Abstract
The austerity movement in high-income countries of Europe and North America has renewed calls for a guaranteed Basic Income. At the same time, conditional and unconditional cash transfers accompanied by rigorous impact evaluations have been conducted in low- and middle-income countries with the explicit support of the World Bank. Both Basic Income and cash transfer programs are more confidently designed when based on empirical evidence and social theory that explain how and why cash transfers to citizens are effective ways of encouraging investment in human capital through health and education spending. Are conditional cash transfers more effective and/or more efficient than unconditional transfers? Are means-tested transfers effective? This essay draws explicit parallels between Basic Income and unconditional cash transfers, and demonstrates that cash transfers to citizens work in remarkably similar ways in low-, middle- and high-income countries. It addresses the theoretical foundation of cash transfers. Of the four theories discussed, three explicitly acknowledge the interdependence of society and are based, in increasingly complex ways, on ideas of social inclusion. Only if we have an understanding of how cash transfers affect decision-making can we address questions of how best to design cash transfer schemes.
Highlights
On 15 April 2013, the lower house of the Italian Parliament received more than 50,000 signatures that had been gathered in support of a popular initiative regarding/for a guaranteed minimum income in Italy [1]
In January 2013, a European Citizens' Initiative for an unconditional Basic Income (BI) was registered, and fifteen EU states are involved in the campaign to raise one million signatures before 14 January 2014
In Canada, for example, Senator Hugh Segal has invoked social inclusivity as a justification for a BI: Being poor would become a problem we all buffered in the same way as we buffer all Canadians relative to health care
Summary
On 15 April 2013, the lower house of the Italian Parliament received more than 50,000 signatures that had been gathered in support of a popular initiative regarding/for a guaranteed minimum income in Italy [1]. CT programs come in two flavours: conditional cash transfers (CCTs) in which recipients receive cash only if they can demonstrate that their behaviour meets certain stated requirements, and unconditional cash transfers (UCTs) in which the payout, in the spirit of a BI, does not depend on individual behaviour. Both BI and CT experiments have demonstrated that people who receive transfers tend to behave in ways that improves their well-being, as we demonstrate.
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