Society's Child
The program, which kicks off this month, is one of the first efforts to test a "universal basic income." Participants will receive €560 ($587) a month -- money that is guaranteed regardless of income, wealth or employment status.
The idea is that a universal income offers workers greater security, especially as technological advances reduce the need for human labor. It will also allow unemployed people to pick up odd jobs without losing their benefits.
The initial program will run for a period of two years. Participants were randomly selected, but had to be receiving unemployment benefits or an income subsidy. The money they are paid through the program will not be taxed.
If the program is successful, it could be expanded to include all adult Finns.
The Finnish government thinks the initiative could save money in the long run. The country's welfare system is complex and expensive to run, and simplifying it could reduce costly bureaucracy.
The change could also encourage more jobless people to look for work, because they won't have to worry about losing unemployment benefits. Some unemployed workers currently avoid part time jobs because even a small income boost could result in their unemployment benefits being canceled.
"Incidental earnings do not reduce the basic income, so working and ... self-employment are worthwhile no matter what," said Marjukka Turunen, the head of the legal unit at Kela, Finland's social insurance agency.
The idea is not unique to Finland.
Advocates point to the Italian city of Livorno, which started a guaranteed basic income for the city's 100 poorest families in June. The scheme was extended to further 100 families starting Sunday. They are receiving €500 ($525) per month.
Pilot programs are also being discussed in Canada, Iceland, Uganda and Brazil.
Switzerland last year considered giving every adult citizen a guaranteed income of $2,500 a month, but the plan was rejected in a referendum. More than 75% of voters were against the measure.
The best example of a guaranteed income program might actually be in the U.S. Alaska has been giving out annual cash payments to all residents since the 1980s, a dividend from the state's oil revenue.
BIEN, a group that campaigns for universal income, describes it as the first "genuine universal basic income system."
Reader Comments
In another European country I remember a school teacher saying that she would enter the unemployment field because thus she would make more money.
What most people in this world don't understand are the following :
#1 : Money in this world , even for the top of the global socioeconomic pyramid, is a tool , not the objective.
#2 : They represent value, you can't possibly zero it.
#3 : The objective is not to have as much as possible you will go nuts trying to earn as much as you can, plus destroying yourself along the way.
#4 : Those who "distribute" them have earned them first. This message is lost when given for free.
#5 : They were created for reasons of accuracy in commodities exchange, unfortunately in the process they became a commodity themselves.
#6 : Finally , yes I agree that we should help children, people in need, disabled people but if you start giving them away for free, people try for nothing, thus learning nothing , giving back to society nothing, we got zero advancement and eventually we'll get back to stone age. I mean , what got us
to the level we are now ? Knowledge. It didn't came free you know.






to compensate for the automation of labour...further enslavement and I certainly don't see an incentive to be upwardly mobile. Maybe in a few years, the conditions will change and the money will only keep flowing if you agree to 'volunteer' as a care worker?
Paying people not to work has never been terribly successful, but it does provide the totalitarian with a very CAPTIVE audience.