Universal basic income

No universal basic income for BC

By Moira Wyton, The Tyee, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

It appears to be the end of the road for a universal basic income in British Columbia.

Reform existing social programs

A panel appointed by the  provincial government in 2018 to examine the idea of a basic income  reported today that it would not be the most effective way to improve  people’s lives.

Instead, the spirit of basic income should  underlie “co-ordinated and substantial” reform of the province’s  existing social programs, according to the panel.

Targeted basic incomes should replace some  social supports like disability and income assistance, as well as  support youth leaving care and women fleeing violence, the report concluded.

The panel also called for universal extended health benefits for low-income people as part of a recommended overhaul of social services in B.C.

“We recommend a broad mixed  system that includes some targeted basic income but also basic  services,” said panel chair David Green of the Vancouver School of  Economics at the University of British Columbia.

The panel also included Jonathan Rhys  Kesselman of Simon Fraser University and Lindsay Tedds of the University  of Calgary, supported by consultant and co-author Daniel Perrin.

Universal Basic Income

Basic income refers to a set of policies  that aim to reduce poverty and improve health and social outcomes by  providing income that lifts everyone over 18 at least to the poverty  line.

Proponents say it gives people the  opportunity to decide how to use money to meet their needs, frees them  to refuse unsafe work and keeps them from financial disaster if they are  laid off or need to stop working.

The panel said it appreciated the spirit of  basic income but argued any program “needs to stand on a base of  support to make effective individual autonomy possible.”

65 Recommendations

Its 65 recommendations propose a  substantial redesign of current social programs and assistance to bridge  gaps and address concerning poverty levels among working-age, single  adults.

Disability assistance rates should be raised by $500 per month to reach the poverty line and the $300 pandemic top-up — cut by $150 by the current government — should be made permanent, the report recommends. 

The disability assistance rate for a single person is now about $1,200 a month to cover housing and all other costs.

The government should also ease rules that  deny support if people have assets and allow people on disability  assistance to earn more money without losing benefits.

The panel also suggested integrated support  for women and children fleeing violence and youth aging out of care,  two groups who have specific needs.

This would effectively create a basic  income for those groups that is responsive to their needs and easier to  access, Green said.

Green stressed that the pandemic’s challenges are unique and that the proposals aim to respond to pre-existing issues as well.

“You need to separate out what is going on with the pandemic from what is ongoing and systemic,” he said when asked by The Tyee.

“It’s not necessarily that you want to  design your system the same way based on the pandemic’s issues… you  have to make sure the rest of the system is there for when people have  individual crises.”

Recommendations don’t go far enough

But one of Canada’s leading scholars on basic income says the recommendations don’t go far enough,  particularly as the pandemic revealed big gaps in existing supports.

“I don’t disagree with any changes they  recommend. I just don’t think they go far enough, and I don’t think  they’re going to be implemented,” said Evelyn Forget, a professor at the  University of Manitoba who has studied basic income for decades.

Basic income and support services aren’t  mutually exclusive, she said, and current programs don’t deliver much of  the autonomy the report praises.

“It goes back to the deserving and the  undeserving,” said Forget, noting people with disabilities, youth aging  out of care and seniors are seen as deserving while others are not.

The report notes single working-age adults, with and without children, are just under one-third of those living in poverty. 

Forget said its proposals to strengthen  labour regulations, expand rental assistance and extend health benefits  don’t necessarily treat those people as deserving of autonomy over their  decisions. A basic income would give them control.

“What basic income doesn’t require is a lot  of personal oversight, and it doesn’t require us to police people’s  decisions,” said Forget.

The BC Greens, who made a study of basic  income a requirement before they would support the NDP’s former minority  government, welcomed the report. 

“The NDP government needs to recognize the  urgent need for transformation of our social safety net, including  implementation of basic-income style policies outlined in this report  and beyond,” the party said in a statement.

Government will heed recommendations

Minister of Social Development and Poverty  Reduction Nicholas Simons said in a statement the government would heed  the recommendations in preparing this year’s budget, expected in April.

Forget has doubts the report reflects the  needs and opinions of the people most in need and is concerned none of  the most drastic recommendations will be implemented.

“Those programs are designed to keep people dependent on the system instead of allowing their autonomy to flourish,” she said.