Is It Time for Universal Basic Income?

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Oct

13

8:30am

Is It Time for Universal Basic Income?

By Bristol Ideas

As a scheme which guarantees a flat-rate income for every individual, regardless of employment status, universal basic income (UBI) is seen by some as the future of welfare policy – to promote lifelong learning, support well-being, and help alleviate the impact of automation on the labour market.
Following the COVID-19 pandemic – which has exposed gaps in existing social safety nets and threatens the very foundations of the modern global economy – calls for UBI are more prevalent than ever. In combination with an apparent sea change in attitudes towards austerity, debt, and fiscal expansion, and the support of mainstream commentators for once-radical policies such as monetary financing and ‘sovereign money’ – the COVID-19 crisis has stimulated new ways of thinking about economic and social policy.
A number of countries as diverse as Hong Kong, Brazil, the US and Spain have proposed universal or quasi-universal handouts, to replace lost incomes and stimulate recovery. Everywhere, governments have torn up existing monetary rules and expanded welfare provisions and business supports drastically. But responses have been diverse, reflecting political and institutional variation.
It remains to be seen how robust the responses will be, and how their redistributive consequences will be settled, over the longer term. Are we witnessing a genuine paradigm shift, or will orthodoxy prevail? Is UBI now a distinct possibility, or an unfeasible pipe-dream? How will societies and economies face up to the new realities of living and working as we emerge from the immediate health crisis into profound economic uncertainty?
At this conference, organised by the Institute for Policy Research at the University of Bath and Bristol Festival of Ideas, leading thinkers, politicians and policymakers come together with the public to debate these issues and to explore new approaches to macro-economic policy-making, the prospects for UBI, and the political economy of social and economic change.
Please click here for a detailed programme of the day.
Once you have registered, you can navigate between the different sessions by clicking on the 'Schedule' bar just above the video feed.
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