Basic income to be given to 84,000 people in Canada
Source: The Independent
An estimated 84,000 people in the Canadian province of Quebec are to receive basic income from the start of next year, as part of the government's anti-poverty plan.
Quebecs Premier Philippe Couillard made the announcement as part of his administrations $3bn plans on Sunday, which aims to promote economic inclusion, CBC News reported.
Those who qualify for basic income include those with a limited capacity to work, including people with physical and intellectual disabilities. It means their current financial support will increase by at least $73 per month.
The plan will see the annual income of those covered by the scheme increase from $12,749 to $18,029 by 2023, which meets the poverty threshold of $18,000, the Montreal Gazette reports. The project, which largely targets single people, intends to bring some 100,000 people out of poverty by 2023, government officials told reporters.
Read more: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/basic-income-quebec-canada-poverty-unemployment-ontario-a8103616.html
msongs
(70,390 posts)davekriss
(4,979 posts)PoliticAverse
(26,366 posts)Last edited Tue Dec 12, 2017, 04:04 PM - Edit history (1)
Edited to correct my Quebec population error as pointed out by "Floyd R. Turbo".
Floyd R. Turbo
(29,360 posts)The whole of Canada is 36 million!
PoliticAverse
(26,366 posts)was around 25 million (but as you point out it is now actually 36+ million). I've corrected my post. Thanks.
Floyd R. Turbo
(29,360 posts)LanternWaste
(37,748 posts)What leads you to allege it was convenient to leave out?
harun
(11,360 posts)LiberalLovinLug
(14,386 posts)From HuffPo Canada, but it would be much the same for the US.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/hugh-segal/guaranteed-annual-income_b_3037347.html
"In Canada, a federal tax-based top-up would be fiscally beneficial. Eligibility for the federal top-up would render millions of provincial welfare recipients ineligible for welfare, liberating billions of dollars for provincial coffers for other purposes like education, chronic care or necessary infrastructure."
If you add the money already put out for welfare plus the savings in all the bureaucracy in screening, and enforcement in trying to find those that 'cheat' by working on the side, there is a net gain. Not to mention the drop in crime from those individuals that for whatever reason failed to qualify for welfare. If there were a simple guaranteed minimum income for all, there would be no welfare program. Just top-ups if you failed to reach the minimum.