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Pages tagged "income security"


Could the CERB program lead Canada toward offering a universal basic income?

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · April 13, 2020 4:28 PM

https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/bicn/pages/3760/attachments/original/1586809488/money_5.jpeg?1586809488

Globe and Mail

When Ottawa unveiled emergency payments of $2,000 to individuals who lost work because of the coronavirus, the program looked to be a stepped-up version of the decades-old Employment Insurance program.

But as the government has moved to fill gaps in the Canada Emergency Response Benefit, the nature of the program is quickly evolving into something that resembles a universal basic income.

A universal basic income, or UBI, would set a minimum income that all Canadians would be eligible to receive, whether they are working, unemployed or unemployable. 

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Opportunity in pandemic: P.E.I. group sees the makings of basic income

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · April 05, 2020 7:54 AM

CBC News

When the federal government unveiled its plan to provide Canadians whose employment has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic with a monthly income of $2,000, members of P.E.I.'s Working Group for a Livable Income saw something that looked a lot like what they and others have been trying to bring to P.E.I. for years: a basic guaranteed income.

"It's very close to what we would be advocating for," said Jillian Kilfoil, executive director of Women's Network PEI, one of the members of the working group.

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Aid programs a model for basic income in Canada

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · April 05, 2020 7:47 AM

Catholic Register

Many of the financial measures being rolled out by governments to help people weather the COVID-19 storm would be unnecessary if Canada had a basic income policy, say basic income advocates.

“At this point, it would be so good if we could have it in the country,” said Sr. Pauline Lally of the Sisters of Providence in Kingston, Ont. “We really need this basic income. I really, really believe that…. It would be one way to end poverty in Canada.”

Lally is a supporter of the Ontario Basic Income Network and a member of Living Wage Kingston. She points to retired Senator Hugh Segal’s recent book, Bootstraps Need Boots: One Tory’s Lonely Fight to End Poverty in Canada, as a guide to how basic income would transform the country.

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Basic Income’s Lessons For Health Care's '$1,007 Sandwich'

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · March 28, 2020 6:28 PM

Huffington Post

Poverty has long weighed on Hugh Segal’s mind. For decades, the former senator has been a vocal champion for a guaranteed basic income to lift the country’s poorest out of the cycle of poverty. He credits his formative years, growing up in an immigrant family in Montreal’s working-class Plateau neighbourhood, for sowing the seeds of his advocacy.

“What bothers me the most about [poverty] is the amount of people whose lives are being wasted because they’re caught in a scramble of too many jobs, too little pay, insufficient resources to cover rent, food, transport, clothes,” he said, in an interview. “Their kids pay a huge price, and it produces all kinds of difficulties.” 

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Keep it quiet, but basic income is coming

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · March 27, 2020 10:48 AM
Opinion -- Postmedia News

When you lock people down (to save their lives), you inevitably close down a lot of the economy as well.

And the lockdown will definitely have to last in most countries until May or June — Donald Trump’s promise of a “beautiful timeline” to reopening the U.S. economy just two weeks hence being delusional.

So where’s the money coming from in the meantime?

The majority of people still have jobs they get paid for: people in essential services who have to go to work, people who can do their work from home, and quite a few others as well.

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Kingston board of health calls for guaranteed basic income

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · March 27, 2020 10:41 AM
Kingston Whig Standard
The need for social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic has left the federal and provincial governments scrambling to make changes to keep Canadians’ financial arrangements from imploding as large parts of the economy grind to a halt.

There have been changes to unemployment insurance, evictions in Ontario are forbidden, banks are deferring mortgage payments, and a whole new array of financial support programs for individuals and businesses are being rolled out to keep everyone afloat.

But the Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox and Addington Board of Health is calling on the federal government to implement a less-complicated solution: a guaranteed basic income.

Read more

New report shows how to improve income security for everyone

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · January 29, 2020 3:14 PM

Basic Income Earth Network

A new report from the Basic Income Canada Network (BICN) details how Canada could improve income security for everyone, with three options for a basic income for adults, while maintaining current child benefits for those under 18.

“We’ve seen interest in basic income grow far beyond theoretical debates. BICN is now frequently asked what it would look like in Canada,” said Chandra Pasma, a member of the BICN Advisory Council and co-author of the report.

“Our report clearly shows there are multiple options Canadian governments could use to implement a successful basic income program.”

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Canada can end poverty and shrink inequality by adding an annual basic income of $22K, new report says

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · January 23, 2020 12:44 PM

The Star

Canada can afford to eliminate poverty, support the middle class and dramatically shrink the gap between the rich and poor by introducing an annual basic income of $22,000, according to a new report.

The unconditional stipend for adults over 18 would come with an annual price tag of between $134 billion and $637 billion, depending on three options explored by the Basic Income Canada Network in a report being released Thursday.

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Can $500 a month change a city? Stockton tests universal basic income

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · January 02, 2020 2:33 PM

San Francisco Chronicle

What could you do with an extra $500 a month? Lorrine Paradela got a better night’s sleep.

The 45-year-old single mother is one of the 125 Stockton residents receiving monthly cash disbursements as part of an attention-grabbing experiment on guaranteed income.

Paradela has been able to pay for a new car after her old one was wrecked in a crash. She bought a video game console for her 16-year-old son as a thank-you gift for his help taking care of his 10-year-old sister.

Read more

Basic income denied in Ontario: Interview with Jessie Golem

Posted on News by Roderick Benns · October 10, 2019 4:10 PM

Open Democracy

Jessie Golem is a photographer and was, for a short time, a basic income recipient in Ontario. Beyond Trafficking and Slavery caught up with her at the 19th Global Basic Income Congress in Hyderabad, India, to chat about what the programme did for her, and what it meant to have it cut short.

Beyond Trafficking and Slavery: You were, for a short time, a recipient of a basic income in Canada. What was the program you were part of?

Jessie Golem: In 2017, the Ontario provincial government under the Liberal premier Kathleen Wynne introduced a three-year basic income pilot. They chose 4,500 people in four cities in Ontario, all of whom were making under C$30,000 a year, to receive an unconditional guaranteed basic income. The size of the income was put on a sliding scale. You could receive up to C$1,400 a month, but if you were working then it was reduced by 50 cents to the dollar. Because I was working, I received about C$700 a month.

Read more

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"I support the idea of a basic income guarantee for everyone in Canada."

"Je soutiens l'idée d'un revenu de base garanti pour tous au Canada."

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