Australia As of 2022, the
Australian Greens support a Liveable Income Guarantee of
$88 per day; meaning all those who do not have an income of at least this figure would be raised to this amount. This would raise all Australians above the Henderson poverty line (as calculated in 2022). This law is primarily implemented through the
Bolsa Família program. Under this program, poorer families receive a direct cash payment via a government issued debit card. Bolsa Família is a
conditional cash transfer program, meaning that beneficiaries receive their aid if they accomplish certain actions. Families who receive the aid must put their children in school and participate in vaccination programs. If they do not meet these requirements, they are cut off from aid. The program has been criticised as vote-buying, trading productive individuals' earning for the votes of welfare recipients As of 2011, approximately 50 million people, or a quarter of Brazil's population, were participating in Bolsa Família.
Canada Canada has experimented with minimum income trials. During the
Mincome experiment in
Manitoba in the 1970s, Mincome provided lower-income families with cash transfers to keep them out of poverty. The trial was eventually ended but this was due to budget shortfalls and a change in government. The province of
Ontario began a minimum income experiment in 2017. Approximately 4000 citizens began to receive a stipend based on their family situation and income. Recipients of this program could receive upwards of $10,000 per year. Government researchers used this pilot as a way of testing to see if a minimum income can help people meet their basic needs. On 31 August 2018, following a change in government, incoming Premier Doug Ford announced that the pilot would be cancelled at the end of the current fiscal year.
China China's Minimum Livelihood Guarantee also called , is a means-tested social assistance scheme introduced in 1993 and expanded to all Chinese cities in 1999.
Denmark (formerly known as ) is a public benefit in Denmark granted to citizens who would otherwise not be able to support themselves or their families. In principle, cash benefits are a universal right for all citizens who meet certain statutory criteria.
Estonia A subsistence allowance is financial help for a person or family in need, which provides minimal resources for everyday life (food, medicine, housing costs, etc.).
Finland Basic subsistence allowance paid by
Kela may be granted to a person or family whose income and assets are insufficient to cover the necessary daily expenses.
France In 1988, France was one of the first countries to implement a minimum income, called the
Revenu minimum d'insertion. In 2009, it was turned into
Revenu de solidarité active (RSA), a new system that aimed to solve the
poverty trap by providing low-wage workers a complementary income to encourage activity.
Greece The minimum guaranteed income is a selective financial benefit to ensure that all citizens enjoy a minimum standard of living and cover their basic needs. It has been tested and implemented in European Union countries and others. In 2019 it was incorporated as a requirement in the Greek Constitution.
India Modern independent India developed many means and livelihood tested cash transfer programs through
Direct Benefit Transfer at both the federal and the state level. At the federal level, these include minimum income social pension programs such as
National Social Assistance Scheme, guaranteed employment program like
National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005 or a disability aid like
Deendayal Disabled Rehabilitation Scheme. At the state level, there can be additional minimum income programs, one such being "Laksmir Bhandar" run by the state of
West Bengal that transfers a minimum aid to families without work in the state.
Ireland In Ireland, €20 of earnings per day of permitted work (beneficiaries are allowed up to three days per week) is disregarded from employment income when calculating
Jobseekers’ Allowance entitlement and deductions are calculated as 60 percent of earnings less this income disregard. In addition, the
Part-time Job Incentive Scheme and
Back to Work Family Dividend are fixed-duration payments offered to the long-term unemployed incentive moving into work. In return for relinquishing claims to primary assistance benefits, both schemes provide benefits for a fixed duration that are slightly lower than household GMI entitlements, but which are not tapered with employment income, subject to certain eligibility requirements. Ireland's relatively generous tapering system serves to smooth disincentives to increase income and work and contributes to their lower measured participation tax rates (PTRs) and marginal effective tax rates (METRs).
Italy The
citizens' income was a social
welfare system created in
Italy in January 2019. Although its name recalls one of a
universal basic income, this provision was actually a form of conditional and non-individual guaranteed minimum income.
Norway Income support can be granted if the applicant has insufficient income and resources to live on and is not entitled to other social security benefits. Income support is paid by the
Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration.
Portugal The Social Insertion Income is a benefit for combating poverty, enabling individuals and their families to obtain support adapted to their situation, facilitating the satisfaction of their basic needs and aiming to integrate them into work, society and the community.
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia has a
Citizen's Account Program which provides a basic income to registered citizens. In December 2017, immediately before the program began, more than 3.7 million households had registered, representing 13 million people, or more than half the population. , between one fifth and one third of Saudi residents are estimated to be non-citizens.
Slovakia Material need assistance (pomoc v hmotnej núdzi) includes one hot meal a day, essential clothing and shelter.
South Africa The Social Relief of Distress grant (SRD) in South Africa is given to those whose monthly income falls short of the individual food poverty line, which is the minimal amount required to buy food that provides adequate calories for survival.
Spain In
Spain, the
ingreso mínimo vital is an economic benefit guaranteed as part of the
Social security in Spain. The IMV is defined as a "subjective right" and is intended to prevent poverty and
social exclusion of people who live alone or integrated into a coexistence unit when they are in a situation of vulnerability due to lack of sufficient financial resources to cover their basic needs. The benefit, which is not fixed and varies depending on various factors, ranges between 462 and 1015 euros per month, is expected to cover 850,000 households (approximately 2.5 million people) and will cost the government 3 billion euros per year.
Sweden Social assistance consists partly of a "national standard" (riksnorm) and partly of "reasonable costs outside the national standard". The national standard includes costs such as food, clothing and footwear. Reasonable non-standard costs include rent and household electricity.
United States The
United States has multiple social programs that provide guaranteed minimum incomes for individuals meeting certain criteria such as assets or disability. For instance,
Supplemental Security Income (
SSI) is a United States government program that provides
stipends to low-income people who are either aged (65 or older), blind, or disabled. SSI was created in 1974 to replace federal-state adult assistance programs that served the same purpose. Today the program provides benefits to approximately eight million Americans. Another such program is
Social Security Disability Insurance (
SSD or
SSDI), a
payroll tax-funded,
federal insurance program. It is managed by the
Social Security Administration and is designed to provide
income supplements to people who are restricted in their ability to
work because of a
disability, usually a
physical disability. SSD can be supplied on either a temporary or permanent basis, usually directly correlated to whether the person's disability is temporary or permanent. An early guaranteed minimum income program in the U.S. was the
Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), established by the
Social Security Act. Where previously the responsibility to assist needy children lay in the hands of the states, AFDC transferred that authority to the federal government. Over time, the AFDC was often criticized for creating disincentives to work, leading to many arguing for its replacement. In the 1970s, President
Richard M. Nixon proposed the
Family Assistance Program (FAP), which would replace the AFDC. FAP was intended to fix many of the problems of the AFDC, particularly the anti-work structure. Presidential nominee
George McGovern also proposed a minimum income—in the form of a Universal Tax Credit. Ultimately, neither of these programs was implemented. Throughout the decade, many other experimental minimum income programs were carried out in cities throughout the country, such as the Seattle-Denver Income Maintenance Experiments. In 1996, under President
Bill Clinton, the AFDC was replaced with the
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. This would
block grant funds to the states to allow them to decide how aid would be distributed.
Other countries • Bulgaria: Social benefits • Croatia: Guaranteed minimum fee • Czech Republic: Living allowance • Iceland: Financial assistance • Latvia: Social assistance • Lithuania: Monetary social support • Romania: Guaranteed minimum income • Slovenia: Cash social assistance == List of countries ==