The Mercury

Finland examines universal basic income plan

- Leonid Bershidsky

FINLAND could become the first country to introduce a universal basic income. An official at the Finnish Social Insurance Institutio­n (Kela), said last week that each Finn could receive €800 (R12 124) a month, tax free, that would replace existing benefits.

Full implementa­tion would be preceded by a pilot stage, during which the basic income payout would be €550 and some benefits would remain.

Kela will present a proposal by November 2016, but for now the idea sounds unrealisti­c. Finland has one of the EU’s shakier economies. It has been in recession almost continuall­y since mid-2012 and lacks growth opportunit­ies.

The traditiona­lly strong pulp and paper industry is in decline and the tech sector hasn’t lived up to expectatio­ns after Nokia lost its place as the cellphone market leader. Giving €800 a month to every Finn (the population is 5.4 million) would cost €52.2 billion a year, and the government projects revenue of €49.1bn for 2016.

Even wealthier Switzerlan­d, which will hold a referendum on a basic income programme next year, is unlikely to adopt the idea because of the expense.

Voter support

The proposal to pay each citizen about $2 500 (R34 480) a month would cost about $210bn a year, or 30 percent of gross domestic product. The Swiss federal government and the parliament have called on citizens to reject it. According to a recent poll, 49 percent of the voters support a universal basic income, but to achieve a majority, the allowance would have to be smaller than proposed.

Finland, however, may go through with its plan, perhaps moving ahead of the the Netherland­s, where universal income pilot projects will begin next year in Utrecht and possibly in several other cities. The reason for the project’s good prospects in Finland: a political consensus that it is necessary.

Earlier this year, Helmuth Cremer of the Toulouse School of Economics in France and Kerstin Roeder of the University of Augsburg in Germany showed that modern democracie­s were far more likely to adopt a means-tested social security system than a universal basic income.

Giving away taxpayers’ money to people whether they work or not is not a popular notion.

The Finns are different. In a recent poll commission­ed by Kela, 69 percent said they would support a basic income plan and that about €1 000 a month would be the appropriat­e amount.

There is broad support for the idea across political parties and Prime Minister Juha Sipila favours the idea as a way to simplify the welfare system. The poll showed there was especially high backing for a basic income implemente­d as a negative income tax.

Such an arrangemen­t, which was initially proposed by Milton Friedman and Robert Lampman, would provide payments from the state that would increase in inverse proportion to income.

US experiment­s in the 1960s showed that a negative tax wouldn’t work “as long as the median income remains within striking distance of the poverty line”.

In Finland, the median income is about €3 000 a month, far more than Kela’s €800 target. But it also is a country where some people pay more than 50 percent tax on incomes of €70 000 a year. There may be a greater acceptance of further redistribu­tion, especially if it means more security.

A jump in the unemployme­nt rate to 11 percent earlier this year (it is 8.4 percent now) raised alarm in Finland, possibly making a basic income even more appealing. One draw is that giving all citizens the same benefits would remove the stigma attached to joblessnes­s.

Many experiment­s have shown that people provided with a basic income don’t lead idle lives. A study conducted in Uganda indicated that people given such assistance invest in their personal developmen­t and end up in more qualified positions, working longer hours and earning more than those who don’t have a safety net. In wealthier countries, people slightly reduce the amount of time they spend at work. The extra time is often spent with children, on personal developmen­t or healthy activities.

There probably isn’t much danger that Finns will stop working if they get a basic income. The bigger risk is that the government won’t be able to pay for it.

Of Finns, 69% say they will support a basic income plan and that about €1 000 a month will be the appropriat­e amount.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Finland’s Prime Minister Juha Sipila favours the idea.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Finland’s Prime Minister Juha Sipila favours the idea.

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