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[Commlist] New book on the digital economy and universal basic income
Sat Nov 16 11:42:53 GMT 2024
NEW BOOK – Inequality in the Digital Economy. The case for a universal
basic income
The Palgrave Studies in Digital Inequalities (series eds Massimo
Ragnedda and Laura Robinson) has just released my monograph on the
universal basic income:
White, A. (2024) Inequality in the Digital Economy. The Case for a
Universal Basic Income. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-69718-0
<https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-69718-0>
https://link.springer.com/series/16770
<https://link.springer.com/series/16770>
*Abstract*
This book will make the case for the introduction of a universal basic
income (UBI). The structural logic of the digital economy as presently
constituted widens inequality and, through its use of automation for
increasingly complex, as well as mundane, tasks, threatens jobs. The
book will investigate the extent of this disruption to traditional
labour markets and of individual livelihoods, and argue that alternative
means of supporting people financially, like UBI, can mitigate the
digital economy’s most baleful impacts. The book will also highlight the
positive social and environmental benefits that would accrue from the
introduction of UBI, as unconditional financial support would reduce
workers’ anxiety in insecure labour markets, and the expending of
valuable resources would be lessened if energy consumption was
determined by society’s needs rather than by the requirements of labour
markets tasked primarily with maximising employment. An explanation as
to why arguments against its introduction on the grounds of cost and its
supposed encouraging of idleness, are, while superficially compelling,
ultimately without foundation, will form the centrepiece of the
concluding political argument for UBI.
*From the Back Cover*
“Andrew White has brought together expertise in the digital economy and
in Universal Basic Income to create a scholarly discussion of the
relationship between Universal Basic Income and the digital economy that
concludes that a smaller unconditional income would be a useful step
towards an unconditional income sufficient to live on. Scholars in both
the digital economy and Universal Basic Income should read this book,
and so should policymakers."
– Dr Malcolm Torry, Visiting Fellow, Institute for Policy Research,
University of Bath, and Treasurer, Basic Income Earth Network.
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