Between universalism and targeting: Exploring policy pathways for an Australian Basic Income
Date
Authors
Spies-Butcher, Ben
Phillips, Ben
Henderson, Troy
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Abstract
Despite growing interest in proposals for a universal basic income, little advance has
been made in implementation. Here we explore policy options for an Australian Basic
Income. Our analysis responds to concerns that Basic Income is both too expensive
and too radical a departure from existing welfare state structures to be a feasible
policy option. Drawing on policy and Basic Income scholarship we identify changes to
Australia’s current means-tested benefits structures that move substantially towards
Basic Income while remaining consistent with historic policy norms, which we call
‘affluence testing’. Using microsimulation we explore fiscal and distributional trade-offs
associated with the implementation of an affluence-tested Basic Income. Our results
suggest Basic Income has the potential to significantly reduce inequality and poverty
while also requiring taxes to rise substantially. Placing these trade-offs in international
context we find the policy would reduce inequality to levels similar to Nordic welfare
states while increasing overall taxation to approximately the OECD average.
Description
Citation
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Source
The Economic and Labour Relations Review
Type
Book Title
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Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31