Basic Income by Default: Lessons from Iran's 'Cash Subsidy' Programme

Main author: Karshenas, Massoud
Other authors: Tabatabai, Hamid
Format: Book Chapters           
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id eprints-31848
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description Karshenas and Tabatabai consider Iran’s nationwide, universal cash transfer programme, which was launched in December 2010 as compensation for massive cuts in subsidies that led to increased prices for energy and other basic products. The authors describe the unusual manner in which the programme emerged, and its potential lessons. Of particular interest is the impact on incomes and expenditures, labour supply, inflation, income distribution, and poverty, in the immediate aftermath of the launch of the programme, as well as its implications for similar schemes such as financing a UBI by carbon taxes. Given an extremely adverse broader environment however, the programme, while still continuing after eight years, has lost much of its lustre as the purchasing power of the transfers has been largely wiped out through inflation.
author_additional Tory, Malcolm
author_additionalStr Tory, Malcolm
format Book Chapters
author Karshenas, Massoud
author_facet Karshenas, Massoud
Tabatabai, Hamid
authorStr Karshenas, Massoud
author_letter Karshenas, Massoud
author2 Tabatabai, Hamid
author2Str Tabatabai, Hamid
title Basic Income by Default: Lessons from Iran's 'Cash Subsidy' Programme
publisher Palgrave Macmillan
publishDate 2019
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/31848/