A universal basic income would enable many people to develop their ideas because they don’t need to fear immediate financial ruin as well as reward those in civic participation – boosting the country in a long run, Florian Marcus, a political scientist, writes.
What the future of Estonia holds is, to a large extent, up to the people who live in it: to the thinkers and doers, to the artists, nurses, bankers, construction workers and, yes, also the politicians. This last group of people has to worry about issues before other people do, this group has to anticipate […]
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