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http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/welfare/2016/02/how-i-learnt-stop-worrying-and-love-basic-income

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How I learnt to stop worrying and love Basic Income

John McDonnell's decision to consider moving to the benefit is the right
one, says Jonathan Reynolds.

​The ​
first time Basic Income was pitched to me I have to admit I thought it
sounded completely unrealistic. An unconditional payment to each
individual, to support their full lives, whether working, studying, caring
or being cared for? I remember sitting in Stalybridge Labour Club with a
beer after a meeting, when my friend Gordon introduced me to the concept.
“How else,” asked Gordon, “will we ensure sufficient support for people as
they have to retrain throughout their working lives - not just for several
different jobs, but for several different careers?”.

Gordon’s question is the right one, and it stuck with me. My outlook on
politics is fundamentally shaped by my experience of growing up in the
North East in the 1980s. The closure of entire industries, like coal and
shipbuilding, had dramatic and fundamental consequences for the areas built
around them. The same is true of the tragic situation in the steel industry
today. I still believe the Thatcher Government’s abject response to
deindustrialisation lies at the heart of many of the problems the UK faces
today, such as low skills, worklessness, poor public health and so on. The
UK spent a fraction of what a country like Sweden spent on education and
retraining as traditional industries declined, and we have suffered the
consequences.

But what should the left’s response be to this sort of seismic economic
change? The traditional response, calling for the nationalisation of
failing industries, doesn’t solve the problem. Running an industry at a
loss because it is subsidised by the taxpayer is not a long-term answer.
Globalisation means it was inevitable that the UK would have to exit some
traditional industries – I wouldn’t fancy bringing back the cotton mills to
Stalybridge, for instance – and education and retraining to take part in
new economic opportunities is the only solution.  But as technology and the
growth of the MINT countries brings ever more economic disruption, as well
as opportunity, we must have a mechanism to provide people with both
security and a platform from which to be able to access these new
opportunities.  Basic Income would do just that. This is the first of my
three justifications for backing it – as a policy to cope with inevitable
but fundamental economic change.

The second justification concerns our existing welfare state.  I have
always been taken aback by the bewildering complexity of our welfare
system. The Child Poverty Action Group Benefits Handbook, which like many
MPs I use to help constituents, is bigger than my copy of the Bible. The
modern evolution of the welfare state – conditionality, sanctions, and
adults being forced to fill in job search diaries as if they were in
primary school – I find unconscionable. I don’t deny there are a small
group of people who do need a kick up the arse. There are also people who
definitely need to access some support to get back into work, especially
with numeracy and literacy.  But why should this be punitive? A system
which sanctions war veterans for selling poppies, or a person for attending
job interview, is both ridiculous and counter-productive.  And that’s
before we consider the fundamental problem of our current benefits system –
how to taper off benefits when someone does return to work to ensure there
is an incentive to work and not a “benefits trap”.

The Government’s answer is universal credit. Having been one of the
pathfinder areas for universal credit, I’m afraid they will be
disappointed. Thanks to George Osborne, universal credit will not now offer
the kind of work incentives it was hoped it would, but the real problem is
that it still cannot cope with the real nature of people’s working lives.
There is not, as much as some Tory MPs would claim there is, a big group of
people who never work and then a larger group who pay their taxes to
support these people. Instead, many people move frequently into and out of
work, because the work they can get is short-term, or insecure, or because
the other responsibilities in their lives cause complications. The benefits
system simply cannot cope with these people, and nothing I have seen
suggests universal credit will be a solution to that. As an example, not
only is universal credit designed to be paid four weeks after a claim is
made (on the huge assumption that everyone is paid monthly in arrears and
so will have four weeks wages to tide them over), if a claim for universal
credit is made too early, and the claimant receives their final pay packet
after lodging the claim, they can wait as much as 11 weeks before receiving
a penny. It is not surprise that foodbanks are booming.  There are also
huge questions regarding conditionality as the nature of work changes: if
technology like Uber creates a hypothetically unlimited amount of
self-employed work, how will conditionality work? Will every job seeker be
forced to do self-employed work in exchange for their meagre support? It’s
a problem which is almost upon us now.

My third, and final, reason for backing Basic Income is far simpler. I
object to the levels of poverty in this country and believe them to be an
indefensible waste of talent and resources. I wonder how many successful
businesses, or technological inventions, or medical breakthroughs, we miss
out upon because we do not give enough people the platform from which they
might fulfil their potential. Just think how more competitive the UK might
be in the global economy if we stopped doing this? In a recent answer
during Women and Equalities questions in the House of Commons, Nicky Morgan
defended the government’s redefinition of child poverty to me on the basis
that Government must tackle the ‘root causes of poverty’, which for her
where educational failure and worklessness. I certainly agree these should
be tackled. But what also struck me about this answer was that it
essentially returned to a Victorian definition of poverty, i.e. that
poverty is a result of character defects or personal problems. It is a
position that pre-dates the work of Charles Booth and Seebohm Rowntree in
1903. There is no Conservative understanding of the person who works two or
three jobs but is still low paid, or who has had a successful career for
many years but then fallen on hard times.  Our current response to a scale
of these problems is simply insufficient.

There are many issues still to resolve about Basic Income, such as how to
give additional support to those with disabilities, and how to tackle the
chronic British problem with housing benefit when we simply do not have
sufficient houses. We would also need to consider how long economic
immigrants would have to be in the UK before they became eligible. But I am
convinced that many fundamental problems in the UK – be it dealing with
economic change, work incentives, poverty or a lack of competitiveness –
could be tackled in this way. I also think it provides an answer to one of
the perennial questions for the Labour Party - how is it that the public
loves the NHS yet resents the benefits system? The answer is, I believe,
that the NHS provides something for everybody. So should the rest of the
welfare state - providing again real social security for all. Moderates
within the Labour Party shouldn’t be afraid to embrace radical ideas. I’m
coming out for Basic Income.

​Johathan Reynolds is Labour/Coop MP for Stalybridge and Hyde, member of
the BIS Select Committee and incoming Chair of Christians on the Left.

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