Finland to pay every citizen $1,100 per month and scrap all other benefits in effort to reduce unemployment rate
FotoliaMarket Square at the Old Town pier in Helsinki, Finland. At present, many unemployed people in Finland would be worse off if they took on low-paid temporary jobs due to loss of welfare payments.
Finland’s government is drawing up plans to pay every citizen a basic income of euros 800 ($1,165) each month, scrapping benefits altogether.
Under proposals drafted by the Finnish Social Insurance Institution (Kela), the tax-free payments would replace all other benefit payments, and would be paid to all adults regardless of whether or not they receive any other income.
While it may sound counterintuitive, the basic income is intended to encourage more people back to work in Finland, where unemployment is at record levels. At present, many unemployed people would be worse off if they took on low-paid temporary jobs due to loss of welfare payments.
More than 10 per cent of Finland’s workforce is unemployed, rising to 22.7 per cent among younger workers.
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