Open this photo in gallery An automated pill dispensing station on an automated pharmacy assembly line reduces human errors and increases pill counting accuracy. Lisa Werner/Getty Images

In Canadian policy circles, “basic income” has come to mean a stipend paid to families or individuals without the many conditions and rules that govern existing income-assistance programs. The amount received is gradually reduced as income from other sources increases.

However, basic income is not just about welfare reform. A basic income is most valuable to people in the middle class and those hoping to join them. Here’s why a Canadian basic income is inevitable.

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Consider Canadians who already benefit from some forms of basic income – families with children under 18, and people aged 65 and older. The poorest families with children receive the Canada Child Benefit, but many professional families get at least partial benefits. The Guaranteed Income Supplement helps the poorest seniors, but Old Age Security provides at least some support to most of those with higher incomes.

Ontario’s recently cancelled basic-income pilot project, which intended to provide benefits for adults according to the same model, enrolled more working people than people already receiving income assistance.

The need for a steady income among middle-class Canadians is accelerating as the labour-market changes. Silicon Valley hyperbole imagines robots replacing human labour, and that has happened for many factory jobs, but a much more likely outcome is that automation will change the way work is done.

The leading edge of professional job change can be seen among journalists, translators and professors, who used to enjoy well-paying, secure careers. The same work is now much more likely to be packaged as “projects” – stories, documents or classes – that can be hired out to independent contractors at a much lower cost. Some of these contractors find themselves competing with others from around the world.

Similarly, pharmacists are being replaced by lower-paid pharmacy technicians or even pill-counting robots. These changes lead to a form of hidden job insecurity that existing social programs cannot address. These are people who vote and who know how to make their voices heard.

At the same time, government finances make basic income an increasingly attractive option. A recent report by the Parliamentary Budget Office emphasizes the unsustainability of provincial budgets compared with the fiscal strength of the federal government. This means that, over the long run, either the federal government must transfer ever larger amounts of tax revenue to the provinces or the provinces must transfer some responsibilities to the federal government.

The Parliamentary Budget Office estimated the net costs of a Canada-wide basic income modelled on the Ontario proposal at $44-billion annually. This did not take into account the money that might be saved by other social programs such as health care if poverty is adequately addressed, or the reduced need for provincial income assistance and disability-support programs.

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If the $20-billion that the provinces collectively spend on income assistance and disability support could be used to fund the basic income, the remaining cost would be $24-billion – remarkably close to what the Canada Child Benefit costs each year.

While it would be politically difficult to negotiate such a significant change all at once, the federal government could introduce a basic income at half or a quarter of the Ontario rates, and negotiate an agreement with the provinces not to reduce income assistance or disability support. Over time, the federal basic income could grow as the economy grows, while transfers to the provinces could be frozen.

As the federally funded basic income covers a growing proportion of the basic needs of recipients, the provinces could turn their attention (and their constrained budgets) to the sorts of things provinces should be able to do better than the federal government – addressing local needs through the delivery of job training and housing supports, for example.

Even a modest Canada-wide basic income would require additional tax revenue, but the federal government has the fiscal capacity to raise taxes in many ways. It need not increase the marginal income or corporation tax rate, and tax revenue will grow as the economy grows allowing the basic income to grow proportionately.

In 1966, Hyman Bookbinder, the assistant director of the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity, declared that adequately addressing poverty in the United States would cost more than US$1-trillion. He was not discouraged by this, but instead pointed out that economic growth would make this entirely feasible. It is, he said, simple: “The poor can stop being poor if the rich are willing to become even richer at a slower rate.”

Evelyn L Forget is the author of Basic Income For Canadians: The Key to a Healthier, Happier, More Secure Life for All. She is a health economist at the University of Manitoba and a contributor with EvidenceNetwork.ca based at the University of Winnipeg.