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8 Reference budgets as tools for everyday life, evaluation and policy making in Finland

  • Anna-Riitta Lehtinen and Kristiina Aalto
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Abstract

This chapter tackles Anna-Riitta Lehtinen and Kristiina Aalto’s work on reference budget methods in Finland in order to establish the decent minimum reference budgets. It illustrates some attempts that were made to establish a programme of reference budget research in the 1990s. It also mentions how reference budget research was revived by Lehtinen and Aalto’s work on consensual budgets in 2010 and then in 2018. The chapter examines how the Finnish reference budgets combine focus group discussions with members of the public in order to help improve the reliability and validity of the resulting standards. It reveals the inadequacy of the Finnish social protection system, in which only pensioner incomes reached the reference budget standard while other cash transfers and benefits were about 70 percent of the reference budgets.

Abstract

This chapter tackles Anna-Riitta Lehtinen and Kristiina Aalto’s work on reference budget methods in Finland in order to establish the decent minimum reference budgets. It illustrates some attempts that were made to establish a programme of reference budget research in the 1990s. It also mentions how reference budget research was revived by Lehtinen and Aalto’s work on consensual budgets in 2010 and then in 2018. The chapter examines how the Finnish reference budgets combine focus group discussions with members of the public in order to help improve the reliability and validity of the resulting standards. It reveals the inadequacy of the Finnish social protection system, in which only pensioner incomes reached the reference budget standard while other cash transfers and benefits were about 70 percent of the reference budgets.

Chapters in this book

  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents v
  3. List of tables and figures viii
  4. Notes on contributors x
  5. Acknowledgements xix
  6. Preface from the series editors xx
  7. Foreword xxii
  8. Introduction
  9. An introduction to minimum income standards and reference budgets: international and comparative policy perspectives 3
  10. Case studies
  11. From normative budget standards to consensual minimum income standards in the UK 27
  12. Minimum Essential Standards of Living research in Ireland 39
  13. The French experience of reference budgets 55
  14. Minimum income research in Japan: its development and political implications 67
  15. Measuring needs and setting standards in Singapore 83
  16. A South African pilot of the Minimum Income Standards approach 97
  17. Reference budgets as tools for everyday life, evaluation and policy making in Finland 109
  18. Belgian reference budgets for social participation and their use for policy purposes 123
  19. The development, value and application of budget standards: reflecting on the Australian experience 139
  20. Estimating the cost of raising a child in Catalonia through the reference budgets approach 155
  21. Measuring poverty in the Netherlands: the generalised reference budget approach 169
  22. The Norwegian reference budget 185
  23. Minimum budgets for Danish families 197
  24. The Swedish Consumer Agency’s calculations of reference values for some of the most common household expense categories 207
  25. Cross-national and comparative perspectives
  26. The Slovenian experience with three methods for defining the minimum income 227
  27. Applying the Minimum Income Standard in diverse national contexts 241
  28. The steep and winding road to comparable reference budgets in Europe 255
  29. Adequate income in Portugal: a comparison of two estimation methods 271
  30. Policy and practice
  31. Basic needs budgets in policy and practice 291
  32. Establishing a national standard: the role of the UK’s Minimum Income Standard in policy and practice 307
  33. Minimum Income Standards in the Basic Income debate 319
  34. Conclusions
  35. Minimum income standards and reference budgets: past, present, future? 333
  36. Index 345
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