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Basic Income, Labour Automation and Migration – An Approach from a Republican Perspective

Fischer Yannick ()
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Fischer Yannick: Department of Politics, University of York, York, UK

Basic Income Studies, 2020, vol. 15, issue 2, 034

Abstract: This research uses a normative approach to examine the relationship between basic income and migration. The decisive variable is the effect of labour automation, which increases economic insecurities globally, leaving some nation states in a position to cope with this and others not. The insecurities will increase migratory pressures on one hand but also justify the introduction of basic income on a nation state level on the other.The normative guideline is the republican conception of freedom as non-domination. This is used to justify a basic income, analyse how labour automation creates dominating structures and how borders dominate migrants seeking to move to countries which introduce a basic income.The result is that nation states that introduce a basic income to counter internal domination through labour automation, also have to look outside of their nation state. The imposition of borders in order to keep a basic income sustainable as well as labour automation itself, establish a form of domination over less developed countries and thus demand international regulation.

Keywords: basic income; labour automation; migration (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1515/bis-2020-0027

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