RUSSIA: Snowden mentions basic income in a recent interview

In a lengthy interview with journalists from The Nation, Edward Snowden discusses the importance of finding a way to provide a basic income for people who do not have work. He links this need to increasing automation and says that automation is inevitably going to mean fewer and fewer jobs.

To read the original article, see:

Katrina vanden Neuvel and Stephen Cohen, “Edward Snowden: A ‘Nation’ InterviewThe Nation. October 28, 2014.

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CLARK, Simon (2008): A basic income for Russia?

AVINUS Magazin, 2011 (originally published 2008)

ABSTRACT: The idea of a basic or citizens’ income rests on the principle that everyone is entitled to the resources which make possible at least a minimum standard of subsistence. This principle is well-established in those countries, particularly in Europe, with a developed welfare state tradition, although its implementation, even in those countries, is surrounded by qualifications centered on the obligation of able-bodied citizens to work and the restriction of public assistance to those who can prove their need for support, which are monitored by an enormous inhuman and incompetent bureaucratic apparatus of inspection, regulation and control. Moreover, the solidaristic welfare tradition is being eroded by individualistic approaches to welfare provision based on compulsory or voluntary, state or private insurance principles.

The full text of the article can be downloaded at:
https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/View/?resid=25123&lang=en