Integrated Transport Resource Catalog

Pepustakaan Pusat Kementerian Perhubungan Republik Indonesia

Title
BASIC INCOME : A TRANSFORMATIVE POLICY FOR INDIA
Collection Location
Perpustakaan Politeknik Keselamatan Transportasi Jalan Tegal
Edition
Call Number
339.354 DAV b
ISBN/ISSN
9781472583130
Author(s)
Davala, Sarath
Jhabvala, Renana
Standing, Guy
Mehta, Soumya Kapoor
Subject(s)
Development studies
Public administration
Industrial arbitration and negotiation
Poverty and precarity
Classification
339.354
Series Title
GMD
Electronic Resource
Language
English
Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Publishing Year
2015
Publishing Place
London
Collation
xii, 240p ; ill.
Abstract/Notes
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. Would it be possible to provide people with a basic income as a right? The idea has a long history. This book draws on two pilot schemes conducted in the Indian State of Madhya Pradesh, in which thousands of men, women and children were provided with an unconditional monthly cash payment. In a context in which the Indian government at national and state levels spends a vast amount on subsidies and selective schemes that are chronically expensive, inefficient, inequitable and subject to extensive corruption, there is scope for switching at least some of the spending to a modest basic income. This book explores what would be likely to happen if this were done. The book draws on a series of evaluation surveys conducted over the course of the eighteen months in which the main pilot was in operation, supplemented with detailed case studies of individuals and families. It looks at the impact on health and nutrition, on schooling, on economic activity, women’s agency and the welfare of those with disabilities. Above all, the book considers whether or not a basic income could be transformative, in not only improving individual and family welfare but in promoting economic growth and development, as well as having an emancipatory effect for people long mired in conditions of poverty and economic insecurity.
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