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Citizen’s Basic Income: The Answer is Blowing in Wind 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

Eduardo Matarazzo Suplicy 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Eduardo Matarazzo Suplicy is Senator from PT-SP, Professor in Economics of 
Escola de Administração de Empresas e de Economia de SĂŁo Paulo, from 
Fundação GetĂșlio Vargas, Ph.D. in Economics by Michigan State University, 
USA, author of the Bill of Law that originated Law 10.835/2004 which institutes 
by steps the CitizenÂŽs Basic Income in Brazil, and of the book Citizen’s Basic 
Income

. The Exit is Through the Door. 

1

st 

Edition 2002 and 3

rd

 Edition 2004, 

Editora Fundação Perseu Abramo and Cortez Editora and Co-Chair of BIEN, 
Basic Income Earth Network. 

 

 

2006 

 

 

 

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To MĂŽnica Dallari, 

 Whom I thank for the suggestion, the incentive, and the tenderness to write 

this book 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For my grandchildren Teodoro, Laura, Maria Luiza and Bernardo to live in a 

better Brazil.

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My thanks go to the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 
especially to its President Lee Hamilton and to the Director of 

Programa Brasil,

 

Luiz Bitencourt, who gave me the opportunity in Washington D.C. during 
January and February of 2005 to dedicate myself with tenacity to the research 
for writing this book.  This work continued until the beginning of 2006 with 
several discussion trips in Brazil and abroad.   

 

I would also like to thank my staff at the Senate: Alan dos Santos Mendes, 
Carlos CĂ©sar Marques Frausino, Edwiges de Oliveira Cardoso, Elisabeth 
Parker Braga de Alencar Pinto, EurĂ­pedes Alencar de Souza, Fernanda Lohn 
Ramos, FlĂĄvia Rolim de Andrade, Isaac Teixeira Ramos, JosĂ© DamiĂŁo da 
Silva, JosĂ© PatrocĂ­nio Filho, LĂ­lian Nio Lie, Luciano Mendes Coiro, Maria da 
Graça Santos de Souza, Neisse Vasconcellos Dobbin, Paulo Nogueira Batista 
Jr, Rosa Wasem, Rose Nogueira, Saul MacalĂłs de Paiva, ValĂ©ria Benetton, 
for their collaboration. 

 

Thanks are also extended to my friends and long time collaborators: Bazileu 
Alves Margarido Neto, JoĂŁo Batista Breda and Samir Cury.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Introduction.............................................................................................................. 5 
I. From Bolsa FamĂ­lia Program to Citizen’s Basic Income....................................... 8 
II. The Fundamentals ............................................................................................ 13 
III. The first proposals of minimum income and of basic income ........................... 15 
IV. The guarantee of a subsistence income starting in the 20th century ............... 21 
V. The creation of BIEN, Basic Income European Network, recently 
transformed in Basic Income Earth Network. ........................................................ 30 
VI. The pioneer experience of Basic Income in Alaska (United States)................. 32 
VII. A good proposal for the democratization and the pacification of Iraq.............. 35 
VIII. The maturing of the Citizen’s Basic Income proposal .................................... 36 
IX. The Precursors in Brazil................................................................................... 41 
X - From Minimum Income to Citizen’s Basic Income ........................................... 42 
XI - Conclusion ...................................................................................................... 56 

 

 

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5

 

 

Introduction 

 

In this book I will try to explain one of the main ways to apply principles 

of justice towards the eradication of absolute poverty and towards improving 
income distribution to create effective peace conditions, as proclaimed many 
times by Martin Luther King Jr. and Pope John Paulo II.

 1

 

 

Besides other important instruments such as the expansion of 

education opportunities, health care, basic sanitation, agrarian reform, micro-
credit and incentives for co-operative production, I show herein that there has 
been a formidable instrument created throughout the history of humanity that is 
in the air, being blown by the wind, a common sense solution we should 
consider: Citizen’s Basic Income. As in one of Bob Dylan’s most beautiful 
songs 

Blowin’ in the Wind:

 

                 
        

   

How many roads must a man walk down 

                before you can call him a man? 
                How many seas must a white dove sail 
                before she sleeps in the sand? 
                And how many times must the cannon balls fly 
                before they've forever banned?                           
                               
                 
 

 How many years can a mountain exist 

                before it is washed to the sea? 
                How many years can some people exist 
                before they're allowed to be free? 
                And how many times can a man turn his head 
                pretending he just doesn't see?                  
 
 

 How many times must a man look up 

                before he can see the sky? 
                How many ears must one man have  
                before he can hear the people cry? 
                How many deaths will it take till he knows 
                that too many people have died? 
         

                      
  

The answer my friend is blowing in the wind 

 the answer is blowing in the wind.

        

 

                                                 

1 The aim of this book is to update in a concise manner the content of 

Citizen’s Income: The Exit is 

Through the Door (Renda de Cidadania. A SaĂ­da Ă© pela Porta).

 SĂŁo Paulo: Editora Fundação Perseu 

Abramo and Cortez Editora, SĂŁo Paulo, 1

st

 Edition 2002 and 3

rd

 Edition 2004. Being my first book, it 

contains several selected texts and documents related to this theme.  

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What the poet means in this song is the answer is already there, ready 

to be seen, and ready to be used. Citizen’s Basic Income is as common sense 
as exiting our homes through the front door. I begin this paper by sharing a 
letter sent by President Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva to a Brazilian woman that was 
read in the program, “Voz do Brasil”. Mrs. Ione Pereira Machado demonstrated 
an attitude that deserved to be praised: 

 

 

 

“BrasĂ­lia, November 8, 2004.  
 
 

Dear Ione:  

 
 

"It was with great emotion that I learned through the press of your 

admirable attitude taken two weeks ago. According to a report made by a 
newspaper from ParanĂĄ, upon learning your husband had found a job after 
being unemployed for several months you decided to give back your Bolsa-
Familia program card after your conscience revision that a salary of R$ 400, 
which he now receives, is sufficient for the family maintenance. You therefore 
did not want to deprive other Brazilians, who are in more need of this benefit.  
 

Ms. Ione, perhaps you do not realize the importance of your gesture in 

the times we are living. With all the difficulty and effort to survive in a country 
like ours, you still managed to find the capacity to be generous and show 
solidarity by thinking of others. 
 

Bolsa-FamĂ­lia is one of the most important and complex projects of our 

government. We realize that by proposing this dream to provide for 11.2 million 
families whom according to IBGE live below the Brazilian poverty line, we must 
be aware of the enormous difficulties that will be presented along the way..  It 
is also necessary to believe it is possible to transform this country and that 
most people are honest and deserving of our efforts and respect.  From your 
little house in MaringĂĄ you gave an example that is needed by all of us. It 
people such as yourself that allow me to believe that the best of Brazil are 
Brazilians and that we will not give up.  
 

 

 

Thank-you for being who you are.  A big hug from myself and Marisa. 

  
 

 

 

 

 

Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva"  

 

 

 

 

Due to the importance of her act I would also like to comment and 

reproduce here some excerpts from an interview Mrs. 

I

one gave to “O Globo”, 

who awarded her the prize “Faz Diferença” (Making the Difference) in 2004.

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““2004 Personality Award”

   

 

Ione Pereira Machado

 

 

""We were almost giving up” 

 

Due to great uneasiness as a result of the 
concern for other families more in need, victims of 
unemployment, Mrs. Ione Pereira Machado was 
motivated to give back the her Bolsa FamĂ­lia 
benefit. Many attempts were required to get 
through the bureaucracy involved in the act. 
Surprised by the award she praised President 
Lula for “observing the needs of the people”. 

 

 

O GLOBO: Had you ever imagined the simple fact of giving back your card 
could turn you into a national example and would bring a letter from President 
Lula, and then receive the “Faz Diferença” award? 

IONE PEREIRA MACHADO: No, no. Did you know the process of giving back 
the card was difficult? We were delayed in finding the right place. We almost 
gave up. We went to one place and they said that it was in another place, and 
then the hot sun
 I told myself, “no, I will not give up ". I didn’t want to keep 
the card. I was anxious to give it back. 

 

Why did you give the card back? 
IONE: Because there are other people who need it. It should be given to 
someone who is perhaps unemployed. It was not fair for us to keep it. My 
husband was unemployed for one year, two months, and twenty days. 

 

Did you count all the days? 
IONE: I counted. It was a great suffering. 

 

Don’t you miss these R$ 50? 
IONE: No. He has his salary which doesn’t reach two minimum salaries, but 
we can get along with it. If we know how to use it we can manage it.  

 

  

What do you think about the fact you are an example for Brazil, a person who 
makes a difference? 

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IONE: Many people could do that, no? We see people all the time in need.  For 
many R$ 50 is not much, but for others it is a lot and goes a long way. 

Do you know of any one else who had this card and like you gave it back? 
IONE: Here in MaringĂĄ alone there are another four who have given it back. 

Do you think that President Lula is creating a good government? 
IONE: I think so, employment has increased. By being a modest President of 
the people he observes our needs. I think he is very aware of what is 
happening in Brazil. 

 

 

Did you enjoy to be awarded a prize by GLOBO? And going to Rio? 

IONE: Of course but that’s that, I do not know what to say. We were a little 
scared to go to Rio because we had never been and we were not used to 
people there. Besides, I think they attack more tourists. And then when they 
look to us they think, “what will we take from these unfortunate ones?"... 
(laughs)” 

 

 

When Lula visited Pombal an inner city in the state of Paraiba he also met with 
six mothers similar to Mrs. Ione who had returned their Bolsa Familia cards. 
What I would like to know is if we will be able to reach a point where we can 
provide a basic income to everyone without this need to control who receives, 
and who does not, the benefit.  Is there a way we could benefit everyone?  
This is the question I would like to answer.

 

 

 

I. From Bolsa FamĂ­lia Program to Citizen’s Basic Income 

 

 

The Bolsa Familia program is one the main instruments used by 

President Lula to reach his target of providing three meals a day to all 
Brazilians and thus, eradicate absolute poverty by the end of his mandate 
2006. The law that defines the program stipulates that all families with a 
monthly income below R$ 100 per capita have access to the program. If the 
family’s per capita income reaches R$50, they receive a benefit of an 
additional R$50, plus R$15 per child. If the family’s per capita income reaches 
R$100, the benefit is only R$15 per child, R$30 for two, R$45 for three, and so 
on depending on the number of children.  

             In return the family must demonstrate that their children up to 6 years

 

old are vaccinated according to the Ministry of Health calendar and are going 
periodically to the government health centers to check their development and 
their nourishment. Children and adolescents from 6 to 16 years old must 
attend school and be in attendance at least 85% of the time. Parents, 
whenever possible, should attend literacy or professional courses. 

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9

 

 

In October 2003 when President Lula launched the Bolsa Familia 

program he unified four existing income programs: Bolsa Escola (School 
Scholarship), Bolsa Alimentação (Cash Food Aid), AuxĂ­lio-GĂĄs (Gas Subsidy) 
and CartĂŁo Alimentação (Food Card), there were around 2.3 million families 
registered in these programs. In December 2003 this quantity increased to 3.5 
million families and by December 2005, 8.7 million. By June 2006 it targeted at 
11.2 million families which corresponds to almost 100% of the families in Brazil  
with a monthly per capita income below R$ 100. 

 

Given that each family has an average of four members 11.2 million 

families will correspond to almost 45 million of people. Based on an estimate of 
the Brazilian Population taken in January 2006, 185 million, this equates to 
one quarter of the total population.  

 

In order to pay the Bolsa Familia benefit which in November 2005 

reached on average of R$ 64 per family, the federal government designated 
an amount equal to the yearly averages (R$64 x 12) multiplied by the target, 
11.2 million families in their last budget. This equals a total budget of R $9 
billion not including administrative costs.  Another source of revenue used to 
reach this target is the government portion of the CPMF - Contribuição sobre 
MovimentaçÔes Financeiras (Financial Movement Contribution) receipt. This 
fund originates from the 0.38% aliquot on each financial movement of which 
only 0.08% is destined to the Fundo de Combate a Pobreza (Fight Against 
Poverty Fund) and the remaining 0.30% is designated to Health. 

 

In consideration of the program’s target and in comparison with other 

budget items, it is not an exceptional amount. For example to pay the interest 
on the public debt, summing up the three levels of the government, federal, 
state and municipal from the years of 2003, 2004 and 2005, equates 
respectively to  R$ 145.2 billion, R$ 128.2 billion and R$ 157.1 billion 
according to the Bulletin of the Central Bank. 

 

Today in order to provide the basic minimum to Brazilians in need 

requires a meticulous verification process to verify program eligibility. 

 

Something that was exemplified through Mrs. Ione’s case.  As the press has 
already reported it is often difficult to check the income of each family and their 
members, working in the formal or informal market, or rendering services to 
third parties.  

For Mrs. Ione and her husband Anquilino Machado who was 

unemployed for more than 14 months, their struggles for survival during the 
past year were certainly not easy.  In order to meet their minimum they 
probably worked from time to time in an informal job and borrowed money from 
friends and relatives.  

How does the government control for all of these variations?  Would it 

be enough that your neighbors and the press keep observing daily each family 
who benefited from Bolsa FamĂ­lia?  If in each house there is a telephone, a 

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television, a computer, rice, bean and potatoes in the cupboard, milk, butter, 
meat, vegetables and fruits in the refrigerator? 

Is there a way to solve this problem and improve upon the target of the 

Bolsa FamĂ­lia program? I think yes there is and luckily, it has already become 
a law. Law n. 10.835/2004 approved by the National Congress in 2003 and 
sanctioned by President Lula on January 8, 2004 will gradually be 
implemented in Brazil. It is the establishment of the Citizen’s Basic Income. 

 
 

 
What is Law 10.835/2004? 

 

 

Starting in 2005 the law of Citizen’s Basic Income will be instituted and 

constitute the right to all Brazilians, resident in the country as well as 
foreigners who have resided here for at least five years, regardless of their 
social and economic condition, to receive annually a monetary benefit. The 
inclusion of people into the Citizen’s Basic Income will be accomplished 
gradually in stages, under the criterion of the national executive power.  It will 
give priority to the more vulnerable segments of population. 

The amount of the benefit will be equal for everybody, regardless of 

their ethnicity, sex, age, civil, or even social and economic condition.  The 
amount is designed to be sufficient to meet all the vital needs of each person 
within the context of the country’s development and budget possibilities. The 
payment will be made in monthly and equal installments. 

 

Additionally, when the federal executive power defines the amount to be 

awarded it will have to take into consideration the laws of fiscal responsibility. 
Beginning in 2005 the executive will assign the necessary budget allotment 
annually within the general federal budget. Already for the years 2005 and 
2006, when defining the expansion of the targets of the Bolsa Familia program 
mentioned above, it can be considered that the government is complying with 
the steps foreseen in Law nr. 10.835/2004 to accomplish the Citizen’s Basic 
Income. Starting in 2005 bills of laws related to the five year plan and the 
budget guidelines, should specify expenditure cancellations and transfers as 
well as other necessary measures for the execution of the ‘Citizen’s Basic 
Income Program’. 

Will Mrs. Ione and her husband still receive CitizenÂŽs Basic Income? 

Yes they will, and also other very successful people like President Lula, PelĂ©, 
Ronaldinho, Ronaldo, Xuxa, the very admired entrepreneur Antonio Ermirio de 
Moraes, myself and Senator Heloisa Helena, who normally have more than 
necessary for survival. Yes everybody including all the people in MaringĂĄ, the 
city of Mrs. Ione and people in need throughout Brazil.  

 

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Why will this happen if those who already have so much do not need 

the Citizen’s Basic Income for their survival? It will happen so they too will 
collaborate more effectively to allow everyone to receive the Citizen’s Basic 
Income.  This is the way to effectively reach all impoverished people. 

I assert we will have the following advantages once the Citizen’s Basic 

Income is fully instituted: 

‱ 

Elimination of all bureaucracy involved in having to know the 
income of each person for the purpose of receiving the basic 
income. 

‱ 

No more stigma or feelings of shame for a person to tell how 
much he/she earns to get an income complement. 

‱ 

Facility in explaining to the whole population through the same 
means of communication the right of everyone to receive an 
equal basic income and the straight forward way to obtain it.   

‱ 

The end of the dependency phenomenon caused by the poverty 
and unemployment traps in programs that define which people, 
or families, have the right to a benefit when his/her income does 
not reach a certain level, detracting an individual from starting an 
economic activity knowing that the government will take off the 
benefit when he/she starts the activity. In the case of Citizen’s 
Basic Income any increase in income resulting from work and the 
person’s initiative will be guaranteed. Everyone will receive the 
same benefit regardless.  

‱ 

Guaranteeing Citizen’s Basic Income will always render valid 
employment efforts. Given that a person can keep the full 
amount of his/her basic income, employed or not, ensures 
his/her situation will be better when he/she is working than when 
unemployed. 

‱ 

From the point of view of dignity and freedom for human beings, 
it is much more better knowing that in the next 12 months and 
from there on every year he/she and each member of his/her 
family will receive a basic income as an inalienable right to all 
citizens as partners in the Brazilian nation. It is not a gift or a 
charity but a citizen’s right, similar to the right that each Brazilian 
has to take a walk in the park of his/her city, or if he/she wishes, 
to go swimming in Copacabana; something that rich and poor 
people alike can do.  

‱ 

Despite these advantages many people ask if it would not be 
better to ensure everyone a job? Economic theory and 
experience demonstrates that the guarantee of a Basic Income 
to everyone can contribute substantially to reaching full 
employment in society. Moreover, the demand for goods and 
services of necessity will increase thanks to the Basic Income 

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being provided. This works as an incentive for the growth of the 
economy and for employment. For example it is very probable 
that the expansion of the Bolsa FamĂ­lia program which benefited 
the family of Mrs. Ione, contributed to more job opportunities in 
Maringa, which then resulted in the hiring of her husband. 

‱ 

Additionally the guarantee of a basic income is a mechanism that 
can contribute to the growth of the economy and its 
competitiveness when it is adopted. This point will be further 
explained below when we analyze the mechanisms of income 
transfer effecting developed countries.  

‱ 

Many activities people like to do or need to do are not 
remunerated by the market.  For example mothers who nourish 
their babies, or parents who take care of their children in order to 
educate and protect them. Or, when our parents get old and we 
begin to take care of them. There are many activities we would 
like to do within our communities, parishes, associations and 
clubs, normally without remuneration. Activities that when 
performed are fundamental for humanity are often not recognized 
by the market. When Vincent Van Gogh (1853–1890) and 
Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920) painted their works of genius, 
they could hardly survive from what they earned when they sold 
them. Both of them became ill and died prematurely. Today 
nevertheless these same works are sold for millions of dollars. 

 

‱ 

Another argument should also be taken into account. Similar to 
many countries the Brazilian Constitution recognizes the right to 
own private property. This signifies that the person who owns a 
factory, a farm, a restaurant, a bank, financial bonds, or real 
estate, is permitted to earn an income under the form of profits, 
rents, and interest.  It is not however written in the Constitution 
that people in this situation, conditional to their income, are 
obliged to work or to send their children to school. Moreover, 
most individuals who own capital do work and do send their 
children to school and the best universities. Why? They do so 
because they are interested in progress. Very well then, the 
argument is that if we ensure the right of wealthy citizens to 
receive private income from capital, without conditions, why can 
we not ensure the right of all citizens the right to be partners in 
this country and receive a modest income  guaranteeing the right 
of full citizenship? 

 

In the last 15 years I have tried to explain the advantages of the 

Citizen’s Basic Income in universities, trade unions, business associations, 
social organizations of civil society and in national forums throughout Brazil. I 
was very happy the day President Lula sanctioned law n. 10.835/2004 proving 

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that he approves and believes in this idea. For him to implement it however 
requires the support of large number of Brazilians in advance, to provide it 
direction and turn it into a reality. 

When examining the bill of law in the Senate which would implement 

Citizen’s Basic Income a rapporteur, Senator Francelino Pereira (PFL-MG) 
was assigned to the Committee on Economic Matters. Upon analyzing it he 
considered the proposal good, but asked me if it would not be better to 
introduce it gradually in order to comply with the Laws of Fiscal Responsibility. 
We agreed on this principle and this idea contributed to the consensus we 
reached in the Senate with only a few objections coming from the Chamber of 
Deputies. Additionally the idea of its gradual evolution and the prioritizing of 
people with the most need initially (until it is feasible to deliver to everyone), 
enabled the Minister of Finance Antonio Palocci to inform President Lula of its 
feasibility so it could be sanctioned.  

When President Franklin Roosevelt was creating programs of the New 

Deal during the Great Depression of the thirties in the US, as a means to end 
the crash and its unemployment, a delegation presented a proposal to him 
which he said, "ok, you've convinced me. Now go on out and bring pressure on 
me!" This historical experience demonstrates that governments even with the 
best intentions and ideals can only act in accordance to society wills.

2

  

The next section will explore the fundamentals of this proposition, how it 

started, and the results of accumulated experiences in several countries 
around the world.  I will also explore how the proposal is consistent with the 
hopes of Brazilians and the hopes of humanity for justice, equality, freedom, 
fraternity, solidarity and democracy. It is an idea that is increasingly winning 
the support of economists, philosophers and social scientists from across a 
large spectrum of thought. 

 

II. The Fundamentals  

 

The fundaments of the Citizen’s Basic Income come from primordial 

times of humanity. Confucius in the Book on Explanations 520 before Christ 
and Answers, observed that “uncertainty is even worse than poverty”

 

and that 

“can anyone leave his home except through the door?”

3

 With those assertions 

as a basis it is my purpose to demonstrate that if we want to eradicate 
absolute poverty and to collaborate towards the construction of a more equal 
and fair society, the good solution is Citizen’s Basic Income, the right of 

                                                 

2

 Steven Schafarman, “Mobilizing Support for Basic Income”, lecture presented at the IX International 

Congress of BIEN, September 2002, and  Saul Alinsky, 1972, Rules for Radicals, New York, Vintage 
Books.  

3

 Guy Standing, stressed this point on a lecture held at C

onferencia Internacional sobre Renda MĂ­nima, 

DiscussĂ”es and ExperiĂȘncias

, (

International Conference on Minimum Income, Discussions and 

Experiences)

 August 11 and 12, 1998, presentation by Eduardo Matarazzo Suplicy, the Federal Senate 

p.3036 and 113-120. ConfĂșcio. 

O Livro das ExplicaçÔes e respostas em 20 capítulos.

 SĂŁo Paulo, Landy 

Livraria and Editora, 2001. 

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everyone to participate in the wealth of the nation by way of a modest income 
that guarantees the needs of all individuals. 

 

Aristotle in Politics

4

, 300 years before Christ, wrote that the objective of 

politics is a fair life achieved by the common good. To achieve a fair life for 
everybody however, it is necessary to have political justice, which should be 
preceded by distributive justice that creates by law equality out of inequality. 

 

Karl Marx’s ideas of justice resonated with Aristotle’s when he wrote 

about how men would behave in society when they were mature: 
 
 

 

“from each according to his ability, to each according to his need”

.  

 
 

Later, the philosopher Marilena ChauĂ­ demonstrated in her works that 

what Karl Marx was expressing here was similar to what Aristotle had been 
expounding on 300 years before Christ.  When Karl Marx wrote this he himself 
was already a mature man after having already publishing with Friedrich 
Engels, 

The Communist Manifesto

5

 (1848), and after having written a great 

part of 

Das Capital

6

.  According to John Kenneth Galbraith, Marx’s conception 

of justice expressed in those 12 words that can be found in 

CrĂ­tics to the Gotha 

Program

 of 1875 had a more revolutionary effect than the book

 Capital.

 7

  

 

One day in 1992 during a lecture I delivered for the CNBB - ConferĂȘncia 

Nacional dos Bispos do Brasil (National Conference of the Bishops in Brazil), 
the Pastorais da Terra (The Pastorals of Earth) and the Comunidades 
Eclesiais de Base (The Basis Ecclesiastic Community), I explained how many 
economists from several schools of thought defended the idea of guaranteeing 
universal minimum income.  At the end of my lecture the then president of the 
CNBB, D. Luciano Mendes de Almeida told me that I did not need to quote 
Karl Marx to defend the project because it was better defended by Saint Paul 
in his Second Epistle to the Corinthians. Since then I have always quoted Saint 
Paul and Karl Marx. 

 

What Marx said is similar to the deep aspirations and hopes of all 

religions. What is the most quoted word in the Old Testament? Rabbi Henry 
Sobel from SĂŁo Paulo taught me it is “Tzedaka” and it appears 513 times. In 
Hebrew it means justice in society, social justice. We can see many passages 
stressing the need of ‘Tzedaka’ in Deuteronomy, in the Proverbs, in Isaiah, or 
in Exodus. It is not coincidental that in Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais 
sem Terra, MST (The Landless Rural Workers Movement) seminars they 
frequently read the Exodus Book to recall the fight for the promised land, the 
fight for justice. 

 

In the Acts of the Apostles of the New Testament we can also find 

principles that approximate the observations made by Karl Marx:  

                                                 

4

 AristĂłteles. 

PolĂ­tica

. BrasĂ­lia.Ed. UnB, 1987. 

5

 Karl Marx e Friedrich Engels (1848

). Manifesto do Partido Comunista

. PetrĂłpolis, Vozes, 1998. 

6

 Karl Marx (1867). 

O Capital

. SĂŁo Paulo, Nova Cultural, 1985. 

7

 Karl Marx, (1875) 

Critica ao Programa de Gotha

. Porto, Portucalense, 1971. 

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15

 

“And they continued steadfastly in the apostles’ doctrine and fellowship, 

and in breaking of bread, and in prayers. And fear came upon every soul; and 
many wonders and signs were done by the apostles. And all that believed 
were together; and had all things common; and sold their possession and 
goods, and parted them to all men, as every man had need”.

 (Acts of the 

Apostles, chapter 2) 

 

We can also find the same principles in the parables of Jesus in the 

Vineyard Landlord. He hired several peasants for his vineyard, in the first hour, 
in the second hour and so on, until the last hour. He then agreed on amount 
with them that they would be paid and considered fair. At the end of the 
journey he began to pay starting with the last ones that had arrived, giving to 
everyone the same amount. When he reached the first peasant this one 
complained; you are paying the same to me as the last one that arrived here 
and I worked much more than he did. And the vineyard landlord answered; so, 
didn’t you realize that I’m paying exactly what you both considered fair, and 
that the last one who arrived here also has the right to receive sufficient for the 
needs of his family (Mateus, chapter 20, v. 1 to 16). 

 

As D.Luciano called to my attention, a clearer defense of the basic 

income project was made by Saint Paul in the Second Epistle to the 
Corinthians. He recommended the Macedonians to follow the example of 
Jesus who although being very mighty had decided to join the poor people and 
to live among them. As is written, he was preaching for more justice and 
equality: “He that had gathered much had nothing over; and he that gathered 
little had no lack”. 

 

Following the terrorist attacks of the World Trade Center in New York on 

September 11, 2001 when around 3000 people were killed, a great interest in 
understanding Islam arose around the world. According to what we can 
understand from the QurÂŽan and the writings of its followers, the teachings of 
the principles of justice and equality are similar between Islam and Christianity. 
For example in the Hadith Book, Omar, the second of the four caliphs who 
came after Muhammad recommended to the ones that had big properties or 
some gains to reserve a part for the ones who had a few or nothing. 

 

The defense of minimum income is also consistent with Buddhism, 

according to what can be concluded from the assertions of the Dalai Lama in 

Ethics for the New Millennium

7

. He affirmed that if we accept the luxurious 

consumption of the very rich ones we should ensure before the survival of all 
humanity. 

 

 

III. The first proposals of minimum income and of basic income 

 

Proceeding with the evolution of history we encounter the person 

responsible for the formulation of modern humanism. Here I am referring to 
Thomas More (1478-1535), who was canonized by the Catholic Church in 
1935, and proclaimed by Pope John Paul II in 2000, as the patron saint of 

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16

politicians and governors because of his moral stature and his ethical 
behavior. He was one of the main advisers to Henry VIII, the founder of the 
Anglican Church. Being a man of high prestige and a theologian, he was also 
the President of the British House of Commons.  When the wife of the King of 
England could not have sons the King asked his adviser and friend to write a 
justification so he could marry another woman. Thomas More who was 
catholic, refused to write such justification and was thus, condemned to death 
and decapitated.  

 

More left however an influential work for the history of humanity called 

Utopia

, published in 1516.  Utopia was the word he used for a fantastic island 

where there was an organized, happy and fair society. At this place imagined 
by More, “nothing is private, and what counts is the public property”, taking 
inspiration from 

Republic

 and from 

Laws

 by Plato. 

 

The Brazilian historian Eduardo Bueno told us that Thomas More got 

interested in writing Utopia after reading 

Four Voyages of Americo Vespucci

, in 

a letter to Soderini

, in 1510. He got acquainted with Rafael Hitlodeu or 

Hythlodaeus – a Greek story teller – who went to Brazil with Vespucci. Thomas 
More visited the island of Fernando de Noronha, where Vespucci had founded 
a trading post. That island, in some way, could have inspired 

Utopia.

 8

 

 

In the first book of 

Utopia

, Rafael Hitlodeu has a dialogue with the 

Cardinal, the Archbishop, and another person about the death sentence, which 
having been newly-introduced in England had not contributed to the reduction 
of robberies, assaults and homicides. He made the following observation: 

 

“Instead of inflicting these horrible punishments, it would be far 
more to the point to provide everyone with some means of 
livelihood, so that nobody's under the frightful necessity of 
becoming, first a thief, and then a corpse." 

 

Using an extraordinary social sensibility he presented a visionary 

proposal to institute an income for everybody so that everyone has the means 
of survival. Sadly this discussion about the death sentence still prevails 
although we are fortunate in Brazil that it is forbidden by our constitution.  
Amnesty International has tried throughout the years to demonstrate 
statistically that it does not lead to a decrease in violent criminal activities.  In 
USA, Cuba, and the Republic of China it is however, still in use.  

A survey conducted by the United Nations in 1988 and updated in 1996, 

emphasized there was no scientific evidence that executions had a greater 
effect in reducing criminality than the condemnation or imprisonment of an 
individual.

9

 Since 1985 more than 40 countries have abolished the death 

penalty having recognized it has little efficacy. 

                                                 

8 BUENO, Eduardo (1998). NĂĄufragos, traficantes and degredados. Coleção Terra Brasilis, vol. II, Rio 
de Janeiro, Ed. Objetiva. 

9

 Please see Death Penalty, Questions and Answers, http://www.amnestyusa.org/abolish/dp_qa.html 

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17

 

It was based on the reflections of Thomas More ten years later in 1526 

that a friend of his, Juan Luis Vives, made the first proposal of basic minimum 
income in 

De subvencione pauperum sive de humanis necessitabus

, to the 

mayor of Bruges a Flemish city in the Spanish Low Countries, today Belgium.   
Juan Luis Vives was from Spain and had studied in Leuven.  Also in the town 
of Ypres in the Spanish Lower Countries they implemented a form of 
assistance for the poor in 1525. 

 

These works by Thomas More and Juan Luis Vives had a great 

influence on “The Poor Laws” later created in England and Spain.

 10

 At the 

beginning of 1531, these laws allowed elders and handicapped people to beg 
for alms at the parishes. Soon afterwards religious houses were authorized to 
raise funds together with landowners in order to give provisions to the poor 
who were then consequentially disposal to work in their respective regions.  
Working houses soon emerged as was arduously described in Charles 
Dickens, “Oliver Twist”. These laws were severely criticized by classical 
economists like Adam Smith, David Ricardo and Thomas Malthus and from 
another perspective by Karl Marx. In the criticisms predominantly made by Karl 
Marx and Adam Smith they to take into account the way in which support had 
been given, and how it also restricted people’s movement, in that they had to 
remain disposal within a given territory.

11

 

 

One of the greatest leaders of the French and American Revolutions 

was Thomas Paine (1737-1809) who formulated one of the principle reasons 
as to why everyone should have the undeniable right to share in the wealth of 
the nation.  Paine who was born in Thetford, England, traveled to America 
under the persuasion of Benjamin Franklin.  In 1774 he published a series of 
13 pamphlets about the American Crisis including 

Common Sense,

 published 

anonymously in January 1776. This pamphlet was distributed in the streets of 
Philadelphia and afterwards in all 13 colonies, with an edition of 150 thousand 
copies.  George Washington considered it to be one of the instruments that 
provoked Americans to change their minds and to fight for their independence.  

 

 

Amongst other arguments Paine proclaimed that it was against 

common sense that an island dominates a continent. Six months later on July 
4, 1776, the United States of America proclaimed its independence.  Paine 
returned to England frustrated by the lack of comprehension of his daring 
ideas in 1778.  Once back in England he began involved in revolutionary 
political movement and consequentially had his books burned.  His 
unpopularity was due to the fact that he had been partly responsible for 
England losing its largest colony.  Paine then turned to France where he 
became involved in the fight for equality, liberty, and fraternity in the Revolution 
of 1789.  His efforts were noticed by being elected to the first Constituent 
National Assembly.  

                                                 

10

 To examine the several forms that The Poor Laws were formulated since the beginning of the 16th 

century, please see text on the Poor Laws, in the British Encyclopedia. 

11

 The analyses of the classical economists on the Poor Laws are described in a more extensive way in 

my book Citizen’s Income. The Exit is Through the Door. 

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18

 

 

In 

Agrarian Justice

 an essay sent in 1795 to the Directorship and 

to the Parliament of France, Paine observed that poverty was related to the 
citizen right of Private Property.  Paine noted this based on the fact the 
indigenous people of America had been in a situation of less misery that what 
he had seen in European villages and cities

12

. He states, “It is a not a 

controvert position that the earth, in its natural, uncultivated state was, and 
would have always continued to be, the common property of the human race." 
He considered is just that the person who cultivates the land and makes some 
improvement, should have the right to receive the result of that cultivation. 
Additionally he argued that “every proprietor of cultivated lands owes to the 
community a ground-rent”. He asserted that from the rent paid by each 
proprietor, a common national fund should be constituted that should yield 
income to be distributed under the form of the equal dividends to everyone, in 
order to compensate for the loss of that natural inheritance. Every person, at 
the age of twenty-one years, should receive the sum of 15 pounds sterling, 
and when the person arrived at the age of fifty years, should have the right to 
receive 10 pounds sterling throughout the reminder of their life because “every 
individual was born in the world with the legitimate right to a certain property or 
equivalent”. Paine defended that this payment should be seen as a right, not 
as a charity. 

 

According to researchers from BIEN – “Basic Income European 

Network” The proposal of a non-conditional Basic Income has existed for at 
least 200 years and a great part of this proposal was inspired by the works of 
the radical Englishman Thomas Spence (1750-1814), who interacted with the 
ideas of Thomas Paine and utopian French socialist Charles Fourier (1772-
1837)

 13

 

Each time Philippe Van Parijs and his collaborators at BIEN deepen 

their surveys they discover even more pioneers who had presented the 
proposal of basic income, many times in an independent manner, other times 
with interactions amongst them. In the excellent didactic book 

LÂŽAllocation 

Universelle

 (2005), edited by Editora Record in Brazil, under the title “

Renda 

BĂĄsica de Cidadania: fundamentos Ă©ticos e econĂŽmicos”, 

Van Parijs and 

Yannick Vanderborght observed that it was a contemporary of Thomas Paine, 
called Thomas Spence who presented the justification for a regular income.

14

 

In a pamphlet published in London under the title, 

The Rights of Infants

 

in 1797, Spence began criticizing 

Agrarian Justice

, by Thomas Paine, for 

having built based on the fundamental truth, “an abominable building of 
opportunism and tolerance”

15

. Afterwards Spence reformulated the proposal 

                                                 

12

 PAINE, Thomas (1796). “Agrarian Justice”. In: FONER, P.F. (ed.) (1974). 

The life and Major 

Writings of Thomas Paine. 

Secaucus, NJ, Citatel Press, 1974 

13

 Ver PARIJS, Philippe Van,

 

“What’s wrong with a free lunch?”, Foreword by Robert M. Solow, edited 

by Joshua Cohen and Joel Rogers for 

Boston Review,

 Beacon Press, Boston, 2001. 

14

 VANDERBORGH,

Yannick t

, VAN PARIJIS, 

Philippe 

L'allocation universelle, Paris: 

Editions La 

DĂ©couverte, 2005 

15

 SPENCE, T. [1797], "The Rights of Infants", in J. CUNLIFFE et G. ERREYGERS (sous la dir. de), 

The Origins of Universal Grants,

 Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004, p. 81-91. 

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19

that he had defended tirelessly throughout his youth, and proclaimed that each 
city should have auctions to cover all local public expenditures including the 
building and the maintenance of real estate, as well as taxes paid to the 
government, that would distribute quarterly equal parts of the surplus among 
all residents ensuring their subsistence

 

 

According to Spence, 

“ regarding the surplus, once paid, all the state 

taxes should be divided in an equal amount amongst all the living souls of the 
parish, whether male or female, married or single, legitimate or illegitimate, 
from a day old to the extremist age, making no distinction between families of 
rich farmers and merchants (...) and families of poor laborers and craftsmen 
(...), giving to the head of every family a full and equal share for every name 
under his roof (...)”. 

 

It is correct to suppose that this surplus should be distributed in equal 

parts among all the living souls of the parish on first day of each quarter, and 
correspond to “two-thirds of the total of the collected rents. Regardless of its 
amount, the excess parts of the rents are the undeniable right of all mankind of 
a civilized society, on the pretence that it is equivalent to the natural 
ingredients of their common estate from which they were deprived when it was 
rented for the sake of cultivation and improvement”.  

 

In February 2003 when I visited Philippe van Parijs in Brussels, I 

became familiar with the places where in 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels 
had lived when they wrote the 

Communist Manifesto

. I also visited the place 

where the lawyer Joseph Charlier (1816-1896) had lived and who in the same 
year published 

Solution du probleme social ou constitution humanitaire

16

Having been inspired by the Fourier tradition, Charlier observed that within the 
equality of rights of land property was the basis of an unconditional right to a 
basic income. He developed this theme in 

The Social Question Solved 

Proceeded by the Philosophical Testament of a Thinker. 

He rejected the idea– 

defended by Fourier himself –that the right should be given based on a formula 
that verifies the income of each person.  Fourier’s idea of the right to 
remunerated work, under the form that was defended by his eminent disciple 
Victor Considerant and by many other people, was based on the premise that 
it was natural to defend the right of each person to receive a sufficient 
remuneration for their work. 

 

Under the labels of “minimum” or â€œguaranteed income” and afterwards, 

“territorial dividend”, Joseph Charlier proposed that all citizens should have the 
unconditional right to a quarterly payment and thereafter monthly, of an 
annually fixed sum by a representative from a national council, based on the 
rental value of all properties. This scheme would end with the domination of 
capital on labor. The remaining question is would it encourage idleness? 

“

"

Hard luck for the lazy: they will be put on short allowance. 

Society's duty does not reach beyond securing each a fair share of 

                                                 

16

 Please see Joseph Charlier, 

Solution du probl`eme social ou constitution humanitaire”

 

(Bruxelles:Chez tous les librairies du Royaume, 1848). 

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20

the enjoyment of what nature puts at his disposal, without usurping 
anyone's rights." Anything above the minimum will have to be 
earned

.

17

 

 

After Fourrier published his book in 1849, the following year John Stuart 

Mill released the second edition of his 

Principles of Political Economy

, where 

he presented Fourrier’s ideas, but concluded with a proposal without any 
ambiguities of an unconditional basic income: “In the distribution, a certain 
minimum is first assigned for the subsistence of every member of the 
community, whether capable or not of labour. The remainder of the produce is 
shared in certain proportions, to be deterred beforehand, among the three 
elements, labour, capital, and talent.” 

 

As Emma Rothschild reminded us in â€œSecurity and Laissez-Faire” her 

article published in 2000 in debate with Philippe Van Parijs, the concept of 
Basic Income was also defended by the founders of Political Economy in 
consonance with the traditions of the free market

18

. Marquis Condorcet in 

Reflections on the Wheat Market

 in 1776 starts his book as following: 

“That all members of the society should have assured the 
subsistence of each season, in each year and wherever they were 
living [...] is of the general interest of all nations”

 

It is in this manner that the portion everyone will receive as his/her 

Citizen’s Basic Income will be a right of equal importance as the wage that 
he/she will receive for his/her effort and dedication to his/her job. All Brazilians 
and foreign residents will enjoy the right to be participants in the wealth of this 
land, and to reap the rewards of past generations and all the people that 
collaborated in the past towards technological progress, and others, who 
worked as slaves without receiving remuneration, but who in effect 
collaborated to the development of the nation.  

 

You may be wondering now when this proposal defended by Thomas 

Paine was finally adopted in his own country (modified), but based on similar 
principles? Surprisingly for many people it was in the twenty-first century. 

  When 

Prime 

Minister 

Tony 

Blair announced that his wife was 

expecting their fourth child, he decided to send a bill of law to Parliament, 
affirming that every child born in the United Kingdom would receive a basic 
capital. When the child is born it would receive a deposit of 250 pounds 
sterling in his/her bank account and an additional 50 pounds sterling when 
he/she reached the age of 6, 11 and 16 years. If the child belongs to the 
poorer segment of the population these sums would be respectively 500, 100, 
100 and 100 pounds sterling. The amounts are intended to yield interest over 

                                                 

17

 An analysis of Charles Fourier ideas was presented by CUNLIFFE, John and ERREYGERS, Guido in 

"Fourierist Legacies: From the `Right to the Minimum' to `Basic Income', in Conference at the History 
of Economic Society (HES), in Greensboro, North Carolina, in the year of 1999. 

18

 ROTHSCHILD, Emma (2000). “Security and laissez-faire”. 

Boston Review, 

Boston, Vol. 25, nÂș. 5, 

October/November. Also published in VAN PARIJS, 

What’s wrong with a free lunch?, already 

mentioned. 

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21

time. When he/she turns 18 years old they have the right to enjoy usufruct 
these resources – which could mean a sum up to 5,000 pounds sterling – to 
spend with freedom as he/she wishes.  It can be used to finance their 
education, start an enterprise, or used appropriately. It is called the 

Child Fund 

Trust

, a bill of law that was approved and promulgated as law on May 13, 2003 

that I personally verified on my visit to the British Parliament in February 2004, 
more than 200 years after its initial formulation by Thomas Paine.  

 

In 2004 when Professor Bruce Ackerman of the University of Yale 

visited the Fundação GetĂșlio Vargas in SĂŁo Paulo, he told me that it was one 
of his post-graduate students who had presented this idea to the Fabian 
Society, an organization that promotes democratic socialism in the United 
Kingdom.  He then presented it to the Prime Minister Tony Blair, a personal 
friend.  The thesis was prepared with Bruce Ackerman and Anne Allsott and 
was based on the original principals of Thomas Paine.  There conception was 
that all American citizens at the age of 21 should non-conditionally receive a 
basic capital of US$ 80,000 to start their adult life

19

.  

 

This proposal of “Basic Capital” is similar to that of “Basic Income” 

because we can always transform capital into an income flow over time and 
vice versa.  After many discussions about the pros and cons, Philippe Van 
Parijs and Bruce Ackerman have concluded that the best solution should be a 
combination of them both. 

 

Unlike Britain, the recommendations of Thomas Paine have only 

partially been accepted by the Legislative Assembly of the French Republic.  
On June 24, 2004 I had the honor delivering a speech at the symposium on 

Citizen’s Basic Income 

or, 

Existence Revenue at the National Assembly of 

France

, organized in co-ordination with Deputy Christine Boutin, of the 

Union 

for a Popular Movement Party 

and president of the 

Forum of Social 

Republicans

. Here present were representatives participating from several 

parties, among them Jean Le Garrec from the Socialist Party, and Roland 
Duchalet from the Vivant Party in Belgium.

 

 

At this event the writer Maurice DrĂŒon from the 

French Academy of 

Literature 

proclaimed that “France should be the first nation to implement a full 

Citizen’s Basic Income or ‘Existence Revenue’”, because of Thomas Paine’s 
original contribution. Yoland Bresson the president of l’association pour 
l'instauration d'un revenu d'existence – AIRE (Association for the Institution of 
Existence Income) presented a proposal at the symposium that would fix a 
lifelong income for the citizens from birth until death at 330 euros per month 
and should be implemented gradually, over five years.  

 

 

IV. The guarantee of a subsistence income starting in the 20th century  

 

During the 20

th

 century philosophers, economists and social scientists 

emanating from large spectrum of thought explored the need to provide every 

                                                 

19

 ACKERMAN, Bruce e ALSTOTT, Anne. (1999) 

The stakeholder society.

 New Haven: Yale 

University Press. 

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22

citizen with a minimum income required for basic survival.  After analyzing the 
great movements that occurred in the first World War, philosopher Bertrand 
Russell in 1918 published 

Roads to Freedom: socialism, anarchism and 

syndicalism 

and affirmed that:

 

“The plan we are advocating amounts essentially to this: that a 
certain small income, sufficient for necessaries, should be secured 
to all, whether they work or not, and that a larger income, as much 
larger as might be warranted by the total amount of commodities 
produced, should be given to those who are willing to engage in 
some work which the community recognizes as useful”

.

 20

 

 

 

 

A good revision of the ideas proposed post-WWI in Europe regarding 

the need to reach the ideals of liberty, equality, efficiency, justice and 
democracy through the provision of a basic income is presented by the Dutch 
economist Walter Van Trier in his book, 

Everyone a King (

1995).  

 

He asks

 

why everyone should not have the right to be a King and to be partners in the 

country where they live?

21

 In 1918, Mabel and Dennis Milner published a much 

debated text, 

Scheme for a State Bonus

 22

.

 Dennis Milner elaborated further in 

1920 with,

 Higher Production by a Bonus on National Output

”. These books 

both presented a proposal of minimum income that varies according to levels 
of national productivity.

23

 

 

The proposition of the Milner couple was “all individuals, all the time, 

should receive a small sum of money from a central fund that would be 
sufficient to maintain their life and freedom, should all else fail; that all people 
should receive a part of a central fund, in a way that all would have some sort 
of income to contribute proportionality to their capacity”.  Milner informed us 
that the origin of his idea was inspired by Edward Bellamy’s 1988 novel, 

Looking Backward

, 2000-1887, which is the story of a man who fell asleep in 

1887 and woke up in 2000, astonished by the existing innovations

24

.  

 

In 1919, Bertram Pickard argued in 

The Reasonable Revolution

:

 a 

Discussion of a State Bonus scheme, a proposal of a National Basic Income

that it should be “a definitive recognition of the right to life, or better yet, the 
equivalent monetary sum to the right to the land”

 25

. By drawing a parallel with 

the ancient ‘Poor Laws’, he affirmed that the weakness was in fact that the 

                                                 

20

 RUSSELL, Bertrand (1918). 

Os caminhos para a liberdade: socialismo, anarquismo e sindicalismo 

Rio de Janeiro, Zahar, 1977 

21

 TRIER, Walter. 

Eveyrone a King

. Leuven: Departement Sociologie, Faculteit Sociale 

Wetenschappen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven., 1995. 

22

 MILNER, Mabel e MILNER, Dennis 

Sheme for a state bonus

. Kent, Simpkin, Marshall&Co, 1918. 

23

 MILNER, Dennis 

Higher production by a bonus on national outuput. A proposal form a minium 

income for all varying with national productivity.

 London,George Allen & Unwin, 1920. 

24

 BELLAMY, Edward. 

Looking backward 2000-1887 

(with a foreword by Erich Fromm). New York, 

Signet Classic, 1988. 

25

 PICKARD, Bertrand. 

A reasanoble revolution. Being a discussion of the state bonus scheme – A 

proposal for a National Minimum Income.

 London: George Allen & Unwin., 1919. 

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23

benefit was only conceded when the need was proved. It therefore did not 
concede to the worker, any power to demand for a fair pay. 

 

Dennis, Mabel and Pickard were all Quakers and members of a group 

formed for the defense of a ‘State Bonus Scheme’. According to their proposal 
20% of all income in England should be collected in a fund, to be used later for 
the payment of an equal amount to all citizens regardless his/her age. 

 

The British Labour party reacted skeptically and after a critical manifesto 

was written in Brighton, 1921, the â€˜League for the State Bonus’ dissolved. 
Nevertheless, several other contributions from political movements continued 
to come forth in favor of minimum incomes.

 Major Clifford H. Douglas created 

the Social Credit Movement which had great repercussion on other countries, 
like in Canada where the 

Social Credit Party

 was founded in 1935.   In 

1929, 

George D. H. Cole presented a new proposal in 

The Next Ten Years in the 

British Social and Political Economy, 

and then in 1935, 

Principles of Economic 

Planning

26

.  Lady Juliet Rhys Williams in 

Something to Look Forward

Suggestion for a New Social Contract

 (1943), proposed a scheme of social 

dividend that would ensure “every one had his/her basic needs; from each one 
the same percentage of his income only with the prosperity of all the 
community”

 27

.  Joan Robinson in the 

Introduction to the Theory of Full 

Employment

 (1937), suggested distributing to everybody on Saturdays, one 

pound sterling. Abba P. Lerner in 

The Economics of Control: Principles of 

Welfare Economics

 (1944), proposed the institution of a fixed sum as a 

negative income tax and 

Oskar Lange, 

in 

On the Economic Theory of 

Socialism,

 presented another form to guarantee some income for each 

person

28

.

 

 

In 1935 James Edward Meade was 

honored with the Nobel Prize in 

Economics.  Later in is career in 1977, as one of the main members of the 

Cambridge Circle

 which met together to discuss the works of John Maynard 

Keynes, they defended the implementation 

of a citizen income or, a social 

dividend, in 

A Guide of Economic Policy for a Worker Government. 

Meade 

considered this an important instrument to reach a higher level of employment 
in the economy. As a wise man he returned to these ideas in his the last ten 
years of his life.

29

 

                                                 

26

 COLE, George D.H. 

The next ten years in british social and economic policy

. London, Macmillan, 

1929; 

Principles of Economic Planning

. London, Cassel&Co, 1935. 

27

 WILLIAMS, Lady Juliet Rhys (1943). 

Something to look forward to

. London, MacDonald and Co. 

28

 ROBINSON, Joan (1937). 

Introdução a teoria do emprego. 

Rio de Janeiro, Forense-UniversitĂĄria, 

1980; LERNER, Abba Ptachya (1944). 

The economics of control: principles ofWelfare State. 

New 

York, MacMillan, 1944; LANGE, Oskar  

Sobre La teoria economica del socialismo. 

Barcelona, Ariel, 

1969. 

29

 Meade, James Meade (1935) “Outline of an Economic Policy for a Labour Government”. In Howson, 

S. (Ed) 

The Collected Papers of James Meade

. Volume I: Employment and Inflation. London, Unwin 

Hyman, 1988; 

Agathotopia:The Economics of Partnership

, Aberdeen, Aberdeen University Press, 1989; 

Liberty, Equality and Efficiency

. London, Macmillan, 1993

 Full Employment Regained An 

Agathotopian Dream

. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press, 1995.  

background image

 

24

 

In Meade’s works he relates his long journey in search of Utopia. No 

matter how much he navigated he did not succeed in finding it. On the way 
back however, he came across 

Agathotopia

. An economist that became his 

friend told him the 

Agathopians

 knew where Utopia was, but they would not tell 

him because they were different from the Utopians, perfect human beings, that 
lived in a perfect place. The 

Agathopians

 were imperfect human beings that 

committed foolishness and perfidies, but that after all, had succeeded in 
building a good place to live.  

 

Meade got interested in studying the institutions and societal relations of 

Agathotopia,

 and concluded they were the best society he had found until then 

who could simultaneously reach the objectives that mankind and economists 
had been seeking for a long time: 

 

I.  

Freedom, in the sense that each one is able to work in his/her 

vocation and is able to spend what he/she receives on the goods that he/she 
wants. 

 

II.  

Equality, in the sense that there are no more great differences 

between income and wealth. 
 

III.  

Efficiency, in the sense to reach the highest possible life pattern 

with the resources and the technology in effect

30

 

The arrangements were first, the flexibility in prices and wages to reach 

the efficiency in resource allocation and second, forms of association between 
the entrepreneurs and the workers so that the workers can participate in the 
results of the wealth creation. The workers would be hired in part in wages and 
in another part in participation aliquots. While the flexibility of wages could 
represent low remuneration, and that cooperatives and/or association forms 
might have negative results before the adverse consequent situation, there 
should be a third fundamental arrangement; the existence of a social dividend 
or a guaranteed minimum income for each citizen. In light of the experiences 
of failures by those who tried to perform very abrupt transformations, Meade 
proposed to achieve these institutions by slow, but firm steps. 

In moments of economic crisis, it is common for people to say that there 

are not enough resources to pay for programs of this kind. In regards to this it 
is important to stress what John Maynard Keynes said (considered by many 
people the greatest economist of the 20

th

 century), in 1939.  In “

How to Pay for 

the War?

”, published first in the newspaper 

The Times,

 and afterwards in 

Persuasion Essays

, Keynes tried to convince his compatriots that although it 

was a time when it was necessary to pay for the expenditure against Germany 
and other countries that entered into the war against the United Kingdom, it 
was also necessary to separate around 2% of the Gross National Product 

                                                 

30

 MEADE, J.E. 

Agathotopia

, op.cit. 

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25

(about 100 million pound sterling from a total of 5 billion), to ensure everyone a 
basic income

31

 

 

 

It is noteworthy to recognize that economists from across a large 

spectrum reached the same conclusion about the importance of a minimum 
income.  Even those who were honored with a Nobel Prize and are renowned 
for their defense of capitalism, together with their critics, reached consensus. 
Friedrick Hayek in 

The Road to Serfdom

32

 (1944), who criticizing communism 

and fascism defended the market system, but yet still stressed the importance 
of ensuring everyone subsistence. George Stigler in 1946 observes that to 
achieve greater employment opportunities and to eradicate poverty, the 
negative income tax is more effective than the minimum wage

33

.  

  

Similarly Milton Friedman in 

Capitalism and Freedom

 (1962) argued that 

capitalism is the most consistent system with the freedom of the human 
beings.

34

 It does not however, completely solve the poverty problem. The only 

instrument that can assist people that does not distort or impede the 
functioning and financing of the market is a negative income tax. The term 
income tax was first used in economic literature by Antoine Augustin Cournot 
(1801-1877), founder of mathematical economics in 1838

35

 

The negative income tax can be defined in terms of a person or a 

family. The person who does not earn a certain level of annual or monthly 
income, fixed in law, gets the right to receive a complementary amount 
equivalent to a proportion of the difference between that level and the level of 
income of the person or of the family. Let’s suppose that the level fixed by law 
for an adult, 18 years old or more, is R$ 600.00 per month and the proportion 
is 50%. So, if the person in that month, for being sick, unemployed or has a 
zero income, he/she has the right to receive R$ 300.00. If he/she gets a job 
which pays R$ 300.00 he/she will have a complementary income equivalent to 
R$ 150.00 and his monthly income becomes R$ 450.00. So, there will always 
be an incentive for the person to progress, because there will be an income 
increase if he/she gets a job, but to nobody a minimum income will be denied. 
 

During the sixties another honored Nobel Prize winner in Economics 

who worked independently from Milton Friedman, James Tobin (1918-2002), 
reported to me in an interview that he and Milton had many discussions about 
macro-economic policy and that they had developed the concept of negative 
income tax to study ways to combat poverty and to strengthen the economic 
status of Blacks.

36

  Another famous author of this discussion is Robert 

                                                 

31

 KEYNES, John Maynard. (1939). “How to pay for the war?” In: KEYNES, John Maynard 

Essays in 

persuasion. 

London, Macmillan, 1972. 

32

 HAYEK, Friedrick A. (1944). 

O caminho da servidĂŁo. 

Porto Alegre, Editora Globo, 1977. 

33

 STIGLER, George, “The Economics of the Minimum Wage”,  American Economic Review, 36, 

1946, p.358-65 

34

 FRIEDMAN, Milton (1962). 

Capitalismo e liberdade. 

Rio de Janeiro, Editora Arte Nova, 1975. 

35

 Cournot A. (1838), 

Recherches sur les principles mathématiques de la théorie des richesses,

 Paris, 

Vrin, 1980. 

36

 Please see the interview with James Tobin and with Milton Friedman in Suplicy, E. M., 

Renda de 

Cidadania. A SaĂ­da Ă© pela Porta and 

Tobin J. (1965), “On the Economic Status of the Negro”, 

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26

Theobald (1929-1999), who was preoccupied that the negative income tax 
would diminish paid work and that it would be essential to maintain a 
guaranteed minimum for consumption

37

.  Moreover John Kenneth Galbraith in 

the past forty-years has delivered numerous lectures in favour of guaranteed 
minimum income, including this one for which he received an honorary degree 
from ‘London School of Economics’ when he turned 90 years old

38

.  

 

“The answer, or part of the answer, is very clear: everybody 
needs to have a guarantee of a decent basic income. A rich 
country, like the USA, can perfectly leave everybody out from 
poverty. Some of them, it will be said, would take that income 
end would not work. It is that way, with the limited welfare 
system, as it is called. Let’s accept that the poor people have the 
right to leisure, as well as the rich people.” 

 
 

In 1968 Robert Lampman, Harold Watts, James Tobin, John Kenneth 

Galbraith, Paul Samuelson and more 1,200 economists sent to the U.S. 
Congress a manifest in favor of the adoption in that same year of an 
guaranteed income program and a complementary system. The United States 
had already had several experiences with income transfer programs such as in 
1935 when the government of Franklin Delano Roosevelt created the 

Social 

Security Act.

 This act instituted the AFDC - 

Aid for Families with Dependent 

Children

, which paid a complementary amount to families up to certain level 

income, whose mothers had lost their husbands, or had difficulties in raising 
their children and to providing education. 

 

According to the assessment of the first director of the social security 

system of the USA government, Arthur J. Altmeyer, not having implemented a 
minimum income provision for every American in 1935 was a “crucial error”, as 
was also stressed by Leslie Lenkowsky in his analysis on the debate about the 
negative income tax.

39

  In 1964, the administration of Lyndon Johnson created 

a Food Stamps program that could be only spent in food. There was also a 
supplementary system which assured to elderly and disabled people had a 
certain guaranteed income. In 1969, President Richard Nixon asked former 
assistants of President John F., Kennedy and President Lyndon Johnson, 
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, to formulate the 

Family Assistance Plan-FAP,

 which 

would signify a negative income tax. 

                                                                                                                                             

Daedalus, vol.94, p.878-98 e Tobin J., Pechman J.A. et Mieszkowski P.M. (1967), 

Is a Negative Income 

Tax Practical

 (Interrogação)“, The Yale Law Journal, vol. 77, p. 1-27.

 

37

 Theobald R. (1963

), Free Men and Free Markets

, New York, Anchor Books and (under the direction 

of) (1967), 

The Guaranteed Income:next step in socio economic evolution(?

), New York, Anchor 

Books. 

38

 Galbraith, J.K., speech published in The Guardian, on June 29, 1999. 

39

 Altmeyer, Arthur J. , 

The Formative Years of Social Security

. Madison, The University of Wisconsin 

Press, 1966, p.260, e Lenkowsky, Leslie, 

Politics, Economics and Welfare Reform. The Failure of the 

Negative Tax  in Britain and the United States

. American Institute for Public Policy Research, Lanham, 

N.Y., London, University Press of America, 1986. 

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27

 

On August 10th, 1969, President Nixon delivered a speech to the nation 

saying that the U.S. would achieve two things that the former generation 
considered impossible: first, man would go to the moon (Neil Armstrong had 
landed on the moon the previous month), and second, they would eradicate 
poverty with the 

Family Assistance Plan

. This law, if approved, would have 

assured an income equivalent to 50% of the difference between US $ 3,900 
(today it should correspond to at least US$ 16,000) and the yearly income of 
the family. The bill of law was approved by the House of Representatives by 
243 against 155, but it was defeated at the Committee of Finance in the 
Senate in 1970, by 10 votes against 6. 

 

In several interviews and speeches at that time Martin Luther King Jr. 

defended emphatically the guarantee of an income, such as in, 

Where do We 

Go From Here: Chaos or Community

40

 â€œ

I am now convinced that the simplest approach will prove to be 

the most effective – the solution to poverty is to abolish it directly by 
a now widely discussed measure: the guaranteed income”. 

 

 

Daniel Patrick Moynihan in his book 

The Politics of Guaranteed Income

 

(1973), analyzed how conservatives used the high contradictions and 
exaggerated desires of progressive supporters to defeat the guarantee of 
minimum income. Some of them proposed a yearly basic income of US$ 
5,500, an amount which would have broken the budget of the time. Others did 
not want it to substitute programs already in effect like 

AFDC

, or the 

Food 

Stamp

 program. Senators especially from food producer states defended the 

program, without realizing that the guaranteed income would be destined 
mainly for the acquisition of first need goods, especially food. Additionally there 
were those who did not want to accept the concession of an income payment 
to those who were not working.

 41

 

 

 When running for re-election in 1972 Nixon ran against George 

McGovern who was assisted by James Tobin and Robert Solow; two 
prestigious Nobel Prize winners in Economics who had presented a further 
reaching proposal of a 

demogrant, 

or social dividend, of US $ 1,000 per year 

to each American. McGovern was not elected and did not succeed in making 
people understand the advantages of a non-conditional basic income. In 
February 2005, I telephoned him while I was at the Woodrow Wilson 
International Center for Scholars in Washington D.C., to tell him that in Brazil a 
similar proposal had been turned into law and that it was to be introduced 
gradually. McGovern, who was on an island in Florida, said that he was very 
happy with the news and added: “people say that I was a man with ideas 
before my time”. 

                                                 

40

 KING Jr., Martin Luther. 

Where do we go from here: chaos or community? 

New York, Harper Row, 

1997. 

41

 MOYNIHAN, Daniel Patrick. 

The politics of a guaranteed income â€“ the Nixon administration and the 

family assistance plan.

 New York: Random House, 1973. 

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28

 

Later on in 1974 the US Congress approved a law from Democrat 

Senator from Russell Long (Louisiana), which would also institute partially a 
negative income tax, the 

Earned Income Tax Credit-EITC

. Confronting the 

concern expressing during the debates in the Senate about the provision of a 
guarantee of income to those who were not working, Russell Long proposed a 
complementary income only to families of people who were employed. The 
families that did not reach a certain level of income with employment, would 
receive an increase in income to compensate the amount that was discounted 
as payment for the social security, and to help with the maintenance of their 
children, thus contributing to leaving the poverty level. The EITC became law 
in March 1975, during the republican government of President Gerald Ford. 

 

With the support Democrats and Republicans the EITC was expanded, 

respectively in 1986, 1990, and 1993, by the initiatives of President Ronald 
Reagan, George Bush, and more significantly, Bill Clinton. In his 
autobiography 

My Life,

 Clinton made 17 references to the importance of EITC 

in his government.

 42

 He stressed how it solved, based on the motto “people in 

first place”, to extend the EITC to families without children, and also to double 
the amount to families with children. This expansion taken together with other 
measures, like the ones adopted by the Federal Reserve System presided by 
Allan Greenspan, contributed to the increase of economic activity and an 
increase in the employment level during Clinton’s eight years of government. 
The unemployment rate which in 1992/3 was around 7.5% of the working 
force, declined and reached 3.9% in the year 2000. 

 

 In 2003 families without children, or with one child, two or more 

children, respectively, whose yearly income was below US$ 12,230, US$ 
30,666 and US$ 34,692 had the right to get a fiscal credit. In the case of a 
family with two or more children the benefit was 40% of the earnings up to the 
limit of US$ 10,510, therefore with a maximum fiscal credit of US$ 4,204. If the 
family income was US$ 10,510 to US$ 14,730, the maximum credit was also 
US$ 4,204. Starting from US$ 14,730 that maximum credit was diminished by 
21, 06% for each additional dollar beyond that limit. This way the EITC 
became zero for a couple with a yearly income of US$ 34,692. From that point 
on the family starts to pay the income tax. 

 

In 2004 the US government paid about US$ 39.3 billion to more than 

21.5 million families and individuals in the country. For families with one child 
the average amount of EITC paid was US$ 2,100. A worker who earns a 
minimum wage in US today of US$ 5.15 per hour, if he works 160 hours per 
month, would earn US$ 824 per month. If he works 12 months, he would earn 
US$ 9,888 per year. A worker who has an annual wage of US$ 10,000 with a 
wife, two or more children, has the right to receive a fiscal credit under the 
form of EITC, of US$ 4000. His annual income becomes US$ 14000.  

 

Several countries whose economies compete directly with the US 

started to adopt similar mechanisms, such as the United Kingdom, which has 

                                                 

42

CLINTON, Bill 

My Life

, ,New York: Knopf, 2004

.

 

background image

 

29

introduced the 

Family Tax Credit

 in 2000. Today a British worker, who has a 

family and receives a monthly wage of 800 pounds sterling, has the right to 
receive a fiscal credit of 400 pounds sterling. 

 

What is the effect of the existence of

 EITC

 for the US economy, or, the 

Family Tax Credit

 for the economy of the United Kingdom, in relation to the 

Brazilian economy? They turn their economies more competitive in relation to 
ours, if we cannot do something similar or better. These programs where the 
American and British societies pay an income that complements the wages of 
their workers, increases their satisfaction and productivity levels. Common 
sense indicates that from the competitiveness point of view of our economy 
alone, we should create a negative income tax system or even better, the 
more rational and complete system of 

Citizen’s Basic Income.

 

 

Among other recent changes to US fiscal legislation I have noticed the 

end of 

AFDC - Aid for Families with Dependent Children

, and of 

EA – 

Emergencial Aid and JOBS – Jobs Opportunities

, that were replaced by 

TANF 

- Temporary Assistance for Needy Families,

 which became more restrictive 

requiring that people start to work after a certain period of being enrolled in the 
program. This assistance can be provided for a maximum period of 5 years. 

 

It is important to emphasize that although the 

EITC

 has become the 

most important income transfer program of the American welfare system, it is 
one of approximately 80 support programs of income for people with some 
limitations. In 2002, these programs including the expenditure with public 
health summed up US$ 522.2 billion, of which US$ 373.2 billion are in federal 
programs and US$ 149 billion are in municipal and state programs. As a 
whole, these welfare expenditures corresponded to 5% of the Gross National 
Product. The average number of beneficiaries in 2002 alone for food stamps 
was 20.2 million; 

TANF

, 5.1 million; 

Social Security Income- SSI

, 6.9 million; 

Health Services

, 50.9 million; 

EITC,

 16.8 million.

 43

 

 

Studies elaborated by Robert Greenstein and Isaac Shapiro from the 

Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

 revealed that the 

EITC 

had resulted in a 

substantial increase of parents and single mothers in the labor market, 
contributing to a moderate increase of income disparities between rich and 
poor workers.  It has removed over 4.6 million people out of poverty, including 
2.4 million children. When Professor Albert Hirschman from the University of 
Princeton visited Brazil on January 1st, 1995, for the occasion of President 
Fernando Henrique Cardoso taking office, I asked him his opinion about the 
expansion of

 EITC

 accomplished by President Bill Clinton. Immediately he 

answered: “It is his greatest achievement.” 
 
 

  

                                                 

43

 Congressional Research Service, The Library of Congress, Report for Congress, received through the 

CRS Web, â€œCash and Noncash Benefits for Persons with Limited Income: Eligibility Rules, Recipient 
and Expenditure Data, FY 2000-FY2002”, November 25,2005, Compiled by Vee Burke. 

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30

V. The creation of BIEN, 

Basic Income European Network

, recently 

transformed in 

Basic Income Earth Network

.

  

 

 

W

hen people realize that the proposal of a Universal Basic Income to 

be given unconditionally to all citizens is fair, equitable and ethically 
acceptable, there will be the conditions needed to introduce it effectively in 
each country. Contributing to this perception has been the main purpose of 
those, who in 1986, founded the 

Basic Income European Network

,

 a forum 

designed to debate all the experiences of income transfer and minimum 
income programs and to defend the establishment of unconditional basic 
income in every country. One of its main founders, Philippe Van Parijs, 
considers it 

important to distinguish between three models of the Welfare 

State: Bismarck, Beveridge and Paine models: 

 

In the Bismarck model the workers give up, compulsorily, one part of 

their present earnings to create a fund that will be used to cover – when 
necessary – health expenses and to provide an income for them when they 
are not able to work. Either because they are beyond a certain age or suffered 
an accident, or because they have a disease, or are being involuntarily 
unemployed. 

 

In the Beveridge model all the holders of primary income, from capital or 

labor, give up compulsorily one part of their earnings to create a fund. This 
fund allows all members of society to receive a minimum level of revenue, 
including health insurance, because they are not capable to meet this 
minimum through their own means – by reason of, for example, age, 
incapacity, accident or disease – or by the impossibility to find a job with 
sufficient remuneration. 

 

In the Paine model all the holders of the income give up, compulsorily, 

one part of their income to create a fund that can be used to pay 
unconditionally, an equal income to all members of society. 

 

The historical European models take several forms starting from the 

contributions by Thomas Paine in 

Agrarian Justice

 (1795), and from 

remarkable initiatives, such as the initiative of Otto Von Bismarck (1815-1898), 
President of the Council of Ministers from Prussia, who after the French-
Prussian War of 1862, succeeded in reconciling the German states and 
establishing a social security system. There was also the initiative of William 
Henry Beveridge (1879-1963), who after participating in 1905 as the 
investigator of the 

Real Committee

 on the ‘Poor Laws’ and was one of the 

main developers 

of Report on the Minority of the Social Security and Allied 

Services.

 He was then nominated as the President of the 

Inter-sector 

Committee

 of the 

Social Security and Allied Services

. In 1941, he wrote a text 

that became known as the 

Beveridge 

Report which contributed to the Labour 

Party victory in the elections of 1945 in the United Kingdom. 

 

Since the thirties several countries introduced programs to guarantee a 

minimum income, whether under the form of benefits to children, or to support 
families with dependent children, income support to the elderly, to the 

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31

disabled, to low income earners, or, for unemployment insurance and for 
minimum income of insertion or of complex systems of social securities. In his 
recent analysis 

Europe Before the Poverty: the National Experiences of 

Minimum Income

44

 

(1999), Serge Paugam traces the establishment of 

guaranteed minimum income systems in Europe, which were generally 
conditional. They were instituted in Denmark,1933; United Kingdom, 1948; 
Federal Germany, 1961; Netherlands, 1963; Belgium, 1974; Ireland,1997; 
Luxembourg,1986; France,1988; and in several provinces of Spain like 
Andalusia, Aragon, Asturias, Catalonia, Galicia, Murcia, Navarre and in the 
Basque lands, 1990; and Portugal, 1996. 

 

Beginning in the 21

st

 Century, the 

European Union and the Organization 

for the Cooperation and the Economic Development (OCDE)

 defended 

together with their member countries the introduction of minimum income 
programs, recognizing however, that it is a national matter of each country. In 
1988, in a resolution that dealt with the eradication of poverty in the European 
community, the European Parliament declared its support for the introducing 
this kind of program. 

In 

Real Freedom for All. What (if anything) can justify 

capitalism? (1995),

 Van

 

Parijs starts from justice principles developed by 

philosopher John Rawls, in 

A Theory of Justice

 (1971):

 45

 

 

1. 

The Principle of Equal Liberty: Each person is to have an 

equal right to the most extensive total system of equal basic 
liberties compatible with a similar system of liberty for all. 

2. 

The Principle of Equal Opportunities: The inequalities of 

social and economic advantages are justified only if (a) they 
contribute to the improvement of the less advantaged of the 
society (the principle of difference), and if (b) they are linked to 
positions that everybody has equal opportunities to occupy. 

 

To put these principles in practice and promote greater equality Rawls 

proposes to maximize a set of primary goods, which includes basic freedoms, 
like the freedom of association, the freedom of movement, the freedom of job 
choice and the freedom of own social respect. In

 A Theory of Justice,

 he 

mentioned that the negative income tax, which provides a minimum income, is 
one of the proper instruments to achieve these goals. 

The philosopher and economist Van Parijs, professor from the Catholic 

University of Leuvan argued however, that to assure the greatest freedom 
possible it is essential that the form taken by a guaranteed minimum income 
avoids two obstacles. First, as the income level increases, it is necessary that 
it does not capture a growing number of people in what is called the 

                                                 

44

 

PAUGAM, Serge. L’Europe face Ă  la pauvretĂ©. Les expĂ©riences nationales de revenu minimum. Paris, 

MinistĂšre de l’emploi et de la SolidaritĂ©, 1999.

 

45

 VAN PARIJS, Philippe 

Real freedom for all: what (if anything) can justify capitalism? 

Oxford, 

Oxford University Press, 1995.  
RAWLS, John (1971). 

Uma teoria da justiça. 

SĂŁo Paulo, Martins Fontes, 1997.  

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32

“unemployment trap”. That happens because the amount that those would 
receive for their job becomes less than the income that they would receive if 
they do not work. Second, that the right to a guaranteed minimum income can 
not be subordinate to work rendered or willing to render, because it would put 
the beneficiary in a unfavorable situation in relation to his/her employer (public 
or private) than if the right to the minimum income was unconditional. That is, 
the consideration of the power dimension requires that the guarantee of the 
total freedom to consume, should not be conceded in detriment to the real 
freedom to work (without the unemployment trap), nor to the freedom to not 
work (without restrictions on the ones who are seeking for job). It is not 
surprising that Rawls suggested that minimum income take the form of a 
negative income tax, which has exactly the advantage of eliminating the 
unemployment trap without restraining the ones who were seeking for a job. 

In consideration of the social basis of self-respect, Van Parijs stresses it 

is important that guaranteed minimum income is able to ensure the 
maximization of real freedom in its dimensions of income and power, without 
attempting against this respect by itself, meticulously described by Rawls in 

Theory of Justice

 as opposite of shame.  For this reason it is essential that 

income is distributed in a form that does not stigmatize, or humiliate, the 
beneficiaries. Moreover, this distribution should be done, particularly, without 
control of resources (on the contrary to what happens, by definition, in the 
negative income tax) and without the control of private life (required to verify, 
for example, if the person is living alone or co-habits with somebody). 

Guy Standing in 

Seeking for a Distributive Justice in a Flexible Working 

World 

(1999), economist and co-founder of BIEN,  recommends that policies 

can only be considered fair if, and only if, they minimize the difference between 
the security degree of those who have less, and the rest of society; including 
everybody’s right to self expression. It is therefore necessary; to find a balance 
between security and freedom by instituting a system that ensures simplicity, 
transparency, equity and efficiency. He argued that it would be essential to 
institute a non-conditional basic income in order to achieve this goal.  

 

Due to the enormous participation from around the world in BIEN, it was 

unanimously transformed into 

Basic Income Earth Network, 

during the 10th 

International Congress that took place in Barcelona in 2004. 

 

VI. The pioneer experience of Basic Income in Alaska (United States)

 

 

There is one place in the world where an equal dividend for all 

inhabitants once they are living there as least one year was instituted. It is an 
innovative and commendable experience which has achieved positive results 
for more than two decades. 

During the sixties Mayor Jay Hammond from Bristol Bay, a small 

fishermen’s village in Alaska, observed that a huge amount of wealth was 
produced in the form of fish, but that many of its inhabitants were still poor. He 
therefore proposed the creation of a 3% tax on the value of fish, to create a 
fund that would pertain to all inhabitants. Initially, he faced a great resistance. 

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33

In order to make the idea more acceptable, he proposed to reduce property 
tax.  Five years later however, both taxes were remaining.  

The experience was so well succeeded that ten years later Jay 

Hammond became the governor of Alaska (1974-1982). Following the lead of 
the previous Governor Keith Miller he agreed with the legislature to put the 
revenue from natural resource exploitation like oil, into a state savings account 
and spend only the interest revenue.

 46

 Considering oil is a non-renewable 

resource this was an innovative way to not only think about the current 
generation, but also about forthcoming generations. 

 

In 1976 Jay Hammond sent to the legislature an amendment to the 

state constitution proposing to separate 25% of all royalties (his original idea 
was 50%, a percentage applied later), from resource exploitation in order to 
create a fund that would belong to all residents in the state of Alaska. Later on 
the proposal was submitted to a popular referendum and was approved by 76 
thousand votes in favor against 38 thousand opposed. At that time, Alaska had 
about 300 thousand inhabitants. 

From 1976 to 1980 there was an intense debate about the destination 

of the fund revenues. Some people proposed the creation of a development 
bank, others warned that this would only provide subsided resources to title 
holders that already controlled large amounts of patrimony, and would result in 
greater income concentration. Initially Hammond considered paying out 
proportional dividends based on how long each citizen had resided in the 
state.  Local attorneys however questioned the constitutionality of this 
procedure, which would break the equality criterion. That led the governor in 
1980 to send another amendment proposing that 50% of the royalties be 
destined to the Alaska Permanent Fund that would then be paid out in 
dividends annually and equally to all residents.  

 

T

he collected revenues were invested in a transparent, prudent and a 

responsible way. Further contributing to diversifying the fund’s portfolio 
investments were placed in US and international companies of which included 
Brazil, and the fund’s bonds and stocks were spread across local enterprises.  

By December 2005 the portfolio of the Alaska Permanent Fund had 

stocks from 16 Brazilian companies, which means we Brazilians are also 
contributing to the success of this system. The equity of the Fund increased 
from US$ 1 billion in 1980, to more than US$ 32 billion in 2005.  

Each person living for one year or more in Alaska between the period of 

January 1

st

 to March 31

st

, must fill in a one page form that includes their name, 

home and business addresses, if he/she was out of the state and what was the 
reason of the trip. The person responsible for children and adolescents up to 
18 years old must fill in a form for them and the dividends destined to them will 
be received by the legal guardian.  According information I have gathered, 
normally parents make a deposit of the money in a savings account so that 

                                                 

46

 HAMMOND, Jay. H. 

Tales of Alaska’s Bush Rat Governor: the extraordinary autobiography of Jay 

Hammond, wilderness guide and reluctant politician.

 Seattle: Epicenter Press, 1994. 

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34

their children may use it later. Two people, also residents in Alaska, witness 
the veracity of the declaration.  

Everybody who returns this form to the government receives 

electronically a dividend between US $300 – to a max. of US $1,963.86 
(2000), on the second week of October.  After the destruction of the World 
Trade Center Towers in New York on September 11th, 2001, the consequent 
drop of the New York stock exchange reduced the annual dividend per capita 
to about US$ 1000. In a family with six people that meant about US$ 6,000 per 
year. This was the wealth the represented the right for everyone to participate 
in the wealth of the state. 

 

In July 1995 I visited Alaska for

 seven days to become familiar with their 

system. As I walked along I asked people what they thought about the 
dividend system which equally paid everyone. I can verify that the support 
today is greater than the proportion of two against one that was apparent when 
the proposal was initially presented by Governor Jay Hammond. I had the 
honor of sitting on a panel with him in February 2004 at the Congress of the 

US Basic Income Guaranteed Network, USBIG,

 in Washington D.C

. I asked 

him if he was familiar with the proposal 

Thomas Paine had made in 1795 in 

Agrarian Justice. 

 He told me he did not, but that he felt happy in knowing that 

there existed a similar initiative. From the legislature of Alaska I have received 
information that today all the 40 deputies and 20 senators support the 
existence of the ‘Alaska Permanent Fund’ and its dividend system. It was not 
apparent in Alaska that there was a problem of people not working because 
they received the basic annual income.  

 

Importantly the Administrative Council of the fund which is constituted of 

six members all of them nominated by the Governor,

 hold meetings with the 

Alaska Permanent Fund Executive Director in a room around which there is an 
auditorium, where people and parliamentarians are allowed to be present and 
a direct broadcasting is made by TV, so that anyone from Alaska may follow 
the meeting. 

At the 9th International Congress of ‘BIEN’ in Geneva 2002, Professor 

Scott Goldsmith from the University of Alaska, Anchorage, presented a paper 
demonstrating that today, it would be political suicide for any leader in Alaska 
to put himself against the dividend system provided by the ‘Alaska Permanent 
Fund.’  Additionally he presented statistical data showing that the 6% annual 
distribution of the GDP of Alaska to its residents has made Alaska the most

 

equalitarian state from the 50 states of the USA

47

 From 1989 to 1999 the average family income of the 20% richest 

families in the United States increased 26%, while the average income of the 
20% poorest families increased 12%. This registers a significant increase, but 
maintains an unequal income concentration. In contrast during the same 
period in Alaska, the average income of the 20% richest families also 

                                                 

47

 GOLDSMITH, Scott, 

The Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend: An Experiment in Wealth Distribution. 

9

th

 International Congress, Bien, Geneva, September 12

th

-14

th, 

, 2002. 

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35

increased 7%, while the income of the 20% poorest families increased 28%, 
registering a significant evolution in a direction towards greater equality.  

 

It should be noted that in the United States, including Alaska, there are 

several income transfer programs like the EITC, the Food Stamp Program, the 
unemployment insurance, the social security system and the TANF (that 
substituted the AFDC in 1996); but only in Alaska there is a dividend system 
paid equally to all its inhabitants that in 2005 equaled 700 thousand. 

 

 

VII. A good proposal for the democratization and the pacification of Iraq 

 

In the dialog that I had in 2004 with the former Governor of Alaska Jay 

Hammond, I pondered that it would be very good for Iraq because for its 
natural resource being oil, to follow the experience of Alaska. He told me that 
he was making every effort to suggest this to his colleague from the 
Republican Party, President George Walker Bush. Jay Hammond died at 84 
years old in August 2004, revered by the inhabitants of Alaska for having been 
one of the people responsible for one of the most successful initiatives of 
shared social development that has ever existed history. 

When SĂ©rgio Vieira de Mello was nominated co-coordinator of the UN 

activities in Iraq, I sent him a letter on May 26, 2003 suggesting that the people 
from Iraq could follow the example of Alaska, so that everyone could 
participate in the wealth of the nation. He answered immediately saying that he 
would convey the suggestion to the people who were in charge of 
administering the country. On August 1, 2003 he called me from Baghdad 
informing me that the proposition was very well accepted and had been 
transmitted by Ambassador Paul Bremer III, the then Chief Administrator of 
Iraq, during a speech on June 23, 2003 at the 

World Reconciliation Summit in 

Amman, Jordan. Sergio told me that the

 mission from the World Bank had 

considered the proposal feasible. Many other enthusiasts of the ‘Basic Income’ 
concept like 

Steve Schafarman, Steve Clemons and Guy Standing made 

similar suggestions during that period in articles published by the 

New York 

Times, Financial Times, 

and other periodicals

 48

 Unfortunately 

SĂ©rgio Vieira 

de Mello

 was murdered on August 19, 2003, in a criminal attack against the 

UN office in Baghdad

On November 6th, 2005, US President George Bush visited Brasilia 

after a meeting of Chiefs of State that had been held in Argentina. After his 
meeting with President Lula at Granja do Torto President Bush delivered a 
speech to about 300 guests at Blue Tree Park, a hotel in Brasilia. He talked 
about how the growth of the commerce among countries of the Americas could 
contribute to increasing employment opportunities; the theme of the 

FTAA - 

Free Trade Area of the Americas

. After he concluded his 22 minute speech, I 

complimented him and we had the following dialog: 

                                                 

48

 SHAFARMAN, Steven. “An Affordable Proposal for Stability in Iraq: A Job for Every Iraqi”. 

The 

Profress Report, 

may, 28, 2003; CLEMONS, Steven. “Sharing, Alaska-Style”. 

The New York Times. 

April 9, 2003; 

STANDING, Guy, The Financial Times, April, 2003. 

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36

 

Suplicy: “

I am Senator Eduardo Suplicy from the Worker’s Party. With 

respect to the integration of the Americas we should not only have as a 
purpose the free movement of capital, goods and services without 
barriers, but also and most importantly of human beings from Alaska to 
the Patagonia. More than that we should also have what you already 
have in Alaska with much success, a Citizen’s Basic Income to all 
residents in that state”. 

Bush: “

Well, in Alaska they have lots of oil”. 

 
Suplicy: “

But yes we could have a basic income from all the forms of 

wealth that are created. I would like to suggest that in order to create 
the conditions for real peace based on justice in Iraq that we should 
encourage the Iraqis to follow the example of Alaska, which pays every 
year a basic income to all residents living in that state in the form of 
dividends that result from the Alaska Permanent Fund”. 

 
Bush: “

We are working on that! We are working on that! Thank you”

  

 

VIII. 

The maturing of the Citizen’s Basic Income proposal

  

 

There are signs that the idea of a non-conditional Basic Income is 

becoming more and more accepted. 

The preface of the book 

What’s Wrong 

with a Free Lunch (2001) 

written by Nobel Prize winning economist Robert 

Solow, from the 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), is Philippe Van 

Parijs’s defense of basic income. The author having debated with several 
economists such as Nobel Prize winner Herbert Simon, Anne Alstott, Wade 
Rathke, and Emma Rotschild (Amartya SenÂŽs wife), began to understand from 
the participants how ‘Basic Income’ could contribute to promote justice, 
increase freedom, improve women’s rights, and help in the preservation of the 
environment. Robert Solow observed that the arguments in favor of the 
proposal to grant this basic right to people are different from the mainstream 
attitudes that commonly prevail today regarding employment and 
remuneration. Although it represents a substantial cost, he feels it should be 
seriously analyzed inclusive of its advantages and disadvantages. 

On February 1st, 2000 in Almancil, Portugal, the Portuguese President 

of the European Union and the country’s Prime Minister Antonio Gutierrez 
showed further signs of serious consideration for the proposal of ‘Basic 
Income’ by inviting Professor Phillipe Van Parijs to present to the directors of 
social programs and specialists of the European Union, “Basic Income: 
Guaranteed Minimum Income for the 21

st

 Century”.  During this presentation 

he stressed that it is natural to expect a strong resistance against this 
proposal, but that when exposed to all of its principles and especially its 
advantages, this resistance will be finally surpassed

. When Gutierrez visited 

Brazil in 2003, he commented that he considered the implementation of a non-

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37

conditional basic income program as a common sense way that should be 
pursued

49

Another propitious sign of the idea’s growing strength can be observed 

in the Brazilian National Congress’s approval of the law establishing ‘Basic 
Income’. Van Parijs has stressed that the implementation universal basic 
income is a deep reform that belongs to the same category as the abolishment 
of slavery or the introduction of the universal suffrage, events that have 
considerably marked, respectively the 19

th

 and the 20

th

 centuries. The 

establishment of a non-conditional basic income system should strongly mark 
the 21

st

 century.  

In an increasing number of countries organizations inspired by BIEN 

(

http://www.basicincome.org.

) have been founded. Similar to the pioneer 

organization all of them have the purpose to promote the discussion of ‘basic 
income’ and to defend the principal in all countries for the need to establish 
unconditional basic income. Today, 

BIEN

 recognizes the following national 

networks: 

 

ARGENTINA:

 

Red Argentina de Ingreso Ciudadano

 

Founded March 2004 

www.ingresociudadano.org

 

President: Ruben Lo Vuolo 

redaic@ingresociudadano.org

 

 

AUSTRIA:

 

Netzwek Grundeinkommen und zozialer 

Zusammenhalt  

Founded October 2002. 

www.grundeinkommen.at

 

Coordinator: Margit Appel, 

margit.appel@ksoe.at

 

 

BRAZIL:

 Rede Brasileira da Renda BĂĄsica de Cidadania

RBRBC. Founded in September 20, 2004, by 13 Brazilians 
who attended the 10th International Congress of BIEN, in 
Barcelona: Maria Ozanira da Silva e Silva, Lena Lavinas, 
ClĂĄudio Roquete, Maria NĂșbia Alves Cruz, Clovis 
Zimmermann, Elenise Scherer, PatrĂ­cia Soraya MustafĂĄ, 
Reinaldo Nobre Pontes, Ernesto Passos de Andrade, Silvia 
Andere, Oscar Valente GonzĂĄles, Maria Luiza Fernandes 
and Eduardo Matarazzo Suplicy.  

RBRBC held its first formal presentation meeting in 
November 2005, at PontifĂ­cia Universidade CatĂłlica de SĂŁo 
Paulo, PUC-SP at the National Seminar on Income 
Transfers organized by PUC-SP, Universidade Federal do 

                                                 

49

 VAN PARIJS, Philippe “Renda BĂĄsica

renda mĂ­nima garantida para o sĂ©culo XXI

?” 

Revista Estudos 

Avançados

. SĂŁo Paulo. Instituto de Estudos Avançados/USP, 2000, nÂș 40, September/December.  

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38

MaranhĂŁo and by NĂșcleo de PolĂ­ticas PĂșblicas, NEPP, from 
Universidade de Campinas, Unicamp. 

Provisory Coordinator: Eduardo Matarazzo Suplicy, 

eduardo.suplicy@senador.gov.br

 and 

www.senado.gov.br/eduardosuplicy 

 

DENMARK: 

BorgeronsbevĂŠgelsen

 

Founded in January 2000 

www.borgerloen.dk

 

President: Jorg Gaugler 

per@borgerloen.dk

 

 

GERMAN:

 

Netzwerk Grundeinkommen

 

 Founded in July 2004 

www.grundeinkommen.de

  

Spokesmen: Ronald Blaschke, Katja Kipping, Katrin Mohr, 
Gunther Soelken, Robert Ulmer, Birgit Zenker, 

kontakt@grundeikommen.de

 

 
 

 

HOLLAND

Veriniging Basinkomen

 

Founded in October 1987 (initially as Werklplaats 
Basinkomen) 

www.basisinkomen.nl

 

info@basisinkomen.nl

 

Coordinator: Guido den Broeder 

 
 
IRELAND:

 

BIEN Ireland 

Founded in March 1995 
Coordinator: John Baker 

John.Baker@ucd.ie

 

 
 
 

SPAIN:

 

Red Renta BĂĄsica

 

Founded in February 2001 

www.redrentabasica.org

 

President: Daniel Raventos 

presidencia@redrentabasica.org

 or 

danielraventos@ub.edu

 

 
SWITZERLAND

BIEN Switzerland

 

Founded in September 2002 
President: Pierre Hrold c/o Jean-Daniel Jimenez 

Jean-da.jimenez@bluewin.ch

  

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39

 

UNITED KINGDOM:

 

Citizen’s Income Trust

 

Founded in 1984 (initially as “Basic Income Research 
Group”) 

www.citizensincome.org

 

Director: Malcolm Torry 

info@citizensincome.org

 

 

UNITED STATES:

 

U.S. Basic Income Guarantee Network

 

(USBIG) 
Founded in December 1999 

www.usbig.net

 

Coordinator Karl Widerquist 

Karl@Widerquist.com

 

 

SOUTH AFRICA: 

Recently founded the 

South Africa 

Coalition for a Basic Income Grant

 that joined 32 civil 

organizations. Among them are COSATO-

The Congress of 

South African Trade Unions,

 the main trade union in the 

country, 

the Alliance for Children’s Entitlement to Social 

Security, Black Sash, Child Health Policy Institute, 
Development Resources Centre, ESST, Gender Advocacy 
Programme, Community Law Centre (UWC), Southern 
African Catholic BishopsÂŽ Conference, South African Council 
of Churches, South African NGO Coalition and Treatment 
Action Campaign,

 joining more than 12 million people.  

 

All of these institutions defend the implementation of an unconditional 

basic income that has the purpose of stimulating the development of economic 
equality, promoting the stability of the family and the community, and allowing 
all people to meet their vital needs and ensuring them a greater dignity. It 
proposes a universal coverage, from birth until death, without the need of any 
verification of income. The social security network should also be extended, so 
that nobody receives less than before the implementation of the program.  

The coalition proposes that the payment should be made by a public 

institution to facilitate the payment to everyone, even in locales where there is 
no banking network. A substantial part of the costs of the program should be 
covered progressively by the tax system, demonstrating that there is solidarity 
and a joint effort to eliminate poverty by all member of a nation or community. 

In December 2003 I had the opportunity to participate in the symposium 

for the implementation of ‘Basic Income’ in Gauteng, South Africa.  Within this 
event I observed the strong commitment of the President of COSATO, and of 
leaders of other entities who represent this cause. This should be seen as an 
important example for Brazil, a country with great economic potential but that 
is still marked by strong inequality with a significant part of our population living 
in absolute poverty.  

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40

The news had already reached the symposium that the Brazilian 

Congress was ready to approve the law that would implement the Citizen’s 
Basic Income (which we confirmed), and was well accepted. The South African 
proposal had already been analyzed in previous meetings of the country’s 
Council of Ministers. On October 17th, 2005 about 400 people met together 
around the legislative assembly of Gauteng where they formed a human chain 
to mark the 

International Day for the Eradication of Poverty

 and to promote the 

approval of basic income for all citizens.  Capetown, the capital of South 
Africa, was chosen to host the 11th International Conference of BIEN on 
November 2nd, 2006.  

Also in Africa the coalition for the “Basic Income Grant” (BIG), in 

Namibia received an audience with the President of the country, Hifikepunye 
Pohamba at the government’s headquarters. According to the head of BIG’s 
delegation, Bishop Zephania Kameeta, following a one hour dialogue, 
President Pohamba said that he would take the idea to discuss in his Cabinet 
and that he would like to be in consultation with more organization directors. 

Growing academic acceptance of the idea can be observed in the 

invitation by the University of Harvard to Professor Philippe Van Parijs, founder 
of BIEN and one of the greatest authorities in Citizen’s Basic Income theme, to 
occupy (since February 2005), the philosophy chair, replacing Professor John 
Rawls (1921-2002). When Van Parijs began lecturing philosophy at the 
university, Professor Amartya Sen decided to invite Philippe Van Parijs to co-
lecture a course with him in Harvard on 

Social Justice and Cultural Diversity. 

 

I was invited to attend the inaugural class of both on February 7, 2005. 

First, Amartya Sen expressed through parables how people have different 
concepts of social justice depending on their cultural roots and depending on 
the values we each take into consideration.  

 Mrs. Annapurna wants someone to clear up the garden, 

which has suffered from past neglect and three unemployed 
laborers - Dinu, Bishanno and Rogini – all very much want the job. 
But she can only hire one of them and the decision is difficult. She 
knows that for much the same the payment, she would get much 
the same work done. 

Dinu is the poorest of the three, this makes Annapurna 

inclined to hire him. But she gathered that Bishanno has recently 
been impoverished and he is psychologically most depressed. 
Among the three he was the unhappiest and should be the one who 
would gain more in happiness than the other two. On the other side, 
there is still Rogini who recently was debilitated from a chronic 
ailment and could use the money to be earned to rid herself of that 
terrible disease

50

 

                                                 

50

 SEN, Amartya, (2000) 

Development as Freedom

, New York, Anchor Books. 

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41

Amartya Sen seeks to illustrate the critical importance of the bases of 

information we use to understand the principles that enter into competition at 
the time when we make decisions. In order to illustrate how different ethnic 
origins result in a variety of values, Prof. Van Parijs asked to about 80 students 
if they spoke other maternal languages besides english. More than 20 of them 
spoke several languages.  

Prof. Sen then asked them to examine throughout the course how the 

idea of universal non-conditional citizen’s ‘Basic Income’ was defended by 
Professor Philippe Van Parijs, and by the Brazilian Senator who was present 
that day in class and would it help or not, the attainment of social justice. On 
that day I had the sensation that I was attending a class given by two people 
who are examples of the earth’s salt, as expressed by Jesus in his parables, 
“who know how to illuminate better the paths that we have to follow”. 

 

IX. The Precursors in Brazil 

As we examine the evolution of history in Brazil of Indigenous people, 

Black people, Mestizos, Landless Rural Workers, the disabled, and all 
members of our society in general, we observe the longings of all 
emancipation movements in defense of citizen rights for the guarantee of an 
income proposal. When the ex-slaves formed their 

quilombos

 in the Brazilian 

regional independence wars in the episodes of Cabanos, Farrapos, Alfaiates, 
Chibata, Contestado (and the fight of rural workers for land as well as the fight 
of urban workers for better conditions of dignity), we will always find herein a 
sense of struggle for the right to live that is related to income. 

 

The common conception of land, values of solidarity and reciprocity 

practiced by our indigenous communities constitutes the basis for the natural 
acceptance of this proposition. In the history of slavery abolition we find many 
voices like Zumbi dos Palmares, JosĂ© do PatrocĂ­nio, Castro Alves, Joaquim 
Nabuco and AndrĂ© Rebouças, all whom expressed longings that are fully 
compatible with what we consider can be attained by  â€˜Basic Income’. The 
works of our sociologists, economists, geographers and historians of the 20

th

 

century became distinguished (such as the works of JosuĂ© de Castro, Caio 
Prado JĂșnior, Florestan Fernandes, Celso Furtado, Milton Santos, HĂ©lio 
Jaguaribe, Maria da Conceição Tavares, Herbert de Souza,  Betinho, and 
Chico de Oliveira), all of them showing an urgent need for Brazil to adopt 
public policies as instruments that provide conditions promoting a deeper and 
more balanced development of the Brazilian society. The situation of deep 
inequality pronounced by Celso Furtado in 

um Projeto para o Brasil

, (1968), 

when our population was of 90 million inhabitants and had a per capita income 
of US$ 350 per year, where the income distribution of the richest 1% 
represented the national income of the poorest 50% people received, did not 
change in the first years of the 21

st

 century. In 2001,  the distribution of the per 

capita domicile income of 172.4 million of Brazilians with a per capita income 
US$ 7,037 per year was detained 13.8% by the richest 1%, while the poorest 
50% only obtained 12.7% of this national income.

 

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42

 

X - From Minimum Income to Citizen’s Basic Income

 

 

The first proposal of the guarantee of minimum income in Brazil came 

from Professor Antonio Maria da Silveira in 

Moeda e Redistribuição da Renda

,

 

(

Currency and Redistribution of Income), 

published in April/May 1975, in 

Revista Brasileira de Economia

51

 

.

 He suggested that the injection of a new 

currency in the economy should be made through the hands of those who 
possessed the least. Criticizing the inefficiency of the instruments used to 
combat the poverty he proposed that the problem should be tackled directly 
through the use of a negative income tax.  

At the time I interacted intensely with Antonio Maria when we invited 

each other to deliver lectures at EAESP-FGV (where I taught), and at ITA in 
SĂŁo JosĂ© dos Campos, where he taught. Our exchanges continue until today. 
On March 7th, 1976, in the “Folha de Sao Paulo", I exposed the importance of 
coordinating the definition of the minimum wage with the guarantee of 
minimum income. 

In 1978 Edmar Lisboa Bacha and Roberto Mangabeira Unger proposed 

in “Participação, SalĂĄrio e Voto” (Participation, Wage and Vote), that agrarian 
reform and a minimum income achieved through a negative income tax should 
be instituted as fundamental instruments for the democratization of Brazilian 
society

52

 

In the second half of the seventies I started to interact more and more 

with the metallurgic workers from the ABC region in SĂŁo Paulo, as well as with 
several segments included in our now President Luiz InĂĄcio da Silva’s

 

Sindicato dos MetalĂșrgicos de SĂŁo Bernardo e Diadema

. At that time I was a 

newspaper journalist who wrote on economic matters in the “Folha de Sao 
Paulo” and I used to observe how entrepreneurs had different powers of 
influence on economic policy with respect to that of the workers in the closed 
politic regime like the one that we lived at that time. These acquaintanceships, 
including the affinity I developed with many social movements once I was 
elected State Deputy in SĂŁo Paulo in 1978 (MDB), led the founders of the PT ( 
founded on February 10th, 1980), to invite me to join them and also turn 
myself into a founder of the party. 

In the meetings between the economists from PT and the national 

direction in the 1980s (especially at the old headquarters in Vila Clementino in 
SĂŁo Paulo), Paul Singer and I exposed the idea that the party needed to 
defend a guarantee of minimum income. As Federal Deputy in 1986, I argued 
with then Minister of Finance Francisco Dornelles in the Chamber of Deputies 
about what he thought about the establishment of a negative income tax. He 
said that he want to know and understand better the proposals of PT. 

                                                 

51

 SILVEIRA, AntĂŽnio Maria (1975). “Moeda e redistribuição da renda”. 

Revista Brasileira de 

Economia

, abr/jun. [Reproduzido in SILVEIRA (1981). 

Moeda e redistribuição de renda

. Rio de 

Janeiro. EdiçÔes Multiplic.] 

52

 

BACHA, Edmar Lisboa and UNGER, Roberto Mangabeira. Participação, salĂĄrio e voto. Um Projeto 

de Democracia para o Brasil. Rio de Janeiro, Paz e Terra, 1978.

 

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43

When I became the first PT elected Senator in 1990, I prepared a bill of 

law with the collaboration of Antonio Maria da Silveira, economist JoĂŁo SabĂłia 
and sociologist Ana LĂșcia SabĂłia, to institute the 

Minimum Income Guarantee 

Program

, through a negative income tax. Following the debates in the PT 

surrounding the minimum income theme, I realized that the idea had already 
ripened. On April 17th, 1991, I presented the Senate Bill of Law nr. 80, which 
proposed that everyone aged 25 years or more with a monthly income less 
than CR$ 45.000, corresponding to 2.5 times the minimum wage of the time, 
would have the right to receive  50% of the difference between that level and 
his/her income. 

At the Committee on Economic Affairs, Senator Mauricio CorrĂȘa, at that 

time leader of PDT – Partido DemocrĂĄtico Trabalhista (Democratic Worker 
Party), was chosen to be the rapporteur. He was receptive towards the 
proposition, but questioned whether or not some adjustments were necessary 
to make it feasible. He suggested that the aliquot should be 30%, and that the 
executive power could raise it to 50% according to the availability of resources 
and according to the success of the program; and that it should be introduced 
over eight years giving in the first year to people aged 60 years or more the 
right and in the second year, people over 55 years and so on until in the eighth 
year all people over 25 years old would receive the benefit. In October 1991 
the project was approved in unanimity by the Committee. On December 16th, 
four and half years of debate, it was approved by the plenary of the Senate 
with a favorable appraisal from all parties; no senator voted against it and 
there were only four abstentions. The leader of 

PSDB at that time, later 

President of the Republic Fernando Henrique Cardoso qualified the proposal 
as “a realistic utopia”. 

The bill of law went to the Chamber of Deputies where at the Committee 

of Finance and Budget it received a favorable and enthusiastic assessment 
from Deputy Germano Rigotto (PMDB-RS), who was in 2004 elected Governor 
of Rio Grande do Sul. Public audiences were held, but the proposal didn’t 
complete its voting at that committee level.  

Throughout the nineties the debate on the theme intensified. At a 

meeting organized in 1991 in Belo Horizonte by Walter Barelli (who at that time 
was the coordinator of the economic area of the parallel government of PT) of 
PT economists, I presented a proposal for the guarantee of minimum income 
together with Antonio Maria da Silveira. It was a good debate. 

 Aloizio Mercadante raised the following question: “Will the guarantee of 

minimum income turn possible a higher level of exploitation from the employer 
and who will tell the worker that he will be able to get part of his remuneration 
from the program?” I pondered that it would be important to ask the following 
question from the point of view of the worker: Will the existence of a minimum 
income be better or worse? And will a guaranteed income be sufficient to 
ensure the worker’s survival; the worker will have greater bartering power to 
decide whether or not he should accept the offered employment conditions.  

Typically for the workers in Brazil, who in the middle of the 21

st

 century 

are still exposed to slavery work, the existence of a guaranteed income would 

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44

allow them to refuse any working condition that could mean humiliation, risk to 
their health, or disrespect to the condition of a human being. If it is true that 
with a minimum income companies will hire more people, the result will be a 
greater pressure on the rise of salaries. Moreover, the combination of a basic 
income with a minimum wage can also contribute to limit the lower level or 
remuneration. 

JosĂ© MĂĄrcio Camargo, a professor from PUC-RJ, pondered whether it 

would be better if the guarantee of an income was granted to the family 
instead of the individual, relating this to education opportunities. One of Brazil’s 
biggest problems is the great number of children who abandon their studies 
early at their parents’ request, who can longer have the money to maintain 
them in school. Therefore if income was provided to needy families who kept 
their children in school, we would also contribute to a better future for these 
children and break the vicious circle of poverty. JosĂ© Marcio Camargo 
published two articles in the newspaper the “Folha de S. Paulo”, 

Poverty and 

Guarantee of Minimum Income, 

on December 26, 1991 and 

The Miserables

on March 3, 1993, which developed this argument. 

As a candidate for the Governor of Distrito Federal, Cristovam Buarque 

had been thinking the same way since 1986 in meetings held at the NĂșcleo de 
Estudos do Brasil ContemporĂąneo in the Universidade de BrasĂ­lia (UnB).  In 
1994 he proposed to institute a minimum income for families in order that they 
can keep their children in schools. In his first week as governor in January 
1995 in the satellite-city of ParanoĂĄ he announced the start of the Programa 
Bolsa Escola (Scholarship Program). All families who did not earn at least half 
of a minimum wage per capita monthly, with children from 7 to 14 years, 
residing in the Federal District for at least five years, would have the right to 
receive a minimum wage per month, as long as their children attended school 
90% of the time.  By the end of his government the program was assisting 
25.680 families, corresponding to 50.673 children. 

In November 1994 Mayor JosĂ© Roberto MagalhĂŁes Teixeira, Grama 

(PSDB), presented to the Municipal Chamber of Campinas the bill of law that 
instituted the 

Familiar Minimum Income Guaranteed Program  - PGFRM

, also 

for families with incomes less than half of a minimum wage monthly who had 
children up to 14 years at school. The income given non-conditionally to the 
families was sufficient to complete a half minimum wage per capita; therefore it 
was a negative income tax for the family with an aliquot of 100%. The law was 
approved in January and the PGFRM was implemented in February 1995. The 
families had to have lived in Campinas for at least two years. The program 
benefited 2,941 families.  

I visited Mayor MagalhĂŁes Teixeira when he presented the bill of law 

and we had a long conversation. We also met several times with the board of 
directors from the PT in Campinas who opposed him. During the first vote the 
only councilman from PT at that time CĂ©sar Nunes, decided to vote against the 
project given that other councilmen, including the ones from the Mayor’s bias, 
did not want to approve some of Nunes’ amendments that stressed the norms 
of the Statute of Infancy and Adolescence involving greater participation from 

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45

the community. During the second vote however, following the approval of his 
amendments and after the dialogue, he opted to vote favorably.  

Afterwards, I was involved in several debates at the Municipal 

Chambers, the House of Representatives, and the Committee of Finance and 
Taxation of the Chamber of Deputies with MagalhĂŁes Teixeira and also with 
Cristovam Buarque, proposing that more and more municipalities and states 
adopt similar programs. Unfortunately MagalhĂŁes Teixeira, who embraced with 
enthusiasm this cause died in February 1996 before completing his mandate. 

Throughout the nineties and in 2001, the proposal of minimum income 

has always been present in Lula’s Government Program, who was then a 
candidate to the Presidency whose goal was/is to eradicate poverty and 
promote the attendance of children in school.  Simultaneously in a variety of 
environments the support and public opinion of initiatives of this kind 
increased. 

The positive news of the experiences of the ‘Distrito Federal’ and the 

municipality of Campinas spread immediately. In October 1995 Mayor Antonio 
Palocci also established in RibeirĂŁo Preto a program to guarantee minimum 
income associated to education. With slight differences in there designs similar 
programs were implemented in ArujĂĄ, Barueri, Betim, Ferraz de Vasconcellos, 
Fortaleza, Franca, Londrina, Manaus, Mococa, Osasco, Ourinhos, Paracatu, 
Pindamonhangaba, Porto Alegre, Presidente Bernardes, Recife, SalezĂłpolis, 
Santo AndrĂ©, SĂŁo Bernardo do Campo, SĂŁo Luiz, Suzano, Teresina, VitĂłria, 
SĂŁo Paulo, JundiaĂ­, SĂŁo JosĂ© dos Campos, Catanduva, SĂŁo Joaquim da 
Barra, Araçatuba, Araraquara, Santo AndrĂ©, Franca, GuaratinguetĂĄ, 
Caçapava, Jaboticabal, Limeira, Piracicaba, Ourinhos, Presidente Prudente, 
Santos, SĂŁo Carlos, BelĂ©m, Belo Horizonte, Betim, Extrema, Blumenau, 
ChapecĂł, Boa Vista, Caxias do Sul, GoiĂąnia, Natal, VitĂłria, Mundo Novo and 
many other muncipalities, all with good results

53

Consequently, new bills of law were proposed to the Chamber of 

Deputies and in the Federal Senate by deputies NĂ©lson Marchezan (PSDB-
RS), Chico Vigilante (PT-DF) and Pedro Wilson (PT-GO); by senators Ney 
Suassuana (PMDB-PB), Renan Calheiros (PMDB-AL); and JosĂ© Roberto 
Arruda (PSDB-DF); all proposing the establishment of minimum income 
projects associated with education or the Scholarship Program.  

In 1996 I accompanied Professor Philippe Van Parijs when he was the 

General Secretary to BIEN to an audience with then President Fernando 
Henrique Cardoso who had called ministers and advisers, and Deputy NĂ©lson 
Marchezan. Van Parijs expressed that he considered a minimum income 
program associated to education opportunities very positive given that it was a 
way to relate it to human capital investment. Starting from these projects the 
government approved and sanctioned on December 10th, 1997, Law 9.533 

                                                 

53

 A detailed exam of the municipal experiences can be found in: SILVA, Maria Ozanira da Silva; 

YAZBEK, Maria Carmelita; GIOVANNI, Geraldo di

 

PolĂ­tica social brasileira no sĂ©culo XXI, A - A 

prevalĂȘncia dos programas de transferĂȘncia de renda. SĂŁo Paulo: Editora Cortez, 2004

; e 

FONSECA, 

Ana M. M. (2001). 

O debate sobre famĂ­lia e a polĂ­tica de renda mĂ­nima. 

SĂŁo Paulo, Cortez, 2001. 

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46

which authorized the Federal Government to grant financial support 
corresponding to 50% of the expenditures to municipalities that instituted a 
minimum income program associated to social and educational incentives. 
Initially municipalities with a lower per capita income would be benefited first, 
and over five years the benefit would be gradually extended to all 
municipalities. The benefit per family however, was very modest.  

In March 2001 a new law was approved by the National Congress and 

sanctioned by President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, number 10.219/2001, 
authorizing the federal government to establish agreements with the 
governments of all Brazilian municipalities to adopt the minimum income 
program associated with education, or Scholarship Program. Through this law 
municipalities would be responsible for the administration of the program while 
the federal government would directly transfer the payment to the benefited 
families using an electronic card. Families with children from 6 to 15 years 
would have the right to the benefit because there children were regularly 
attending a school and the family had a per capita income up to half a 
minimum wage or, R$ 90 in 2001. The benefit was R$ 15, R$ 30 or R$ 45 per 
month, varying whether the family had one, two or three children.  

In the same year the ‘Poverty Fund’ was created and approved by the 

National Congress under the initiative of Senator Antonio Carlos MagalhĂŁes 
(PFL-BA), and based on the studies and works developed by the 

Committee to 

Fight against Poverty.

 This fund was designated to finance the minimum 

income program, and was financed from part of the 

CPMF – Contribuição 

Provisória sobre MovimentaçÔes Financeiras

 (Provisory Contribution on 

Financial Movements). This equates to 0.038% on all financial movements 
from which 0.08% would be assigned to the 

Fight against Poverty Fund.

 

According to the then Minister of Education Paulo Renato de Souza, in 2001 
his Ministry signed agreements with 5,200 of the 5,565 Brazilian municipalities 
with the objective to institute that program and to realize the target of 
benefiting 4.2 million families. By the end of the Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s 
government half of this target had been accomplished.  

Several municipalities and State governments instituted similar 

programs that provided a more generous benefit to the families. This was the 
case of the municipality of SĂŁo Paulo during the government of Mayor Marta 
Suplicy. Previously in 1996 during the government of Paulo Maluf, a law under 
the initiative of Councilman Arselino Tatto which established the Guaranteed 

Minimum Income Program

 in the city of Sao Paulo was approved. Mayor Maluf 

however, vetoed the bill. In the proceeding administration of Mayor Celso Pitta, 
the Municipal Chamber threw out the veto but the Mayor argued it was 
unconstitutional in Court. Pitta finally gave up after I had persuaded his 
Municipal Secretary of Labor, Fernando Salgado, that it was a good initiative. 
Celso Pitta even reserved one percent of the municipal budget during the last 
year of his government for the implementation of the program. Those 
resources however, ended up being using for other purposes. Under the 
administration of Mayor Marta Suplicy in 2001, with 

Marcio Pochmann as the 

Secretary of Labor, Development and Solidarity

, and Ana Maria Medeiros da 

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47

Fonseca as co-coordinator, the initiative to establish the program within the 
municipality of SĂŁo Paulo, with an extended program and a higher amount per 
family was finally implemented. 

During its advanced stage the Guarantee of Minimum Income Program

 

in SĂŁo Paulo benefited families with children up to 14 years, who were obliged 
to attend school and have a per capita family income up to a maximum of half 
a minimum wage. Beginning in October 2001 the benefit became the following: 
from 1/3 to 2/3, with the proportion under the criterion of the executive power, 
of the difference between the number of people in the family times a half 
minimum wage, less the monthly family income. Let’s suppose that the 
executive defines the aliquot as 50% and that the minimum wage is R$ 300. In 
a family with four people with a monthly family income of R$ 300, the benefit 
should be 50% of the difference between 4x R$150 less R$ 300, therefore R$ 
300 per month. 

Mayor Marta Suplicy signed an agreement with the federal government 

and later with the state government to receive more resources than the 
municipal administration had the right to receive, according to the Federal law, 
but with the promise to invest the resources in terms of the municipal program. 
In 2004 when the ‘Minimum Income program’ reached about 190 thousand 
families in the municipality of SĂŁo Paulo, a significant improvement was noted 
in economic activity indicators, in tax collection, the employment level, the rise 
of equality and the reduction of the criminality indexes, and mainly in the 
districts where the number of beneficiaries were greater

54

. For example the 

homicide rate in SĂŁo Paulo which was 57.3 per 100 thousand inhabitants 
during the two years period 1999/2000, dropped to 51.6 in the three years 
period 2001/2003. 

In the State of SĂŁo Paulo beginning in 2001 the government of Geraldo 

Alckmin established the Citizen Income program which was approved by the 
legislative assembly and encouraged municipalities to sign agreements with 
the state, who would then grant all families with monthly income up to one 
minimum wage as a complementary income. This benefit per family which was 
initially R$ 60 per month during 12 months, was conditioned so that children in 
school age must attend school and those aged up to 5 years must be 
vaccinated and the families had to participate in social and educational 
activities. Functioning as an exception, it allowed the participation of families 
with incomes up to two minimum wages with two or more children from zero to 
16 years old.  

With these examples from the state and the municipality of SĂŁo Paulo 

we hope to illustrate the multiplicity of different programs that exists in all 
states and municipalities of the country. 

 

At the end Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s government in 2002 there 

were several existing income transfer programs that related to the ideals of the 
PGRM. 

Additionally there were continuous income payments made to retired 

rural workers, seriously disabled people and the elderly pertaining to families 

                                                 

54

 POCHMANN, M. (Org.) 

PolĂ­ticas da InclusĂŁo Social.

 1. ed. SĂŁo Paulo: Cortez, 2004.  

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with an income less than a quarter of a minimum wage

. There was also the 

Programa de Erradicação do Trabalho Infantil

 - 

PETI (

Infantile Work 

Eradication Program)

, administrated by the Ministry of Social Welfare and 

Assistance with grants amounts slightly higher than the PGRM which at that 
time was administrated by the Ministry of Education.  Also existing was the 
Bolsa Alimentação (Food), 

which benefited families with children from 6 

months to 6 years and 11 months with benefits similar to PGRM of MEC but 
administrated by the Ministry of Health.  The ‘Income Program’ administrated 
by the Ministry of Regional Integration was of a slightly different design

When President Lula was elected in October 2002 with 53 million votes 

in the second turn corresponding to 62% of the valid votes, one of his main 
proposals was the development of project called “Fome Zero” (Zero Hunger). 
This program involved instruments of agrarian reform such as incentives to 
family agriculture, the expansion of credit to small and medium producers, the 
construction of reservoirs for containing water in the semi-arid regions, the 
installation of popular restaurants, and the distribution of food baskets to 
populations in emergency situations. It also included an income transfer 
program provided through the distribution of a food card given to needy 
families to acquire food.  

On March 27, 2003 when the government began its mandate, President 

Lula signed a provisory measure instituting the Food Card. Its distribution, 
providing R$ 50 per month to families with a per capita monthly income up to a 
half of one minimum wage, began in the most vulnerable areas of the 
Northeast’s semi-arid regions where the municipalities of Guaribas and AcauĂŁ, 
in PiauĂ­, were the first to be chosen. 

I accompanied the responsible people from the 

Ministry of Food 

Security and Fight against Hunger

, and the Governor of PiauĂ­, Wellington Dias, 

to the meetings of the Administration Councils in their respective municipalities 
where explanations were given to the various representatives of the population 
in the presence of mayors and councilmen. On one occasion some of the 
questions made by people in the audience called my attention like this one: 
“why certain families were chosen, when many others here, also poor, are not 
registered in the Program? “ One of the ladies responsible for the 
Administration Council answered that question almost in the following way: 
“One of our main difficulties is exactly to verify who is really poor. Which 
families do not receive any income up until the amount defined by law?”  

There in the inland region of PiauĂ­ the situation is more difficult where a 

great part of the economic activity is informal. Another question asked involved 
the requirement to spend the amount of the Card only on basic food. People 
had to fill in forms or booklets – which they could do with the help of the owner 
of the shop; in that region usually modest groceries or emporiums – informing 
them of what they bought. 

I fully agreed with the targets of the

 Zero Hunger Program 

which were 

very enthusiastically defended by the Minister of Fight against Hunger, JosĂ© 
Graziano da Silva, to develop a food security policy. As JosĂ© and I had already 
had debated together at the Instituto de Cidadania on the occasion of the 

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49

elaboration of the program in the Lula government in 2001, we differed on 
some points. I defended that we should advance the need to give greater 
freedom to people to choose what to buy with the resources we provided as 
part of the citizen’s right.  Previously defined in law however, JosĂ© Graziano 
confirmed that the spending should only be on food. 

Six months later on October 20, 2003, considering the diagnosis given 

by Miriam Belchior, a special adviser of the Presidency of the Republic, in 
regards to several income transfer programs in effect, the federal government 
through the Provisory nr. 132 decided to unify the following four programs: 
Bolsa Escola (managed by the Ministry of Education, instituted in April 2001); 
Bolsa Alimentação (managed by the Ministry of Health, instituted in September 
2001); AuxĂ­lio GĂĄs, (from the Ministry of Mines and Energy, instituted in 
January 2002); and CartĂŁo Alimentação, (from the Ministry of Food Security 
instituted in that year); and established the Bolsa FamĂ­lia Program. Bolsa 
Familia was intended to rationalize the four programs that were often 
superimposed and to give greater value to the ‘Single Registry’ of beneficiaries 
that had been instituted in April, 2001. 

The Programa de Erradicação do 

Trabalho Infantil, PETI that

 was established in the government of Fernando 

Henrique Cardoso still need to be integrated into Bolsa FamĂ­lia.  This was 
finally accomplished through the Integration Directive between the two 
programs on December 28, 2005

55

It is important to emphasize that even though only representing a 

modest amount, Bolsa FamĂ­lia corresponds to almost three times the amount 
of the income transfer programs that previously existed in the former 
government; such as Bolsa Escola, Bolsa Alimentação and Bolsa Renda 
(managed by the Ministry of Social Integration, a program that assisted people 
affected by nature disasters such as flood and drought with a benefit equal to 
the amount of Bolsa Escola and Alimentação).  Bolsa Renda was later 
incorporated into other programs and afterwards incorporated into Bolsa 
Familia during the Lula government. Bolsa Familia is still a conditional program 
that provides a complementary income to families with monthly per capita 
incomes less than R$ 100.00. If the per capita monthly income is only reaches 
R$ 50.00, the monthly benefit is R$ 50.00 plus R$ 15.00, 30.00, or 45.00, for 
families with one, two, three or more children up to 16 years old respectively. If 
the per capita monthly income is in the range of R$ 50.00 to R$ 100.00, the 
benefit will be only R$ 15.00, 30.00 or 45.00 per month, for families with one, 
two, three or more children up to 16 years old, respectively. 

The development of the Bolsa FamĂ­lia program within the Ministry of 

Social Development was created in cooperation with the ministries of 
Education, Health and municipal administrations, including support from IDB 
and BIRD.  It should be noted that is has substantially improved on its 
counterpart checking mechanisms. This is to say that children from 0 to six 

                                                 

55

 The team coordinated by Miriam Belchior were constituted by Ana Fonseca; Ricardo Henriques, 

Anna Peliano, Maya Takagi, Mauricio Muniz, Tereza Cotta, Michelle Oliveria Lessa, representing the 
Ministries and Public Institutions involved in the income transfer programs administration.  

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50

years old become vaccinated according to Ministry of Health calendar and visit 
periodically health posts for the accompaniment of their nutritional 
development, while the ones from six to 15 years and 11 months old have to 
provide proof of school attendance in at least 85% of their classes. According 
to the survey released in January 2006, when the target of 8.7 million families 
had been reached, only 2.8% of the children in 2005 did not comply with this 
last requirement. 

 By 2004 the results of 

Pesquisas Nacionais por Amostra de DomicĂ­lios 

- PNAD’s

 (National Researches of Domiciles by Samples) – completed by the 

Instituto

 Brasileiro de Geografia e EstatĂ­stica

, IBGE (The Brazilian Insitute of 

Geography) according to an analyses from a wide range of economists who 
dedicate themselves to the theme of inequality and eradication of absolute 
poverty in Brazil, demonstrate that there were very positive effects in the 
expansion of the program. That was stressed by Rodolfo Hoffmann in his 
article “PNAD mostra redução na desigualdade e na pobreza” (PNAD shows 
reduction in inequality and in poverty): 

 

The reduction of inequality can be verified by several indicators. 
The Gini index, in 2002, 2003 and 2004 is, respectively, 0.587, 
0.581 and 0.569. The percentage of the income appropriated by 
the 10% richer people dropped from 46.8% in 2002 to 46.0% in 
2003 and 45.0% in 2004. The percentage of the income 
appropriated by the 5% richer people dropped from 33.4% in 2002 
to 32.7% in 2003 and 31.9% in 2004. 

The proportion of poor people increased from 35.8% in 

2002 to 37.5% in the following year. No doubt that 2003 was a 
relatively bad year for the Brazilian economy, with low average 
income. A slight recovery was expected in 2004. Regarding to the 
average income, the recovery was modest, with a growth of only 
3.4% in the per capita income, after a drop of 5.8% between 2002 
and 2003. But the reduction of inequality contributed for a more 
substantial reduction of poverty between 2003 and 2004. The 
proportion of poor people in 2004 was 34.6%, slightly below the 
figure observed in 2002. 

The oscillation of the poverty level in these 3 years, with 

poverty in 2004 lower than in 2002, is confirmed by more 
sophisticated measures, which takes into consideration the 
insufficiency of income of each poor person, giving more weigh to 
insufficiency of income of the poorer. The poverty index of Sen in 
2002, 2003 and 2004 is respectively, 0.214, 0.226 and 0.201. In 
the same sequence, the poverty indexes of Foster, Greer e 
Thorbecke are 0.096, 0.103 and 0.008. 

 

 

Hoffmann shows the effects of having expanded income transfer 

programs like Bolsa Escola, Renda MĂ­nima and Bolsa FamĂ­lia from October 

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51

2003 and so forth, once they became part of the statement called 

other 

incomes:

 

It could be verified that the participation of these “other incomes” in 
the total of domicile income increased from 1.0% in 2003 to 1.6% in 
2004. And what called attention is the extraordinary growth of the 
participation of this item in the total income of the poorer segments. 
For domiciles with a per capita income equal or less than R$ 50 (in 
currency of September – October 2004), this participation passes 
from 11.1% in 2003 to 18.9% in 2004. For domiciles with per capita 
income higher than R$ 50 and up to R$ 100 this participation 
increased from 4.2% to 8.4%. For all segments with per capita 
income up to R$ 300 this participation more than doubled between 
2003 and 2004, passing from 1.8% to 3.7%. It is reasonable to 
suppose that in these segments practically there are no yield from 
interests and dividends. So we can conclude that the growth of the 
participation of this item in the total income reflects the amplification 
of income transfer official programs. It is a component with very 
small participation in the total income, but with expressive 
participation in the income of the poorer segments. Its growth 
contributed substantially for the reduction of poverty.

 

 

Similar conclusions were recently expressed by economists Rosa Maria 

Marques, Ricardo Paes de Barros, Marcelo Neri and JosĂ© Alexandre 
Scheinkmann: 

“Generally speaking, for the group of regions, the less developed 
the municipality – characterized by low transfer of ICMS – the 
greater the relative importance of the Bolsa FamĂ­lia. In some 
case, like in Medina, without the need of further investigations, as 
the income of almost 30% of the population is guaranteed by the 
income transfer of this program, there’s no doubt that the Bolsa 
FamĂ­lia is responsible for a good part of the economic activities 
practiced in the municipality.”

56

 

“It is a new and sensational fact that the inequality has decreased 
systematically in the past three years, representing all things that 
one who wants to combat the poverty would like to see in Brazil, 
and yet when it came followed by a growth like the one of the last 
year (referring to 2004).

 57

”  

“The conjugation of economic growth with a better distribution of 
income resulted in significant reduction in extreme poverty in 
Brazil in 2004. The percentage of people who lived with an 

                                                 

56

 MARQUES, Rosa Maria, 

A importĂąncia do Bolsa FamĂ­lia nos MunicĂ­pios Brasileiros, 

Cadernos de 

Estudos, n.1, Desenvolvimento Social in Debate, , MinistĂ©rio do Desenvolvimento Social e Combate Ă  
Fome, BrasĂ­lia, 2005. 

57

 Interview of PAES DE BARROS, Ricardo ao 

O Estado de S. Paulo

, Caderno 

AliĂĄs

, in 04/12/2005. 

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52

income less than R$ 115 per month passed from 27.26%, in 
2003, to 25.08%, in last year (2004), the lowest level since 1992 
(35.87%)....It was a year in which we had the recovery of the labor 
market, with the generation of formal jobs, and a new generation 
of social programs, like the Bolsa FamĂ­lia.

58

” 

“Despite the program is relatively small, that in 2005 spent about 
0.3% of the GDP, the Bolsa FamĂ­lia, thanks to its focus on the 
poorer segments, is doing an important role in the diminishing of 
poverty in Brazil. The redistributive impact of this program will 
confirm the work of the Secretary of Economic Policy from the 
Ministry of Finance, which estimated that, in 2003, 73% of the 
expenditure in Bolsa Escola benefited families who were among 
the 40% poorer segment. 

Conditional transfer programs will not solve, by themselves, the 
extreme poverty problem in Brazil. The government must increase 
the quantity and the quality of the education and health supply for 
the poor and fixing the conditions that propitiate the creation of 
more and better jobs by the private sector. But public policies 
aimed to the less favored are essential for the decrease of poverty 
in Brazil.”

59

 

 

Having confirmed the efficacy of income transfer programs associated 

with education and health assistance opportunities, which started under Bolsa 
Escola and Bolsa Alimentação and then were later unified in Bolsa FamĂ­lia, is 
it not time to take a step towards implementing a Citizen’s Basic Income? Let’s 
take into consideration President Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva’s own affirmation 
declared on January 9, 2005 practically one year after having sanctioned the 
Law 10.835, on January 8, 2004, which established the Citizen’s Basic 
Income, given on program broadcasted by RadiobrĂĄs, “CafĂ© com o 
Presidente” (Breakfast with the President); which emphasized the Bolsa 
Familia program would reach by 2006 the total amount of families that 
according to IBGE are below the poverty line. He said: 
 

“Brazil that I wish is a Brazil where, someday, the State does not 
need to have an income transfer because people are working and 
earning their sustenance from their own work. It is that what 
dignifies the man, the woman, it is that what gives us pride, to live 
at the expense of ourselves, at the expense of our work, of our 
sweat”. 

In order for us to accomplish this wish of our President for us all to live 

at the expense of our own work, it is necessary to understand that the Citizen’s 

                                                 

58

 NÉRI, Marcelo, “MisĂ©ria in queda: Mensuração, Monitoramento e Metas”, 

Conjuntura EconĂŽmica

Fundação GetĂșlio Vargas, November 2005. 
59 SCHEINKMANN, JosĂ© Alexandre. “Bolsa-FamĂ­lia e pobreza Bolsa-FamĂ­lia e pobreza.” 

Folha de 

SĂŁo Paulo

December 18, 2005.  

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53

Basic Income does not correspond to any sense of charity or assistance but 
that it is a right, granted unconditionally to all citizens of Brazil to participate in 
the wealth of this nation, whether produced by natural resources or by 
previous  generations (including those who previously worked as slaves 
without receiving a fair payment), or, wealth provided by technological 
progress achieved through the interaction of the inventors with the whole of 
society. 

In discussions I had with the Minister of the Social Development Patrus 

Ananias at the World Social FĂłrum in Porto Alegre in January 2005 and with 
the participation of Philippe Van Parijs, or, at the Meetings of the National 
Association of the Post Graduation Centers in Economics (Associação 
Nacional dos Centros de PĂłs Graduação de Economia, ANPEC) in Natal, in 
December 2005; the minister has expressed a great interest in the proposal 
but has formulated some important questions: 

‱ 

How is it feasible to pay a reasonable amount of basic income to 
185 million Brazilians, if the amount paid now to poor families by 
Bolsa FamĂ­lia is still modest? 

‱ 

Which should be the amount to start the basic income? 

‱ 

Would it not be more adequate to first increase the amount of 
Bolsa FamĂ­lia? 

‱ 

How is it possible to finance the payment of a basic income to 
everyone? 

‱ 

As public opinion supports the requirements of the school 
attendance and vaccinations and considers them positive, how 
can we start paying non-conditional income guarantees to all 
citizens? 

It is paramount to remember that the law establishing Citizen’s Basic 

Income grants great flexibility to the executive power regarding its 
implementation. The amount given and its realization will be gradual and given 
under the criterion of the Nation Executive, which gives priority to the neediest 
until everybody can receive it. 

In January 2006 I accompanied Minister Patrus Ananias from the 

Ministry of Social Development and Fight against Hunger on a visit of a needy 
district in the municipality of Campinas, where we had a dialogue with families 
who were benefited by the income transfer programs. Eight programs are 
superimposed and logically there was a great difficulty for the families to 
understand, which one they are supposed to be included. If someday we can 
implement a Citizen’s Basic Income program in all of Brazil, it will be much 
simpler to explain to all Brazilians what their effective right is. 

The government needs to first evaluates that it is necessary to increase 

the amount of the Bolsa FamĂ­lia for the 45 million beneficiaries, which can be 
done. The government could also then expand the number of eligible families 

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54

who have the right to enroll in the program. An alternative to the gradual 
implementation could also be done through the universal concession of the 
Citizen’s Basic Income initially awarded to people up to 18 years old, as is 
defended in Argentina by economists Ruben Lo Vuolo

60

 and Alberto Barbeito 

and in Brazil by economist Lena Lavinas

61

It is expected that the Citizen’s Basic Income should initially start with a 

modest amount, let’s say R$ 40.00 per person. In a family of 6 persons that 
would mean R$ 240.00 per month. If the head of the family receives a 
minimum wage of R$ 300.00 in the beginning of 2006 and there is no other 
income in the family besides these two, the family income will be R$ 540.00. 
R$ 40.00 times 12 months signifies R$ 480.00. Multiplied by 185 million we will 
have to pay an annual amount of R$ 88.8 billion. This is about ten times the 
total amount now paid for the Bolsa FamĂ­lia program in 2006. This is much 
more less however, than what we have paid for the interest on the public debt. 

Even starting with a modest amount for the Basic Income as stated in 

the example above, the total amount of R$ 88.8 billion corresponds to nearly 
5% of the GDP estimated to be R$ 2 trillion in 2006; this is a difficult amount to 
be available in the short term. This concern was the subject of the discussion 
that I had with the Minister of Finance which is why it is important to introduce 
the system gradually. Minister Palocci told me that a possible way is to 
consider the Basic Income firstly for families, granting afterwards, to everyone. 
I told him that it this is a possible alternative. 

Let’s remember that the Fight against Poverty Fund which provides the 

resources for Bolsa FamĂ­lia created through an Amendment to the Constitution 
in 2000 has its length fixed until 2010. It is therefore still necessary to think of a 
permanent source of revenue that can keep up to the growth of the country. 

A possible solution is to finance the program through the creation of 

Citizen’s Brazilian Fund which over time would be able to provide the 
necessary resources to pay the basic income in accordance to the model 
formulated by Thomas Paine and by the Alaska Permanent Fund. This is the 
main purpose of the law which I presented to the Senate in 1999 that has 
already been approved by the Committees of Constitution and Justice and 
Social Matters. The initial capital of the fund would be constituted by 10% of 
the shared participation of the Federal government in the capital of the public 
companies. The resources of the fund would be formed by endowments 
consigned to the federal budget; 50% from royalties produced by natural 
resources; 50% from resources proceeding from concessions of public works 
and services; 50% from rents coming from federal real estates and other 
assets and donations. 

                                                 

60

 VUOLO, RubĂ©n Lo, BARBEITO, Alberto C., 

Contra la exclusiĂłn. La propuesta del ingreso 

ciudadano. 

Buenos Aires, Ciepp/CIEPP/Mino y DĂĄvila, 1995. 

61

 LAVINAS, Lena. 

et alli

 â€œExceptionality and Paradox in Brazil: From Minimum Income Programs to 

Basic Income”. 9

th

 International Congress, Bien, Geneva, September 12

th

-14

th, 

, 2002. 

 

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55

Regarding to the conditions considered positive by the public, we 

should take into consideration the teachings of great masters like Jean Piaget, 
Maria Montessori, AnĂ­sio Teixeira and Paulo Freire, who showed that 
education is a liberating process through which the person becomes more and 
more conscience. Similar to way richer people usually take all the right steps to 
get their children vaccinated and attending the best schools, we can also 
expect that all families once given the right to receive a basic income for all 
their members will also make efforts to improve the education and the health of 
their children 

The Italian philosopher Antonio Negri from the University of PĂĄdua, and 

the political scientist Giuseppe Cocco from the Universidade Federal do Rio de 
Janeiro in an article in 

Folha de SĂŁo Paulo

 praised the Bolsa-FamĂ­lia, 

qualifying it as the embryo of a universal and citizen’s income. They exalted 
Lula’s government for aiming towards non-conditionality and trying to 
accelerate the popularization and democratization of the program.

62

 

Celso Furtado the greatest Brazilian contemporary economist 

understood very well the proposal. On the day of the sanction of the law he 
sent the following message to the President: 

 

Dear Mr. President Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva 
President of the Republic 
 

At this moment when Your Excellency sanctioned the Citizen’s Basic 

Income Law I want to express my conviction that, with this measure, our 
country puts itself in the vanguard of those that fight for the building of a more 
harmonious society. Brazil was frequently referred as one of the last countries 
to abolish slave labor. Now with this act which is a result of the principles of 
good citizenship and the wide social vision of Senator Eduardo Matarazzo 
Suplicy, Brazil will be referred as the first that institutes an extensive system of 
solidarity and furthermore, it was approved by the representatives of its 
people. 

At this opportunity I would like to wish Your Excellency a continuous 

success in the important mission assigned to you.               
 

Cordially, 
Celso Furtado,  
Paris, January 8, 2004    

 

 

                                                 

62

 NEGRI, Antonio e COCCO, Giuseppe, “Bolsa-FamĂ­lia Ă© embriĂŁo da renda universal” 

Folha de S. 

Paulo,

 05.01.2006. 

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56

XI - Conclusion 

When Brazil institutes the Citizen’s Basic Income it will do the natural 

thing that other countries in the Americas will also soon do. The ideal thing is 
to harmonize the path of social rights in several countries in the region. For this 
reason I have tried to manifest to newly-elected Presidents of these countries 
my disposition in collaborating with the authorities of their governments and 
their parliaments. In January 2006 I therefore sent similar letters to the 
President of BolĂ­via, Evo Morales, of Chile, Michele Bachelet, and of 
Argentina, Nestor Kirschner.  The one published below was published in the 
main newspaper of BolĂ­via, 

La RazĂłn 

on January 13, 2006: 

 
 

Letter to President Evo Morales 
 
 

Congratulations for your extraordinary and very important election to the 

Presidency of the Republic of Bolivia with 54% of the votes from the people of 
your country at the first turn. I believe that it is a very important event for 
people who love democracy and the fight for the accomplishment of justice as 
in the historical elections of Salvador Allende in Chile, even without obtaining 
the absolute majority of Nelson Mandela in South Africa and of Luiz InĂĄcio Lula 
da Silva in Brazil.. 
 

With close attention I have followed your speeches in favor of the real 

sovereignty of the Bolivian people, of a democracy that really matters to all 
people, especially to the ones who have been neglected and who did not get 
their full citizen’s right for such a long time in history. I consider very important 
your announcements in favor of the soon to be integration of Bolivia into the 
Mercosur countries. This integration should consider promptly the free 
movements not only of goods, services and capital stocks, but also of human 
beings. More than that it should contemplate the gradual homogenization of 
social rights in the Americas if it is our wish for a real integration.    
 

Your public statements in favor of Bolivia to be able to charge 50% of 

taxes and royalties on the exploitation of its natural resources is also important 
to ensure that all people can participate in the wealth of the nation. Regarding 
this matter I would like to put myself at your disposal to debate with the 
authorities of the new government and of the National Congress of Bolivia 
about the ways to create a National Bolivian Citizen’s Fund which will allow in 
the near future the payment of an unconditional basic income to everyone of 
the near 9 million Bolivians.   
 

Today in Brazil the Bolsa Familia Program is in intense expansion. 

Families with a monthly income up to R$100.00 have the right to receive a 
benefit of R$15.00, R$30.00 or R$45.00 depending on whether the family has 
one, two, three or more children up to 16 years old and plus R$50.00 if the 
monthly income is up to R$50.00. As compensation the families must 
demonstrate that their children up to 6 years old are taking vaccines 
recommended by the Ministry of Health and that the ones from 7 to 16 years 
old are going to school.  

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57

 

It is very relevant that on January 8, 2004 President Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da 

Silva sanctioned the Law 10.835 instituting in gradual steps beginning in 2005 
a Citizen’s Basic Income commencing with the most in need and gradually 
extending to all Brazilians living in the country, including foreigners residing in 
Brazil for 5 years or more to have a right to receive this income. It will be given 
to everyone in yearly or monthly payments.  
 

Bolivia is in a very favorable situation to consider seriously the very 

positive experience that exists in the State of Alaska in the USA. In the sixties 
the mayor of a fishermen’s village, Bristol Bay, 

observed that a huge amount of 

wealth was produced in the form of fish, but that many of its inhabitants were 
still poor. He proposed a creation of a 3% tax on fishing to create a fund which 
would belong to everybody. There was a great resistance and it took almost 5 
years to persuade everyone. He was so well succeeded that 10 years later he 
became the Governor of the State of Alaska. His name was 

Jay Hammond. 

In the sixties Alaska discovered a huge oil reserve. Therefore in 1986 

the Governor told his 300.000 co-citizens: let’s think not only on the present 
generation, but also future ones. The oil and other natural resources are not 
renewable. Let’s separate 50% of the royalties generated by the exploitation of 
natural resources for the creation of a fund which will belong to everybody. The 
proposal was approved by the Legislative Assembly and also by a referendum: 
76.000 in favor versus 38.000 against. Since the eighties these resources 
have been invested in government bonds, shares of companies in Alaska, 
USA, international companies and real estate enterprises. The value of the 
Permanent Fund of Alaska had growth from US$ 1 billion dollars in 1980 to 
US$ 32 billion dollars in 2005.  

Every person living in Alaska for one year or more, of any origin, race, 

gender or age has the right to receive a yearly dividend which increased from 
US$ 300.00 in the early eighties to US$ 1963.86 in the year of 2000, and to 
US$ 845.76 in 2005. In the nineties the state of Alaska distributed 6% of its 
Gross National Product to its inhabitants that today sum up to 700.000. As 
consequence Alaska became the most equalitarian state of all US states. 
From 1989 to 1999 the average monthly income of the 20% richest families in 
USA increased 26%. The monthly income of the 20% poorest families in USA 
increased 12%. In Alaska the average monthly income of the 20% richest 
families increased 7% and of the 20% poorest families increased 28%, four 
times more.  

I’m sure that this is the standard of development that Your Excellency 

would like to see in Bolivia, the same as we would like to see in Brazil. 

   

 Eduardo Matarazzo Suplicy 

Senator (PT-SP) 

 

In the Americas, another important step was recently taken in the 

province of Alberta, Canada. In January 2006 all people living in the province 
received 400 Canadian dollars through cheques sent through the post to their 
residences. It was a democratic distribution that the government of that 

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58

province decided to do because of the positive results produced by the oil and 
economic activities revenues.

63

 The decision means the implementation of 

Citizen’s Basic Income similar to what occurred in Alaska 25 years ago. Let’s 
remember that it was in Alberta in 1935 that the Social Credit Party was 
founded in defense of a basic income, resulting from the Movement for Social 
Credit created in England by Major Clifford H. Douglas. In terms of countries 
however, Brazil is the first in which its National Congress approved a law for its 
implementation.  

In 2003 when this bill of law was waiting to be approved in the Chamber 

of Deputies, I delivered a lecture at the Initial Attendance Unit of FEBEM, 
Fundação Estadual do Menor (Underage State Foundation) in SĂŁo Paulo.  It 
was overcapacity as only 150 people could stay inside, and yet there were as 
many as 500 more adolescents aged 15 to 20 years old. I transmitted to them 
the matter above and told them that if the Citizen’s Basic Income was had 
already been in effect, very probably they would not have committed the 
crimes that caused their arrest. For a better understanding reminded them that 
when President Lula was a boy he came from Garanhuns, CaetĂ©s, the inland 
of Pernambuco at 7 years old by truck to Vicente de Carvalho, in SĂŁo Paulo. It 
was during the same time that the inlander Luiz Gonzaga sang that song by 
Patativa do AssarĂ©, 

Sad Departure

, which illustrated the degree of freedom of 

many people in Brazil: 

 

 
“I sell my donkey 
My “jackass” and my horse 
We’re going to SĂŁo Paulo 
To live or to die 
[
] 
Because soon comes 
a lucky farmer 
who buys what he owns 
for such a bargain 
[
] 
 
Oh Lord, oh Lord 
What a pity to see 
So strong, so brave 
A northeasterner 
Living as a slave 
In the North and in the South"  

 
And how is it today that this freedom feeling is realized by the 

youngsters living on the periphery of our big metropolis? It is illustrated here in 
the lyrics of the hip-hop song that these youngsters know how to sing by heart 

                                                 

63

 BIEN Newsletter, 36, Novembro 2005 e 

http://www.gov.ab.ca/home/albertasurplus/

  

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59

even though the lyrics are very long like this one, 

The Man on the Road,

 by 

Mano Brown (Os Racionais): 

 

Man on the Road 
 

A man on the road begins his life anew 
His purpose: his freedom.

 

Which was lost, taken from him;

 

and he wants to prove to himself he had really changed,

 

he is rehabilitated and wants to live in peace.

 

Not to look back, tell crime: never again!

 

At Febem painful memories, so.

 

Yeah, make money, get rich, at last.

 

Many have died, yeah, in such wild daydreaming,

 

tell me who is happy, who does not despair,

 

to see his child born in the cradle of misery!

 

A place where the sole attraction is the bar,

 

and candomblé is the place to seek blessing
.

 

 
 

On the following week by their request I invited Mano Brown to 

deliver a speech together with me. Together with the composer in a filled up 
dining room they sang six songs. All of them illustrated the point that Amartya 
Sen explained so very well. It is necessary that people have choice and 
alternatives to be able to live with dignity. Therein lays the importance of the 
Citizen’s Basic Income. Then they asked me: But why it is not put in practice 
yet? I explained that the Senate had already approved it and that the Chamber 
of Deputies had not yet approved the Law and then the President will sanction 
it. Now all of that has already happened and it remains only necessary to apply 
the Law. 

Brazil will be better place when the Citizen’s Basic Income takes full 

effect.