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PRIVACY
Regional Development

Wales could trial basic income and a shorter working week

The Future Generations Commissioner believes giving people unconditional, regular payment could prevent further mass unemployment and poverty

Sophie Howe, The Future Generations Commissioner for Wales

Wales could be the test ground for a pioneering initiative for a basic income from the government and a shorter working week.

The Future Generations Commissioner is leading work on how giving people unconditional, regular payment could prevent further mass unemployment and poverty caused by the pandemic.

Sophie Howe, whose job remit is to look after the interests of future generations, has launched research into the practicalities of a dramatic change to how people live and work.

The commissioner, whose role is enshrined in law as part of Wales’ Well-being of Future Generations Act, and her office, is working with the think-tank Autonomy on a project to explore how both policies have the potential to be part of solving the unemployment crisis as companies cut hundreds and thousands of jobs.

They are recommendations in her Future Generations Report, published in March, but the office believes they have become critical since the pandemic has exposed inequalities and the precarious nature of modern work.

The ideas have gained increasing momentum in mainstream thinking, with basic income now a key Liberal Democrat policy.

Ms Howe’s Manifesto for the Future, launching this month, will urge political parties in Wales to commit to exploring them in their manifestos ahead of May’s Senedd elections next May.

The work with Autonomy is the first feasibility study of its kind in Wales and will seek to provide answers to many of the often-asked questions around a basic income - including how it could be funded, and who would receive it.