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      Basic income and the problem of cumulative misfortune

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      Author
      Wigley, S.
      Date
      2006
      Source Title
      Basic Income Studies
      Print ISSN
      1932-0183
      Publisher
      Walter de Gruyter GmbH
      Volume
      1
      Issue
      2
      Pages
      1 - 17
      Language
      English
      Type
      Article
      Item Usage Stats
      120
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      84
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      Abstract
      This paper defends a regularly paid basic income as being better equipped to tackle unfair inequalities of outcome. It is argued that the timing of "option-luck" failures – in particular, whether they occur early in a lifetime of calculated gambles, and whether they are clustered together – may lead to a form of "brute bad luck," referred to as "cumulative misfortune." A basic income that is paid on a regular basis provides a way to prevent the emergence of cumulative misfortune, because the basic income at least partially replenishes the individual's ability to take the next calculated gamble. The upshot of this is a nonpaternalistic justification for an unconditional basic income that is paid regularly and is nonmortgageable. This has an important bearing on the debate between those who advocate a one-off endowment at the start of adult life and those who advocate a basic income paid regularly throughout one's life. The paper contends that a regular basic income represents a superior social policy because it prevents the emergence of cumulative misfortune, rather than belatedly attempting to compensate for its effects during our senior years.
      Keywords
      Basic endowment
      Brute luck
      Cumulative misfortune
      Option luck
      Paternalism
      Regular basic income
      Permalink
      http://hdl.handle.net/11693/48407
      Published Version (Please cite this version)
      http://doi.org/10.2202/1932-0183.1039
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      • Department of Philosophy 182
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