This concept is a form of
universal basic income (UBI), where the citizen's dividend depends upon the value of natural resources or what could be titled as
common goods like
location values,
seignorage, the
electromagnetic spectrum, the industrial use of air (CO2 production), etc.
Permanent Fund Dividend implementation in Alaska The U.S. state of
Alaska dispenses a form of citizen's dividend in its
Permanent Fund dividend, which holds investments initially seeded by the state's revenue from mineral resources, particularly
petroleum. In 2005, every eligible Alaskan resident (including children) received a check for $845.76. Over the 24-year history of the fund, it has paid out a total of $24,775.45 to every resident. Some believe this dividend as the reason why Alaska has one of the lowest rates of inequality and relatively low levels of poverty compared to other US states.
Carbon emissions reduction proposal The concept is also promoted as a tool to reduce carbon emissions.
Peter Barnes created the concept of "Sky Trust" as an example of how this could be implemented. Barnes proposes setting up a public trust to manage the funds, separate from the private sector being taxed. A calculation based on specific assets by Barnes estimates that American citizens could each get $5,000 per year by this model.
Swiss experiment proposal A Swiss campaign in 2013 advocated for a citizen's income which could net each citizen an amount equivalent to $34,000. His theory goes along with Barnes with the exception of ownership, Pogge contends that the people own the resources.
The Progress Report says that the dividend should be valued by the free market.
Maryland proposal John Moser, a 2018 congressional candidate in Maryland, ran chiefly on the proposal that a citizen's dividend based around a portion of all income would eliminate homelessness and hunger, and would act as a collective risk share as used in
Nordic model nations.
New Physiocratic League The New Physiocratic League, a project advocating for an economic reform revolving around shifting taxation towards land, advocates for a form of citizen's dividend as part of its Three Pillars program of income support.
Citizen's dividend proposal in India Rahul Chimanbhai Mehta, an Indian politician, has proposed a form of citizen's dividend. In his system, two-thirds of the
royalty payments from mining and
wireless spectrum, as well as the rent collected from some
public land would be dispensed as monthly payments to all Indians above the age of seven. The remaining third would be allocated for the
military. His proposal allocates less funds for parents who have more than four children and for legal minors but more funds for
senior citizens. According to his estimate, this can result in a monthly income of approximately Rs. 1000 for every Indian.
Other proposals Several philosophers and economists connect
left-libertarian ideas with support for UBI. Of these, the most closely related theory to
Georgism calls for a citizen's dividend—that is, a UBI equal to the monetary rental value of natural resources and socially created wealth. Writers advocating citizen's dividends include
Peter Barnes (author of
With Liberty and Dividends for All), economist Nic Tideman and activist Jeff Smith. Barnes proposes setting up a public "Sky Trust" to manage the funds creating from taxing pollution, greenhouse gases and other actions that deplete the value of shared natural resources. Other theorists use left-libertarian insights without strictly connecting the monetary value of resource value with the level of UBI.
Philippe Van Parijs makes a freedom-based argument for the highest sustainable UBI regardless of the value of natural resources, justified partly on the basis that the labor market is imperfectly competitive and produces a significant amount of "job rents."
Guy Standing uses many left-libertarian or "[Thomas] Painist" arguments for UBI, along with
progressive and
social-democratic arguments for UBI without committing to resource- or rent-based financing of UBI. To reduce
economic inequality to levels he considers more advantageous,
Steven Pearlstein proposes a $3000 per year dividend for Americans completing
K-12 education, with a requirement to at some point perform three years of
public service (or, alternatively,
profit sharing). == See also ==