Posted on Jan 4, 2017
Finland experiments with universal basic income scheme
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Posted 8 y ago
Responses: 7
Makes sense to me.
Finland Economic Outlook
December 20, 2016
The long stagnant economy churned out another quarter of weak growth in Q3, expanding 0.4% from the previous quarter. Although the headline number was a better reading than Q2’s 0.1% contraction, the details showed a still beleaguered external sector, which remains too heavily centered on a struggling agricultural sector and a battered forestry industry. Conversely, domestic demand continued to be a bright spot, and its upbeat momentum is likely to have carried over into the fourth quarter, as suggested by both a second month of strong expansion in industrial output in October and an over five-year high in consumer confidence in November. Less positive was October’s unemployment rate, which jumped after having reached a two-year low in August.
Finland Economic Outlook
December 20, 2016
The long stagnant economy churned out another quarter of weak growth in Q3, expanding 0.4% from the previous quarter. Although the headline number was a better reading than Q2’s 0.1% contraction, the details showed a still beleaguered external sector, which remains too heavily centered on a struggling agricultural sector and a battered forestry industry. Conversely, domestic demand continued to be a bright spot, and its upbeat momentum is likely to have carried over into the fourth quarter, as suggested by both a second month of strong expansion in industrial output in October and an over five-year high in consumer confidence in November. Less positive was October’s unemployment rate, which jumped after having reached a two-year low in August.
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Basically a cap to encourage work. It makes limited sense. That was my problem when I was unemployed. I was unemployed for nine months and when you added up all of my benefits (food stamps, utility subsidy, COBRA, etc) I was making about $15 per hour. And the job center would get pissed as I was turning down $17/$18 per hour jobs. I'd tell them, "why bother? If I get a job, I then have to buy my own food, etc."
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LTC (Join to see)
PO3 Donald Murphy You have described the problem with some of the problems with the current system, if someone can make as much or more on welfare than they could when working, why work.
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other than what could go wrong with this one... Another experiment in the Social programs from hell...
Love the final and bottom Line...
..."... "While at first glance a universal basic income might appear desirable, any practical implementation will invariably be unaffordable. Because it doesn't take into account individual needs properly, it will markedly increase inequality," Conservative politician Damian Hinds said during the debate, The Independent reported...." ...
Love the final and bottom Line...
..."... "While at first glance a universal basic income might appear desirable, any practical implementation will invariably be unaffordable. Because it doesn't take into account individual needs properly, it will markedly increase inequality," Conservative politician Damian Hinds said during the debate, The Independent reported...." ...
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CPT Jack Durish
Ultimately, they should learn a lesson from America's national park rangers who advise us: "Don't feed the bears". You'll only create more dependency
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PO3 Donald Murphy
We have the problem here in the USA too. We have too many that "make" too much on unemployment/welfare and therefore don't feel a need to "work." I had the same issue when I was out of work for 9 months. I made $15 an hour - tallying up everything. And then the job center would get mad when I turned down $16 - $17 an hour jobs. So while we snicker for now, the end result may be something we examine deeper.
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