Universal basic income is “what capitalism ought to have been striving for all along”, according to author and prominent economic thinker Rutger Bregman.
In this week’s Big Issue, the Dutchman sets out the argument for a basic income for all – and explains why the coronavirus pandemic has only strengthened his case.
“See it as a dividend on progress, made possible by the blood, sweat and tears of past generations,” he said. “In the end, only a fraction of our prosperity is due to our own exertions. We are rich thanks to the institutions, the knowledge, and the social capital amassed for us by our forebears. This wealth belongs to us all. And a basic income allows all of us to share it.”
Bregman wants us to remember that real change comes out of crises, beginning life as “experiments that ever so slowly change the world”. And you can’t argue with the science, he said: free money works.
Wow, after the Financial Times editorial, now this. The pope endorses universal basic income. https://t.co/87JSss1mQA
— Rutger Bregman (@rcbregman) April 12, 2020
“Now it’s time to scale up the experiment,” he said. “Millions of unemployed workers, gig workers and freelancers need a basic income, and they need it now.