Basic income, Democratising money & Social Security

October 30, 2014 Category: Event Comments Off on Basic income, Democratising money & Social Security

Loading Map.... SOAS, Institute of Education, Student Union

20 Bedford Way - London

Details 20 Bedford Way - London 51.5224895 -0.12808619999998427

Date/Time

Date(s) - 30/10/2014

7:00 pm

Location

SOAS, Institute of Education, Student Union

Category(ies)

Thursday October 30th, 7pm, institute of education students union, Room S16, Level 3 of the main IOE building on Bedford Way 20 Bedford Way, London WC1H 0AL

Barb Jacobson (Basic Income UK), Duncan McCann (NEF) and Ben Baumberg (Kent University)

Barbara Jacobsen

Coordinator of the European Citizens’ Initiative in the UK. And author of Basic Income UK a group promoting an unconditional basic income as a progressive policy towards an emancipatory welfare state for the UK and beyond.

“Unconditional basic income, a regular payment to each individual without work or other requirements, is an old idea which has come back into prominence this past year. Not just about technological unemployment, it affirms everyone’s right to exist, to participate in society and to do work the market doesn’t pay for.”

Duncan McCann

‘Duncan works as a researcher at NEF working on issues of monetary reform, complementary currencies and financial system innovation.’

“Money should be created as a public utility with all the benefits of that process accruing to the people rather than commercial banks who currently create about 97% of the money that we use in the economy. Returning money to a public utility would have a number of benefits including reducing asset price bubbles, improve economic stability, reduce overall debt, reduce pressures on constant economic growth and eliminate banks runs and bank subsidies.”

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Ben Baumberg: “Social Security: towards a ‘real utopia’”

Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Social Policy at the University of Kent.Ben also helped set up the collaborative research blog Inequalities, where he regularly write articles and short blog posts. he has a wide range of research interests, currently focusing on disability, the workplace, inequality, deservingness and the future of the benefits system, and the relationship between evidence and policy

University of London, Institute of Education, University of London, 20 Bedford Way, London WC1H 0AL, UK