6533b85efe1ef96bd12c0752
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Micro-investment perspective and the potential of the universal basic income
Teppo EskelinenJohanna Perkiösubject
Basic incomeCash transfersEconomic growthinequalityInequalitypilot programmes050204 development studiesmedia_common.quotation_subjectGeography Planning and Developmentmicro-investmentsocial cash transfersDeveloping countryManagement Monitoring Policy and LawDevelopment0502 economics and businessSimilarity (psychology)Economicspilotointi050207 economicsmedia_commonEstimationPublic economicsperustulo05 social sciencesmikroinvestoinnitta5142kansalaispalkkaInvestment (macroeconomics)investoinnitbasic incomeCasheriarvoisuusdescription
In this article, we explore the prospects of Basic Income (BI) as a development policy tool. Our approach is to analyse the BI as a tool for promoting micro-investments and as a general development policy instrument, thus deliberately departing from the perception of cash transfers as targeted poverty reduction tools. As experiences in testing BI systems in developing country contexts are limited to local and regional experiments in Namibia and India (Haarmann et al., 2009; Haarmann & Haarmann, 2012; Davala et al., 2015), conclusive assessments about the impacts of the BI cannot be drawn. Therefore, we aim to estimate potential impacts of the BI by synthesising existing knowledge. This estimation will not be quantitative, but rather show likely outcomes of a BI scheme. We will complement existing knowledge by exploring cognate cash transfer policies and other experiences that bear similarity to the BI. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-06-22 | Development Policy Review |