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A free lunch with robots – can a basic income stabilise the digital economy?

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Article

Pulkka, Ville-Veikko

Transfer. European Review of Labour and Research

2017

23

3

August

295-311

automation ; employment ; guaranteed income ; precarious employment ; underemployment ; digital economy

Technology

http://trs.sagepub.com/

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1024258917708704

English

Bibliogr.

"The discussion on the possible implications of the digital economy for labour continues unabated. An essential dimension of the discussion is the widely shared view that a basic income could guarantee sufficient purchasing power for unemployed, underemployed and precarious workers should technological unemployment and labour market insecurity increase. A budget-neutral basic income has serious limitations as an economic stabilisation grant, but if financing proposals are revised, these limitations can be tackled. Even though guaranteeing sufficient purchasing power for unemployed, underemployed and precarious workers does not necessarily require an unconditional universal benefit, it seems clear that traditional activation based on strict means-testing and obligations will not be a strategy flexible enough to guarantee sufficient consumer demand in fluctuating labour markets. An economically sustainable solution might be to reduce means-testing gradually and to study carefully the effects. "

Digital;Paper



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