Citizens’ basic income in Scotland: On the road to somewhere

Author:

Cantillon Sara1ORCID,O’Toole Francis2

Affiliation:

1. Wise Centre for Economic Justice, Glasgow Caledonian University, UK

2. Economics Department, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland

Abstract

While the economic fragility exposed by Covid-19 has renewed the attention paid to social protection systems and in particular to basic income, the Scottish government had already funded four local authorities – North Ayrshire, City of Edinburgh, Fife and Glasgow – to undertake a feasibility study on the introduction of a Universal Basic Income pilot in Scotland. This article explores the specific Scottish context and rationale for this study, including the factors that led the Scottish government and the local authorities to pursue this approach, as well as the impact of the study on the wider social security debate and policy context in Scotland. Specifically, it takes a critical look at the Steering Committee's feasibility study, and its two commissioned research components, and explores the financial costings and institutional obstacles identified in taking forward a pilot Universal Basic Income in Scotland. These significant challenges are considered in light of both the limits of devolution and the ongoing debate on independence, as well as the wider implications for progress in social protection in Scotland.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science

Reference18 articles.

1. Equality

2. Scotland’s Progressive Rhetoric: Devolution and Carer’s Allowance

3. Citizens’ Basic Income Feasibility Study Steering Group (2020) Assessing the Feasibility of Citizens’ Income Pilots in Scotland: Final Report. Available at: https://www.basicincome.scot/__data/assets/pdf_file/0024/175371/Draft-Final-CBI-Feasibility_Main-Report-June-2020.pdf

4. Deparle J (2021) A Historic Decrease in Poverty. The New York Review, 18 November. Available at: https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2021/11/18/historic-decrease-in-poverty/

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