Basic Income—an early Icelandic experiment**

Old age, illness, and/or physical and/or mental disabilities may limit the ability of an individual to generate enough income to cover basic costs of living. Most developed nations provide financial assistance to persons with limited abilities. In 1974, an Icelandic government passed an act of law p...

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Main Authors: Karlsson Johannes, Matthiasson Thorolfur
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/ntaxj.2019.2019.issue-1/ntaxj-2019-0004/ntaxj-2019-0004.xml?format=INT
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:vrs:notajo:v:2019:y:2019:i:1:p:56-62:n:4 2023-05-15T16:51:00+02:00 Basic Income—an early Icelandic experiment** Karlsson Johannes Matthiasson Thorolfur https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/ntaxj.2019.2019.issue-1/ntaxj-2019-0004/ntaxj-2019-0004.xml?format=INT unknown https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/ntaxj.2019.2019.issue-1/ntaxj-2019-0004/ntaxj-2019-0004.xml?format=INT article ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:33:27Z Old age, illness, and/or physical and/or mental disabilities may limit the ability of an individual to generate enough income to cover basic costs of living. Most developed nations provide financial assistance to persons with limited abilities. In 1974, an Icelandic government passed an act of law providing a tax credit, payable to taxpayers under certain conditions. The tax allowance was applied first to settle the taxes and public levies owed by the taxpayer, with any amount remaining paid out to the individual. This system can be seen as a first, limited attempt at establishing a partial universal basic income of sorts. This social interaction between stakeholders on how to share the tax revenue between the taxpayers led to a government crisis. The shareholders in this partial universal basic income system, the state and municipalities, the old age community, the trade unions, and the employers all have different financial and political interests and were affected by this reform. The lesson is that a basic income would need strong supporters if implemented, where the role of the government and/or the parliament would be mapped. Its supporters must be able to withstand the pressure from the social partners in the labor market because of the interactivity of the social security system and the pension fund system, which is not a part of the fiscal system in Iceland. The conflict of interests becomes apparent. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Old age, illness, and/or physical and/or mental disabilities may limit the ability of an individual to generate enough income to cover basic costs of living. Most developed nations provide financial assistance to persons with limited abilities. In 1974, an Icelandic government passed an act of law providing a tax credit, payable to taxpayers under certain conditions. The tax allowance was applied first to settle the taxes and public levies owed by the taxpayer, with any amount remaining paid out to the individual. This system can be seen as a first, limited attempt at establishing a partial universal basic income of sorts. This social interaction between stakeholders on how to share the tax revenue between the taxpayers led to a government crisis. The shareholders in this partial universal basic income system, the state and municipalities, the old age community, the trade unions, and the employers all have different financial and political interests and were affected by this reform. The lesson is that a basic income would need strong supporters if implemented, where the role of the government and/or the parliament would be mapped. Its supporters must be able to withstand the pressure from the social partners in the labor market because of the interactivity of the social security system and the pension fund system, which is not a part of the fiscal system in Iceland. The conflict of interests becomes apparent.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Karlsson Johannes
Matthiasson Thorolfur
spellingShingle Karlsson Johannes
Matthiasson Thorolfur
Basic Income—an early Icelandic experiment**
author_facet Karlsson Johannes
Matthiasson Thorolfur
author_sort Karlsson Johannes
title Basic Income—an early Icelandic experiment**
title_short Basic Income—an early Icelandic experiment**
title_full Basic Income—an early Icelandic experiment**
title_fullStr Basic Income—an early Icelandic experiment**
title_full_unstemmed Basic Income—an early Icelandic experiment**
title_sort basic income—an early icelandic experiment**
url https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/ntaxj.2019.2019.issue-1/ntaxj-2019-0004/ntaxj-2019-0004.xml?format=INT
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/ntaxj.2019.2019.issue-1/ntaxj-2019-0004/ntaxj-2019-0004.xml?format=INT
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