Credit: Shutterstock

Credit: Shutterstock

Basic income is all the rage these days. The idea — which calls for the government to give everyone in a given city/state/country/whatever enough money to live in, no strings attached — is being tested in Finland, in Ontario, in the Netherlands, and in Kenya. Switzerland’s set to vote on whether to adopt it as a national policy in June.

But discussions of the proposal rarely mention that many rich countries — including France, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Sweden — already implement a version of it. Most Western European countries have what’s called a “universal child benefit,” or a basic income going only to families with children.

It’s a much simpler way to support families than the complicated system the US uses, and an American version could vastly reduce child poverty, perhaps eliminating it altogether.

At least 10 rich countries have universal child benefit policies

For a widely employed policy, universal child benefits (also known as “child allowances”) keep a pretty low profile. That’s […]

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