Universal basic income refers to a social welfare system where all citizens or residents of a country receive an unconditional lump sum income, meaning an income that is not based on need (i.e. it is not means tested). The proposal has been debated in a number of countries in recent years, including Japan. (See the Wikipedia article universal basic income around the world for comparative discussion).
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| - Universal basic income in Japan (en)
- Basinkomst i Japan (sv)
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| - Basinkomst, även kallat medborgarlön, har traditionellt sett inte varit någon stor fråga i Japan. Men från omkring 2007 har debatten ökat och enligt brittiska Metro överväger Japans regering någon variant av detta system, men i första hand inriktat mot fattiga. Det ökade intresset för idén har av forskare satts i samband med ökningen av fattigdom och social exklusion, framförallt efter år 2000. Två japanska partier har tagit ställning för idén, Nya Partiet Nippon och , Midori no Tō. Bland de akademiska förespråkarna kan nämnas , professor vid Doshisha University, och , The Japan Society for the Promotion of Science). (sv)
- Universal basic income refers to a social welfare system where all citizens or residents of a country receive an unconditional lump sum income, meaning an income that is not based on need (i.e. it is not means tested). The proposal has been debated in a number of countries in recent years, including Japan. (See the Wikipedia article universal basic income around the world for comparative discussion). (en)
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| - Universal basic income refers to a social welfare system where all citizens or residents of a country receive an unconditional lump sum income, meaning an income that is not based on need (i.e. it is not means tested). The proposal has been debated in a number of countries in recent years, including Japan. (See the Wikipedia article universal basic income around the world for comparative discussion). According to Hirano Hiroya of Mejiro University, the growing debate is understandable, as social exclusion, precarity in the labor market and poverty have increased in recent decades. Indeed, the state welfare system in Japan developed quite late and is still considerably less generous than in Europe, with the state playing a much smaller role in welfare provision and families, local communities and corporations play a larger role. In response to the combined effects of automation and job uncertainty, two political parties support universal basic income: Reiwa Shinsengumi and Greens Japan. Japanese academics arguing for basic income include Toru Yamamori of Doshisha University and Hiroya Hirano of Nihon Fukushi University. Ronald Dore, a British sociologist specializing in the Japanese welfare state, has also been engaged in the basic income debate for many years, arguing for its implementation. The main organization promoting basic income in Japan is BIEN Japan, which is part of the Basic Income Earth Network (BIEN). (en)
- Basinkomst, även kallat medborgarlön, har traditionellt sett inte varit någon stor fråga i Japan. Men från omkring 2007 har debatten ökat och enligt brittiska Metro överväger Japans regering någon variant av detta system, men i första hand inriktat mot fattiga. Det ökade intresset för idén har av forskare satts i samband med ökningen av fattigdom och social exklusion, framförallt efter år 2000. Två japanska partier har tagit ställning för idén, Nya Partiet Nippon och , Midori no Tō. Bland de akademiska förespråkarna kan nämnas , professor vid Doshisha University, och , The Japan Society for the Promotion of Science). (sv)
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