World Finance, “Unconditional basic income roundup.”

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Here we round up World Finance’s pursuit of today’s ascendant economic star: unconditional basic income. We take a look at just what unconditional basic income might mean for economies on both a micro and macro level.

World Finance, “Unconditional basic income roundup. World Finance, May 15th, 2014.

Members of 'Generation Basic Income' pose with eight million coins of Swiss five-cent in a vault. Having collected over 130,000 signatures on a petition, the activists have forced a referendum on Universal Basic Income in Switzerland -via World Finance

Members of 'Generation Basic Income' pose with eight million coins of Swiss five-cent in a vault. Having collected over 130,000 signatures on a petition, the activists have forced a referendum on Universal Basic Income in Switzerland -via World Finance

LINKS: At least 32 established Facebook pages on Basic Income:

BIEN

BIEN

There are now at least 32 established Facebook pages on Basic income. They are listed below with international pages first, continent-wide pages second, and national or regional pages three (group in alphabetical order):

  1. International: https://www.facebook.com/Basic.Income.Earth.Network
  2. International: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Basic-Income-News/146808728715113
  3. International: https://www.facebook.com/basic.income
  4. Europe: https://www.facebook.com/ECI.BasicIncome
  5. Germany/Switzerland: https://www.facebook.com/bedingungsloses.grundeinkommen
  6. Belgium: https://facebook.com/BelgianNetworkForBasicIncome
  7. Bulgaria: https://www.facebook.com/EGIBBD
  8. Croatia: https://www.facebook.com/temeljnidohodakhrvatska
  9. Czech Republic: https://www.facebook.com/EOI.ZakladniPrijem
  10. Denmark: https://www.facebook.com/UbetingetBasisindkomst
  11. Estonia: https://www.facebook.com/KodanikupalkEuroopasse
  12. Finland: https://facebook.com/perustulo
  13. France: https://facebook.com/RevenudeBase
  14. Germany: https://www.facebook.com/NetzwerkGrundeinkommen
  15. Greece: https://www.facebook.com/basicincomegr
  16. Hungary: https://www.facebook.com/FNA.hu

    Basic Income

    Basic Income

  17. Ireland: https://www.facebook.com/BasicIncomeIreland
  18. Italia: https://www.facebook.com/RedditoBaseIncondizionato
  19. Latvia: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Eiropas-iniciat%C4%ABva-par-pamatien%C4%81kumiem/1438566166359282
  20. Lithuania: https://www.facebook.com/BasicIncomeLithuania
  21. Luxembourg: https://www.facebook.com/Grondakommes
  22. Netherlands: https://facebook.com/pages/Vereniging-Basisinkomen/165488696805185
  23. Norway: https://facebook.com/BorgerlonnBienNorge
  24. Poland: https://www.facebook.com/bezwarunkowydochodpodstawowy
  25. Portugal: https://www.facebook.com/RendimentoBasicoPortugal
  26. Romania: https://www.facebook.com/UBI.Romania
  27. Slovenia: https://facebook.com/pages/Univerzalni-temeljni-dohodek/493981737287209
  28. Spain: https://www.facebook.com/RentaBasicaUniversal
  29. Sweden: https://facebook.com/BasinkomstMedborgarlon
  30. Switzerland (FR): https://facebook.com/Pour.1Revenu.inconditionnel.de.base
  31. United Kingdom: https://facebook.com/BasicIncomeUK
  32. United States of America: https://www.facebook.com/pages/US-Basic-Income-Guarantee-Network/206792926015200
Unconditional Basic Income Europe

Unconditional Basic Income Europe

    OPINION: Global carbon tax petition calls for fossil fuel dividend

    No doubt most Basic Income News readers are aware of an interesting intersection where the arguments for basic income overlap with the arguments on how to best control global warming.

    In his book, “Storms of my Grandchildren,” climate scientist James Hansen proposes a global carbon tax with the proceeds to be distributed to everyone (he calls it fee-and-dividend).

    In other words, Hansen sees a worldwide basic income as a major component in solving one of our most important environmental challenges.

    How to get there is the question.

    In his book, Hansen proposes that the different national governments each implement a fee-and-dividend system. The fossil fuel fees collected by each country would be distributed as carbon dividends to the residents within their own borders.

    Although it might have some effect on a few nations in the short-term, such an approach is unlikely to achieve the desired long-term results.

    Nations with limited fossil fuel production but large populations would only have small dividends to distribute, and so little incentive to participate.

    Those nations with large fossil fuel industries and small populations would find the temptation to produce and sell untaxed product on the black market attractive.

    A better approach might be to bypass the national governments and go directly to the people of the world.

    I have posted a petition on Care2 calling for a global carbon tax that takes that approach.

    The petition is addressed to the secretary-general of the United Nations and calls for a worldwide referendum on the question.

    Such a worldwide vote would be difficult to achieve but far from impossible. Don’t forget that the U.N. organized and ran an election in Kampuchea when much of that nation was still controlled by the Khmer Rouge.

    Here in British Columbia, we have a carbon tax of $30 per tonne.

    According to Wikipedia, the burning of fossil fuels produces about 30 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide in the world each year.

    A carbon tax of $30 per tonne of carbon dioxide would therefore raise about $900 billion per year.

    Assuming there are about 5 billion adult human beings on the planet, the carbon tax proposed in my petition would provide each of them with a basic income of roughly $180 per year – effectively doubling the incomes of hundreds of millions.

    No doubt most Basic Income News readers can point out many advantages of such a global carbon dividend. However, I would like to identify two that seem to me, as a layperson, most important.

    The first would be simplicity. It would be relatively easy to identify those who are eligible to receive the benefit (age 18 and over), which would lessen the possibilities for corruption.

    The second is that it would not be charity. The lives and livelihoods of every human being are being put in danger by global warming. The proposed carbon dividend would therefore be in partial compensation for that risk.

    Such a global fee-and-dividend system would not solve all the world’s problems – but it would be a step in the right direction. It would help us to get a handle on global warming and global inequality – two of our biggest problems.

    It would also open the door for reform and democratization of the United Nations (“No taxation without representation”).

    The petition seeks to get 100 million names. This is modeled on the Swiss precedent, where 100,000 signatures on a petition are enough to get an important initiative taken to referendum. The world’s population (7 billion and rising) is about 1,000 times larger than that of Switzerland (8 million).

    I don’t really expect the Care2 petition to achieve that number. I do hope, however, that some international organization will pick up the idea and run with it.

    You can view the petition (and hopefully sign it) at:  www.thepetitionsite.com/286/384/042/petition-for-a-referendum-on-a-global-carbon-tax

    BIEN Congress speaker profile: Enno Schmidt

    Enno Schmidt

    Enno Schmidt

    Enno Schmidt will speak at BIEN’s Congress from June 27th through the 29th. Schmidt is an activist and co-founder of the Initiative Basic Income in Switzerland and president of the Cultural Impulse Switzerland Foundation. Schmidt is known for his 2008 film “Basic Income – a Cultural Impulse,” which has had a major influence in the basic income debate. The film is in German, but it is available with closed captions in English and in other languages.

    Born 1958 in Osnabrück (Germany), he studied painting and art theory at the Academy of Fine Arts in Frankfurt am Main. Schmidt is a recipient of the Frankfurt Art Prize. He became a Managing Director and shareholder of the Enterprise Economy and Art – Extended GmbH and a Visiting Research Fellow at Oxford Brookes University. He contributed to creating the Future Foundation Social Life under the umbrella of the Trusteeship Office of the GLS Bank in Bochum, Germanyand held a teaching position at the Institute of Entrepreneurship, University of Karlsruhe. Living in Basel, since 2006 Schmidt has been a spokesperson for the initiative, author, filmmaker and presenter.

    More information is available at: https://biencanada.ca/congress/keynote-speakers – enno

    Felix Oberholzer-Gee, “Will a guaranteed income ever come to America?”

    [Ginny Holbert]

    SUMMARY: In a follow up to their video, PBS Reports, the Swiss native and Harvard Business School professor suggests that Europeans and Americans have differing beliefs about the causes of rising income inequality. Because Europeans are more likely to believe that wealth is attributable to luck and inheritance, they are more likely to support redistributive policies such as the proposed Swiss basic income guarantee.

    Felix Oberholzer-Gee, “Will a guaranteed income ever come to America?” PBS Newshour, April 7, 2014

    Could America ever seriously entertain a guaranteed basic income? Above, members of 'Generation Basic Income' in Switzerland post with 8 million Swiss coins after securing a ballot referendum on an uncondition basic income. Photo by FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images via PBS

    Could America ever seriously entertain a guaranteed basic income? Above, members of 'Generation Basic Income' in Switzerland post with 8 million Swiss coins after securing a ballot referendum on an uncondition basic income. Photo by FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images via PBS