Sirvan Karimi
Amid the Covid-19 pandemic, the idea of a universal basic income (UBI) has been touted by those across the political spectrum as a prospective model of social security that would provide guaranteed cash to citizens.
But while UBI is desirable in principle, it’s not a magic solution to the intricate and perennial problems of poverty and income inequality. Its implementation in Canada is not financially, administratively, politically or constitutionally feasible.
Within emerging literature on the implications of the Covid-19 pandemic on employment and earning levels, UBI has been elevated to the status of a panacea that could ease all the social and economic ills that societies are encountering during the crisis.
Ardent advocates of UBI have argued that it has the potential to reduce poverty, narrow income inequality gaps, address automation, eradicate the stigma associated with collecting government assistance, enhance the social well-being of citizens, diminish dependency and streamline existing complex and fragmented social transfer programmes and public services.
The appeal of UBI in Canada has become so strong that several Liberal MPs have asked Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to elevate UBI to the top of his policy agenda.
From Cerb to a universal basic income?
Some advocates of UBI contend that the gradual conversion of the Cerb (Canada Emergency Relief Benefit) into UBI is a logical progression.
However, if UBI is set at a monthly, $1 000 (R14 437) unconditional benefit for every adult Canadian, the total net annual cost would be $364 billion. Obviously, that’s not only financially unsustainable, it’s also politically suicidal.
On the other hand, according to a report released by the Office of the Parliamentary Budget Officer last year, the estimated cost of a watered-down version of UBI — called a guaranteed basic income — covering only low-income, working-age Canadians (estimated at 9.6 million Canadians between the ages of 18 to 64) would be in the range of $47.5bn to $98.1bn for a six-month period.
Under this attenuated version of UBI — similar to the Ontario basic income pilot project introduced by the former provincial Liberal government in 2017 and later abandoned by Doug Ford’s government — individuals and couples would receive an annual income of $18 329 and $25 921 respectively.
The projected cost range depends on how much of the benefit is clawed back from recipients when any other income increases above an established threshold.
Taxes raised?
Even under this trimmed version of UBI, however, there could be pressure to significantly raise taxes to pay for it, which could inflict colossal costs on the economy.
Some UBI advocates argue that part of the cost of maintaining the programme could be recovered by eliminating or curtailing almost 55 federal and provincial social programmes that have been put in place to assist low-income and vulnerable Canadians.
But a critical point they’re missing is that the current federal and provincial social programmes have already created their own constituencies. Replacing existing social assistance programmes with a guaranteed basic income might not be attractive to recipients of these existing benefits.
Under the Ontario Basic Income Pilot project, for example, people with disabilities were asked to give up other public supports in order to access the programme. It was in fact due to the perceived unattractiveness of this trade-off that many people with disabilities refused to enrol in the programme.
It’s a formidable task to persuade Canadians who have been attached to these programmes to opt for even this attenuated version of UBI.
Government limitations
Finally, one of the most challenging procedural constraints in adopting a UBI, all but ignored by its proponents in Canada, is a constitutional convention that limits the ability of the federal government to introduce a new social programme.
The federal government has historically attempted to justify its politically contentious inroads into social policy domain by invoking federal spending power, which permits Parliament to make payments to individuals, organisations, institutions and governments for purposes over which it has no constitutional jurisdiction.
Federal spending power has been the source of long-time contention between federal and provincial governments, especially Québec, which calls it an affront to provincial autonomy and sovereignty.
Under the ground rules established by the Social Union Framework Agreement (Sufa) of 1999 that Québec did not sign, the federal government agreed to refrain from introducing new social programmes without the consent of the majority of provinces.
That means establishing UBI as a national programme requires tedious and complicated negotiations between federal and provincial governments. Reaching a political consensus on which current social programmes should be trimmed or eliminated, is a tall order.
Enrich current social programmes instead
Rather than sacrificing existing social programmes and services in favour of UBI, federal and provincial governments should enrich current social programmes and invest in Canadians in order to strengthen their capability to fully participate in employment and social life.
Adopting UBI requires a fundamental restructuring of the existing social safety net in Canada, and would not necessarily culminate in conquering income inequality and poverty as its advocates have claimed.
Even some social justice activists have come to the realisation that UBI “is not an alternative to neoliberalism, but an ideological capitulation to it.” According to this line of reasoning, UBI provides a golden opportunity and enormous latitude for governments at all levels to justify further cuts to public services like health care, education and social housing, and to shift the rising cost of living to individuals.
As Matthew Flisfeder, a professor at the University of Winnipeg, has aptly pointed out, without reducing the cost of living, UBI would become nothing more than “a mere prop to markets and a way to serve individual and household debts.”
* Karimi is an assistant professor in school of public policy and administration at York University, Canada.
** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of IOL.