This paper is focused on a specific reform strategy - the Guaranteed Annual Income (GAI).It addresses an age-old issue of social welfare programming in a market economy. How do we maintain an incentive to work yet provide a safety net for those shaken loose by large-scale yet seemingly continuous change? Why participate in a losing cause if the consequences of not participating are not all that bad materially? The problem is particularly acute when the financial rewards of work and the type of work available both continue to deteriorate for a very broad class of people, as is happening in Canada. Even worse, how does one prevent the development of a welfare culture that is tolerated, if not totally accepted, to the point that it becomes imm...
In light of the Great Recession’s lingering impact on unemployment, policy pundits have suggested re...
A guaranteed income (GI) that replaces the welfare state is not currently on the political agenda, b...
This paper presents a theoretical model to show that in sectors where workers invest in firm specifi...
The idea of a guaranteed income has a long and respectable history in Canadian political and economi...
This paper discusses guaranteed annual income (GAI) as a mean of income redistribution and an altern...
A guaranteed income (GI) that replaces the welfare state is not currently on the political agenda, b...
In an earlier paper I outlined a proposal for a national income insurance plan and discussed the str...
The ability of public policies to secure the economic and social rights recognized in the Universal ...
This article provides an overview of income support programs in the United States. The article first...
This paper examines the historical alternatives to welfare reform, namely the guaranteed income. ...
The federal Conservative government recently began phasing in a plan to raise the age of eligibility...
Guaranteed Annual Income (GAI) has been advocated and opposed in both the United States and Canada a...
For the last thirty years, there has been widespread agreement that the nation\u27s welfare system s...
Over the past half decade Australian economic policy has been adventurous in its departure from full...
Poverty remains a persistent problem even in advanced economies, and Alberta is no exception despite...
In light of the Great Recession’s lingering impact on unemployment, policy pundits have suggested re...
A guaranteed income (GI) that replaces the welfare state is not currently on the political agenda, b...
This paper presents a theoretical model to show that in sectors where workers invest in firm specifi...
The idea of a guaranteed income has a long and respectable history in Canadian political and economi...
This paper discusses guaranteed annual income (GAI) as a mean of income redistribution and an altern...
A guaranteed income (GI) that replaces the welfare state is not currently on the political agenda, b...
In an earlier paper I outlined a proposal for a national income insurance plan and discussed the str...
The ability of public policies to secure the economic and social rights recognized in the Universal ...
This article provides an overview of income support programs in the United States. The article first...
This paper examines the historical alternatives to welfare reform, namely the guaranteed income. ...
The federal Conservative government recently began phasing in a plan to raise the age of eligibility...
Guaranteed Annual Income (GAI) has been advocated and opposed in both the United States and Canada a...
For the last thirty years, there has been widespread agreement that the nation\u27s welfare system s...
Over the past half decade Australian economic policy has been adventurous in its departure from full...
Poverty remains a persistent problem even in advanced economies, and Alberta is no exception despite...
In light of the Great Recession’s lingering impact on unemployment, policy pundits have suggested re...
A guaranteed income (GI) that replaces the welfare state is not currently on the political agenda, b...
This paper presents a theoretical model to show that in sectors where workers invest in firm specifi...