Some people in the Dutch city of Utrecht might
soon get a windfall of extra cash, as part of a daring new experiment
with the idea of “basic income.”
Basic income is an unconditional and regular payment
meant to provide enough money to cover a person’s basic living cost. In
January of 2016, the fourth largest city in the Netherlands and its
partner, the University of Utrecht, will create several different
regimes for its welfare recipients and test them.
A group of people already receiving welfare will get monthly checks ranging from around €900 ($1,000) for an adult to €1,300 ($1,450) for
a couple or family per month. Out of the estimated 300 people
participating, a group of at least 50 people will receive the
unconditional basic income and won’t be subject to any regulation, so
even if they get a job or find another source of income, they will still
get their disbursement, explained Nienke Horst, a project manager for
the Utrecht city government. There will be three other groups with
different levels of rules, and a control group that will follow the
current welfare law, with its requirements around job-seeking and
qualifying income.
The experiment seeks to challenge the notion that
people who receive public money need to be patrolled and punished, said
Horst. The traditional criticism of basic income is that it does not
incentivize people to work, and thereby damages the economy
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