed to the vagaries of global trade and automation. While basic income is still an emerging idea, the growing experiment­ation underscore­s the deep need to find effective means to alleviate the perils of globalizat­ion.

The search has gained an extraordin­ary sense of urgency as a wave of reactionar­y populism sweeps the globe, casting the elite establishm­ent as the main beneficiar­y of economic forces that have hurt the working masses. Americans’ election of Donald Trump, who has vowed to radically constrain trade, and the stunning vote in Britain to abandon the European Union, have resounded as emerg e n c y s i r e n s f o r g l o b a l leaders. They must either update capitalism to share the spoils more equitably, or risk watching angry mobs dismantle the institutio­ns that have underpinne­d economic policy since the end of World War II.

Universal basic income is a catchall phrase that describes a range of proposals, but they generally share one feature: All people in society get a regular check from the government — regardless of their income or whether they work. These funds are supposed to guarantee food and shelter, enabling people to pursue their own better- ment while contributi­ng to society.

A Silicon Valley startup incubator, Y Combinator, is preparing a pilot project in Oakland, Calif., in which 100 families will receive unconditio­nal cash grants ranging from $1,000 to $2,000 a month. Voters in Switzerlan­d recently rejected a basic-income scheme, but the French Senate approved a trial. Experiment­s are being readied in Canada and the Netherland­s. The Indian government has been studying basic income as a means of alleviatin­g poverty.

“The last two years, there’s been an explosion of interest in basic income,” says Guy Standing, a research associate with the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, and a co-founder of the Basic Income Earth Network, an institutio­n created to promote the idea. “The elites realize that the inequaliti­es are becoming politicall­y dangerous.”

A fundamenta­l shift

Fo r g e n e r a t i o n s , p o l - i c y ma k e r s h a v e s o u g h t the magic formula for full employment, with nearly everyone who wants a job able to find one. Traditiona­l unemployme­nt insurance schemes were devised in an age when the cyclical nature of factory life was dominant. Workers who were idled in lean times could pay their bills using unemployme­nt benefits while awaiting the inevitable return of flush ones.

Universal basic income is gaining considerat­ion in part as an acknowledg­ment that the labor market has changed so fundamenta­lly that full employment may amount to a fantasy. Factories have been refashione­d into urban-chic office spaces. Robots are replacing workers, while the gig economy turns full-time jobs into contract positions.

Basic income is intended to be permanent, built for an age in which demand for labor may be perpetuall­y slack. Whatever happens — say everyone becomes a part-time Uber driver, or Uber drivers are replaced by self-driving cars — everyone can count on sustenance.

Strikingly, basic income is being championed across the ideologica­l spectrum.

Utopian dreamers envision it as an emancipati­on from the meaningles­sness of low-wage work. People stuck in dead-end jobs at fast-food restaurant­s could abandon laboring over the fryolator in favor of growing organic vegetables and reading to their children.

Labor advocates embrace basic income as a means of increasing bargaining power, enabling workers to eschew poverty-level wages while holding out for better.

Liber t arians see it as a means of shr i nki ng government by consolidat­ing social service programs. Liberals envision it as a way to remove the stigma of public assistance.

The te c hnol o g y worl d has seized on basic income as the response to automation and its threat of joblessnes­s. If everyone’s needs are being met, then society can embrace robots and liberation from drudge work.

Yet the expensive price tag attached to anything that is truly universal makes it a political non-starter in many countries — especially in the United States, where Trump just appointed a labor secretary who is critical of simply raising the minimum wage.

If every American were to receive just $10,000 a year, the tab would be roughly $3 trillion a year, roughly eight times what the United States now spends on social service programs. The government might just as well commit to handing out unicorns.

Beyond arithmetic, basic income confronts fundamenta­l disagreeme­nts about human reality. If people are released from fears that — absent work — they risk finding themselves sleeping outdoors, will they devolve into freeloader­s?

“Some people think basic i n c o me wi l l s o l ve e ve r y pro bl e m under t he s un, and some people think it’s from the hand of Satan and will destroy our work ethic,” says Olli Kangas, who oversees research at Kela, a Finnish government agency that administer­s many social welfare programs. “I’m hoping we can create some knowledge on this issue.”

The safety net stifles

Half a millennium ago, T h o mas More ’s s e mi n a l novel, “Utopia,” included the suggestion that public assistance might be a better way to deter thieves than a death sentence. More than two centuries later, American revolution­ary agitator Thomas Paine proposed creating a national pool of money distribute­d to every adult.

The Rev. Martin Luther Ki n g Jr. p ro mote d b a s i c i nc o me. The l i b e r t a r i a n e c onomi s t Mil t on Fr i e dman embraced a variant: negative income taxes that would put cash in the pockets of the poor.

Yet with the exception of a few experiment­s, basic income has been confined to the margins of policy conversati­ons.

Until now.

Finland’s concerns are pragmatic. The government has no interest in freeing wage earners to write poetry. It is eager to generate more jobs.

The global financial crisis and its aftermath played out against a wrenching economic refashioni­ng here. The growth of tablets and s mar t p h o n e s a s s a i l e d a major industry, commercial paper manufactur­ing. A crisis in neighborin­g Russia diminished trade. Over the past decade, Finland’s economy has grown not at all.

For workers, the shock has been cushioned by a comprehens­ive social welfare system. In the five years after suffering a job loss, a Finnish family of four that is eligible for housing assistance receives average benefits equal to 73 percent of previous wages, according to data from the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t. That is nearly triple the level in the United States.

But the social safety net also appears to be impeding the reinvigora­tion of the economy by discouragi­ng unemployed people from working part-time.

“It always should be worth taking the job rather than staying home and taking the benefits,” says Pirkko Mattila, Finland’s minister for social affairs and health. “We have to take the risk to do this experiment.”

Ou l u , a c i t y o f n e a r l y 200,000 people on the Nordic Sea, stands as a potentiall­y fertile testing ground.

In centuries past, inhabitant­s occupied themselves shipping salmon and t ar upriver to Russia while trying not to freeze to death. More recently, the city has evolved into a center for wireless communicat­ions.

Three years ago, Microsoft purchased Nokia’s handset business, raising local hopes of a revival. But last year, Microsoft went on to shutter the operation. Local Nokia jobs have been halved, falling to 2,500 from 5,000. Oulu’s unemployme­nt rate now sits above 16 percent, more than double the national average.

City leaders portray this as an opportunit­y to start over, describing a future centered on companies like Asmo Solutions.

With its office in a first- story walk-up, the company checks the boxes for requisite elements of a modern startup. Coders stare i n t o l a p t o p s whi l e l e a n - ing against beanbag chairs arrayed across red shag carpeting. The founder, Asmo Saloranta, 35, wears a silver hoop earring, his blond hair pulled back into a ponytail. He used to be chief executive; now he is chief visionary. He has designed a phone charger that draws power only when a phone is connected.

Oulu is an ideal place to start a technology business, he says: “There are highly talented tech people.”

Activating the jobless

But hiring them is maddeningl­y complicate­d.

Saloranta has his eyes on a former Nokia employee who is masterly at developing prototypes. He only needs him part time. He could pay 2,000 euros a month (about $2,090). Yet this potential hire is bringing home more than that via his unemployme­nt benefits.

“It’s more profitable for him to just wait at home for some ideal job,” Saloranta complains.

Basic income would fix this, he says: “It would activate many more unemployed people.”

This is a part of the debate t h a t o f t e n g e t s mi s s e d . Monthly checks for everyone may look like socialism, but proponents advance it as a way to invigorate capitalism.

From Italy to India, companies that would like to leave behind unprofitab­le enterprise­s in favor of fresh pursuits hold back because of the expense and reputation­al damage of firing people. Basic income could be the tool that makes restructur­ing palatable.

Wi t h b a s i c i n c o me i n place, companies might be more inclined to take a risk on hiring more aggressive­ly — adding vigor to the local economy — knowing they have the freedom to be ruthless in cutting loose those workers who prove disappoint­ing.

“It does make it easier to have labor flexibilit­y,” says Karl Widerquist, a philosophe­r at Georgetown University in Qatar, and a leading advocate for basic income. “I know that if I have to close down this operation, everyone is going to be OK.”

P e o p l e wh o l o s e j o b s would do well to gain training in modern trades. On this point, economists universall­y concur. Yet in many countries, social welfare systems are so laden with rules that jobless people tend to acquire just one skill: They gain savvy in navigating the bureaucrac­y.

T h i s d e p e n d e n c y i s a key justificat­ion for basic income. If people receive money without having to endure appointmen­ts with government bureaucrat­s, they will have time for more productive exploits.

“Basic income is kind of a symbol that we believe in your capacity and we think that you are actually able to do things which are beneficial to you, and also for your community,” says Heikki Hiilamo, a professor of social policy at Helsinki University. “It’s built on a kind of a positive view of human beings. People want to be autonomous. They want to improve their well-being.”

Wanting to work

Ja a na Matil a has t hree degrees in computing and an obsessive interest in software, and intense aspiration­s to forge a career in the Oulu technology scene.

What she does not have — has never had — is a fulltime job.

At 29, she has completed three unpaid internship­s. Her last stint ended when her employer folded.

She teaches adults to swim. She catches freelance jobs, recently designing a website for a hair salon. Mostly, she lives on unemployme­nt benefits — 700 euros a month (about $732).

Matila would like to do more freelance work, but she lives in fear of derailing her unemployme­nt benefits. She is supposed to fill out forms that account for every bit of income while providing pay stubs, bank documents and work contracts. This year, she failed to secure a receipt for the swim lessons. While she tracked one down, she lost her benefits for a month.

“I h a d t o a s k my b oyfriend, ‘Can you give me some monthly money so I can buy some food?’” she says. “It’s really frustratin­g.”

She thinks about starting a website. Mostly, though, she goes for walks through the forest with her dog. She frets that she is falling behind in skills as technology advances.

“People in a disadvanta­ged position, they use a major part of their cognitive ability worrying about their lives, worrying about where they will get their next meal,” says Mikko Annala, a researcher at Demos Helsinki, a think tank. “What if we have this potential there that is continuous­ly worrying about life, about making it? What if we can get that into use by giving them something?”

The most compelling argument against basic income is the most obvious: If everyone gets money without a requiremen­t to do anything, humans may become morally depraved slackers.

Jari Viljala finds this notion ridiculous.

An electricia­n by trade, Viljala is accustomed to braving Arctic blasts of wind in minus-35-degree temperatur­es while threading wires into the spines of new housing complexes. He has left his wife and two daughters behind for as long as eight months at a time to venture north for constructi­on projects.

His gaze intense, his arms covered in tattoos, he takes pride in his reputation as the guy who will do anything.

“The dirtiest, trickiest job that no one else wanted to do,” he says, “I have always volunteere­d.”

But since the summer, Viljala has been out of work. His 3,300 euros in monthly wages (about $3,450) have g i v e n way t o 6 5 0 e u r o s (about $680) in monthly unemployme­nt benefits.

He needs money for new brakes on his 11-year-old Ford sedan, which failed inspection. Without a car, he cannot get to what work he may secure. He also needs money to get current on the rent, having fallen more than two months behind.

At 3 6 , h e i s w i r y a n d strong. He could earn additional cash on the side. But the unemployme­nt rules say otherwise.

So he stays home and does what he can — making dinner for his girls, doing the laundry. He rides the bus through the gray dawn to the unemployme­nt office.

He waits and he worries. He wonders how it makes any sense that an able-bodied man with every compulsion to work must stay idle to ensure that he can support his family.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JANNE KORKKO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Entreprene­urs in Oulu, Finland, work last month at Creative Laboratory, a communal office space. Oulu has a wealth of laid-off tech workers and an unemployme­nt rate of 16 percent.
PHOTOS BY JANNE KORKKO / THE NEW YORK TIMES Entreprene­urs in Oulu, Finland, work last month at Creative Laboratory, a communal office space. Oulu has a wealth of laid-off tech workers and an unemployme­nt rate of 16 percent.
 ??  ?? Jaana Matila, 29, an unemployed coder with three computing degrees, is seen at home last month in her Oulu home with her dog.
Jaana Matila, 29, an unemployed coder with three computing degrees, is seen at home last month in her Oulu home with her dog.

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