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Basic Income From an Ecological Perspective
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Jan Otto Andersson
Published/Copyright:
September 7, 2010
How is a basic income (BI) linked to growth and ecological sustainability? Should it be financed from more production, natural resource rents or green taxes? Should a BI be introduced globally rather than in the already rich countries? There is a case on equity grounds for linking a BI to ecological taxes and degrowth in the overconsuming societies, but to use BI as a tool for improving production in poverty struck regions.
Published Online: 2010-9-7
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Front Matter
- Content
- List of Contributors
- Research Note
- Introduction: Basic Income, Sustainability and Post-Productivism
- Basic Income From an Ecological Perspective
- Basic Income and Sustainable Consumption Strategies
- Political Ecology: From Autonomous Sphere to Basic Income
- Basic Income, Post-Productivism and Liberalism
- Mobility, Inclusion and the Green Case for Basic Income
Keywords for this article
Keywords – basic income;
degrowth;
global equity;
green taxes
Articles in the same Issue
- Front Matter
- Content
- List of Contributors
- Research Note
- Introduction: Basic Income, Sustainability and Post-Productivism
- Basic Income From an Ecological Perspective
- Basic Income and Sustainable Consumption Strategies
- Political Ecology: From Autonomous Sphere to Basic Income
- Basic Income, Post-Productivism and Liberalism
- Mobility, Inclusion and the Green Case for Basic Income