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An egalitarian case for basic income
Author(s)
Date Issued
1992
Date Available
2012-05-01T15:48:24Z
Abstract
In section 1, I set out a general perspective on the nature of egalitarianism and relate it to some familiar conceptions of economic equality. In section 2, I argue in keeping with the popular notion of equality that it makes sense to think of equal income as a baseline against which departures need to be justified. Section 3 discusses some problems which arise concerning departures from equal income justified by different needs, and argues for a particular approach based on what I shall call a 'background agreement' on need. Section 4 looks at the issue of relating income to work, and tries to construct and defend an interpretation of the idea that income inequalities should compensate people for differences in their work. I argue for a system of 'compensating differentials' based on a background agreement regarding the benefits and burdens of different kinds and amounts of work. Section 5 considers the principles of free choice of occupation and of the right not to work, with particular reference to their role in a system of compensating differentials. In section 6, I show how the case for a basic income follows from the conception of economic equality I have put forward.
Sponsorship
Higher Education Authority
Type of Material
Book Chapter
Publisher
Verso
Subject – LCSH
Income
Equality
Compensation management
Work
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Journal
Van Parijs, Philippe (ed.). Arguing for Basic Income : Ethical Foundations for a Radical Reform
ISBN
0860915867
978-0860915867
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
Egalitarian case for BI.pdf
Size
155.15 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
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