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Your support makes all the difference.Over 170 MPs and peers have urged the government to introduce a universal basic income to "give everyone the financial support they need to provide for themselves and their families" during the coronavirus pandemic.
In a letter to chancellor Rishi Sunak the parliamentarians say that the plan to pay every adult a flat, unconditional sum of money each week for the duration of the crisis is a "practical, not ideological" proposal.
They argue that "ensuring personal economic security must be second only to safeguarding people's health" in the outbreak, and that other approaches, such as subsidising payroll – would not help the growing five-million strong cohort of self-employed workers.
"Our economy has seen a fundamental shift since 2008. The number of self-employed has risen from 3.25 million to more than 5 million people. Universal Basic Income would protect self-employed workers and those in precarious employment," the cross-party letter, organised by Labour MP Alex Sobel says.
"The app-based driver is not paid when there is no work. Nor is the zero-hours warehouse worker, the children’s entertainer or the agency-supplied care worker. Many people do not have employers incentivised by the Government to keep paying them. A Universal Basic Income would be far more effective than subsidising company payroll."
The Government has been urged to act on concerns that many workers who cannot afford to stop attending work to self-isolate will continue to go to work and spread the virus, worsening the pandemic – or that those who do follow advice will go bankrupt as a result and be unable to pay their rent.
The Chancellor earlier this week unveiled a series of measures to help businesses and property owners during the crisis, but they were widely criticised for providing no support for renters and little to directly help workers.
"The scale of the coronavirus crisis must act as a catalyst for innovative and bold solutions. We must put in place new ideas now, to ensure the safety and security of our citizens," the MPs and peers say.
A universal basic income, at least on a temporary basis during the pandemic, is one suggested solution gaining traction. Labour leadership candidate Rebecca Long-Bailey earlier this week called for the introduction of such a scheme, and said it should be set at the level of a living wage for the duration of the crisis.
She said that "people deserve nothing less than the same level of reassurance that the government has already afforded to business".
In the US, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has said “we are looking at sending checks to Americans immediately" - an approach known as "helicopter money" which the MPs who sign the letter characterise as "something which sounds very much like a temporary universal basic income".
Writing for The Independent, MP Mr Sobel, who organised the letter, said: "Nearly every adult is either in the DWP or HMRC system. They can quickly gather payment information for those who wish to receive a direct cash payment and then work using National Insurance numbers as unique identifiers to ensure that there are no payment duplications. System challenges are always given as reasons to act slowly but, even though the systems that we have are currently designed to receive payments not give them, we have them all the same.
"The EUBI (Emergency Universal Basic Income) must be generous enough to allow working age adults eat, pay rent, consume basic home utilities - and while much can be done through payment holidays on rents, internet access etc a direct payment close to the after-tax living wage should be what we aim for. There is no other way of financing this than through borrowing, and we ask the Treasury and Bank of England to begin modelling this proposal at scale."
Other approaches have also been suggested. Shadow chancellor John McDonnell on Friday morning called for the UK follow the approach taken in Denmark and have the government cover 90 per cent of companies' pay bill. Labour has also backed the extension of statutory sick pay, with the UK's rate and coverage among the lowest in Europe and largely excluding the self-employed. The opposition also says the mortgage holiday offered by the chancellor to home-owners should be extended to tenants.
Former work and pensions secretary Iain Duncan Smith on Thursday attack proponents of a universal basic income and said the "redundant" idea would act as a disincentive for people to work during the crisis. He said the plan was unaffordable and that his own delayed Universal Credit system would be better suited to supporting people who become unable to work, with tweaks to make it more generous.
"Let me say now, it’s unaffordable, impractical, produces massive disincentives for people to work and most importantly won’t make any difference to poverty in this country," he said of a basic income. "And even if that weren’t enough, this would not be the moment for such a massive upheaval of our welfare system."
The signatories of the letter are:
Alex Sobel MP
Debbie Abrahams MP
Rushnara Ali MP
Mike Amesbury MP
Fleur Anderson MP
Paula Barker MP
Apsana Begum MP
Olivia Blake MP
Paul Blomfield MP
Steven Bonnar MP
Tracy Brabin MP
Kevin Brennan MP
Lyn Brown MP
Chris Bryant MP
Karen Buck MP
Ian Byrne MP
Ruth Cadbury MP
Wendy Chamberlain MP
Bambos Charalambous MP
Feryal Clark MP
Daisy Cooper MP
Rosie Cooper MP
Marsha de Cordova MP
Ronnie Cowan MP
Stella Creasy MP
Alex Cunningham MP
Wayne David MP
Geraint Davies MP
Alex Davies-Jones MP
Martyn Day MP
Tan Dhesi MP
Allan Dorans MP
Stephen Doughty MP
Jack Dromey MP
Rosie Duffield MP
Clive Efford MP
Chris Elmore MP
Florence Eshalomi MP
Bill Esterson MP
Stephen Farry MP
Vicky Foxcroft MP
Mary Foy MP
Gill Furniss MP
Patricia Gibson MP
Preet Gill MP
Kate Green MP
Lillian Greenwood MP
Andrew Gwynne MP
Claire Hanna MP
Emma Hardy MP
Helen Hayes MP
Sharon Hodgson MP
Kate Hollern MP
Rachel Hopkins MP
George Howarth MP
Rupa Huq MP
Christine Jardine MP
Dan Jarvis MP
Ruth Jones MP
Gerald Jones MP
Sarah Jones MP
Barbara Keeley MP
Afzal Khan MP
Ben Lake MP
David Lammy MP
Clive Lewis MP
Tony Lloyd MP
Caroline Lucas MP
Seema Malhotra MP
Rachael Maskell MP
Kerry McCarthy MP
Catherine McKinnell MP
Andy Mcdonald MP
Jim Mcmahon MP
Anna Mcmorrin MP
Ian Mearns MP
Navendu Mishra MP
Layla Moran MP
Grahame Morris MP
Ian Murray MP
James Murray MP
Charlotte Nichols MP
Abena Oppong-Asare MP
Kate Osamor MP
Kate Osborne MP
Sarah Owen MP
Steph Peacock MP
Luke Pollard MP
Yasmin Qureshi MP
Ellie Reeves MP
Jonathan Reynolds MP
Lloyd Russell-Moyle MP
Liz Saville-Roberts MP
Naz Shah MP
Virendra Sharma MP
Jeff Smith MP
Alex Sobel MP
Jo Stevens MP
Wes Streeting MP
Gareth Thomas MP
Derek Twigg MP
Claudia Webbe MP
Catherine West MP
Matt Western MP
Philippa Whitford MP
Nadia Whittome MP
Beth Winter MP
Mohammad Yasin MP
Daniel Zeichner MP
Barry Sheerman MP
Stephen Morgan MP
Nick Thomas-Symonds MP
Bell Ribiero-Addy MP
Hilary Benn MP
Matt Western MP
Sharon Hobson MP
Mary Foy MP
Baroness Smith
Lord Bach
Lord Bassam
Lord Bradley
Lord Browne
Baroness Corston
Lord Desai
Baroness Donaghy
Baroness Drake
Lord Faulkner
Lord Filkin
Lord Foulkes
Lord Goldsmith
Lord Hain
Lord Harris
Lord Haskel
Lord Howarth
Baroness Hughes
Lord Hunt
Lord Kennedy
Baroness Kennedy Of Cradley
Baroness Kennedy Of The Shaws
Baroness Kingsmill
Lord Kinnock
Lord Lennie
Lord Levy
Baroness Liddell
Baroness Lister
Baroness Mallalieu
Baroness Massey
Lord McNicol
Lord Mendelsohn
Lord Monks
Baroness Morgan
Baroness Morris
Lord Murphy
Baroness Primarolo
Baroness Prosser
Baroness Quin
Baroness Ramsay
Lord Robertson
Baroness Royall
Lord Snape
Lord Stevenson
Baroness Taylor
Baroness Thornton
Lord Triesman
Lord Tunnicliffe
Baroness Warwick
Lord Watson
Lord West
Lord Wood
Lord Woolmer
Lord Young
Baroness Young
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