Abstract
Abstract
Given the increasing potential of automation in the primary and industrial sectors of the economy, it is helpful to take a mesoeconomic, i. e. sectoral, look at the concept of a basic income. We present a thought experiment centred on societies in which labour takes place only in the service sector. We identify service sectors like prostitution in which it may be advantageous to shift away from the market and sectors like health services where public involvement is indispensable. Introducing a basic income may also generate social capital, which usually accompanies service provision in the sphere of cooperation.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics
Reference124 articles.
1. Encounters with the Archgenius;Time Magazine, 7,2016
2. Property and republican freedom: An institutional approach to basic income;Basic Income Studies,2008
3. Healthcare access and mobility between the UK and other European Union states: An `implementation surplus’;Health Policy,1997
4. Where have all the secretaries gone?;Fortune,1997