Basic Income for Canadians: The key to a healthier, happier, more secure life for all

Front Cover
James Lorimer & Company, Oct 2, 2018 - Business & Economics - 216 pages

 Canadian social programs were designed for a world in which most people graduated from high school, then found a permanent job with benefits that, barring unforeseen accidents, they would hold until they retired with a pension — all under the benevolent eye of their workplace union. In the last forty years, however, the labour market has fundamentally changed. Good, full-time jobs have been replaced by part-time or temporary work that pays lower wages, offers fewer benefits and rarely comes with union support. Economic insecurity is now a feature of the lives of large numbers of people. Those forced to rely on provincial income assistance or disability support find themselves trapped in a system that perpetuates dependence.

This new situation has given new life to an old idea — basic income. This book explores basic income from a Canadian perspective. It reports on research from the original test in Manitoba in the 1970s to the Ontario initiative launched by the Wynne government, then killed by the Ford Tories.

The evidence shows that basic income improves family and community health and well being, improves financial resilience, and improves access to education and training — all at an affordable cost.

 

Contents

Introduction
9
A Basic Income Guarantee for Canada
15
Rediscovering Mincome
34
Basic Income is Good for Your Health
50
The Future of Work
63
Work and Human Dignity
78
Women and Basic Income
96
How Basic Income Affects Different People
111
Can We Afford a Basic Income?
148
Getting From Here to There
167
A Basic Income for All of Us
183
Notes on the cost of a basic income
188
Acknowledgements
193
Further Reading
194
Endnotes
199
Index
208

Nine Myths About Basic Income
126

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2018)

 EVELYN L. FORGET is an economist in the School of Medicine at the University of Manitoba. Several years ago she began researching the data associated with a basic income field experiment conducted in Manitoba in the 1970s. She has been consulted by governments and researchers in Ontario, British Columbia, Quebec, Finland, the Netherlands and Scotland on this topic. Her research has been featured on CBC IdeasPBS MarketplaceFreakonomics and in the documentary The Free Lunch Society. She lives in Winnipeg.