Universal Basic Income and contemporary welfare policy reform

Lead Research Organisation: University of Brighton
Department Name: Sch of Applied Social Sciences

Abstract

My postdoc will translate and apply my PhD research to impact the prominent discussion of UBI in the context of contemporary debates around social security policy and welfare reform. The fellowship will facilitate a number of outputs, including a co-authored book, a policy briefing and a series of public and private engagements with stakeholders in the field of welfare policy and campaigning. The aim of the fellowship will be to develop my career in the field of welfare policy, both inside academia as well as within the field of policy development and advocacy, and research application. UBI is an old idea that has made a huge impact in recent policy debates globally - with various trials of the policy either completed, underway or planned in the near future. In short, the policy proposes that the state distribute cash payments to all residents under its remit with minimal (or zero) conditionality; legal residents receive the payment whether you are working or not, independently of your financial situation. Proponents of the policy point to its potential to improve the financial security of those workers facing an increasingly precarious labour market, its capacity to help mitigate some of the effects of automation and its possible impact on gender inequality. Opponents of the policy point to its potential to further imbricate a financialised, possibly neoliberal, rationale into everyday life, as well as the potentially high costs of a UBI on the public purse. A further policy question which will guide this project, involves framing UBI as a reform to the system of welfare conditionality, which currently operates in the UK through the existing benefits system including Universal Credit (UC). As part of its remit, my postdoc will examine this debate in light of my PhD findings and the current welfare policies' emergence since New Labour's reforms - showing a 'how we got here' policy story, which consolidates my previous research into welfare policy history. UBI as a policy option has reemerged within a fertile and prolific period of academic work on welfare policy. My PhD is situated in this contemporary agenda. Throughout ten years of austerity-driven public policy in the UK, a substantial body of evidence has emerged via critical research into the impacts on the restructuring of social security services and welfare payment systems (including the development of UC). There is an emerging debate that has not only highlighted the negative effects of the rollout of UC, but has also thrown the idea of welfare conditionality itself into question. Key questions revolve around the ethical and practical implications of basing the eligibility for social security support on a 'willingness to work', as compared to a a system of unconditional cash support (which UBI policy proffers). Despite the potential for a cross-sector dialogue, the academic policy work on this topic - and the key researchers in the field - have been largely unconnected with the activities of the network of UBI activists economists and policy organisations that are pursuing work on UBI. This is beginning to change, with organisations such as the Basic Income Conversation starting to forge links between the UBI and welfare policy conversations. The fellowship will apply my PhD research findings to this productive interaction, and its activities will revolve around developing the policy implications therein. By building on my PhD research and experience and connections within the policy world, I intend to bring key stakeholders into conversation via online workshops and other forms of meetings, so as to build new collaborative potentials around the issue of welfare policy reform. On top of these networking engagements, I will produce three outputs: a book, a policy briefing and articles for various media outlets. Thus, fellowship will allow me to disseminate my work across various platforms to diverse audiences - from academic through to political and activist circles.

Publications

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Description During my first few months of the award I was involved in a think tank's (Autonomy) report for a Welsh public body: the Future Generations Commissioner. https://autonomy.work/portfolio/basic-income-cornwall/ The report went on to influence the Welsh Government's decision to run a UBI pilot for care leavers: https://www.gov.wales/basic-income-pilot-care-leavers I have also been an expert witness on UBI (basic income) at a committee at the Senedd.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Government, Democracy and Justice
Impact Types Societal,Economic,Policy & public services