Categories: FinanceNews

Swiss Citizens Reject Universal Basic Income Idea

Contrary to what most people had expected, the Swiss population is not for establishing a universal basic income to every citizen. As it turns out, only 23% of votes was for this solution. Quite a disappointing result, but also a valuable lesson about free money.

No Basic Income In Switzerland

On paper, the concept of establishing a universal basic income for every citizen in Switzerland sounded great.Independent group Bien-CH managed to obtain enough positions to make residents vote on this proposal, and experts assumed a lot of people would vote “yes.” But as it turns out, they were plain wrong, with less than one in four favoring this solution.

The concept of a universal basic income will not go away all of a sudden, though. It is clear this proposal was rather rough around the edges and needs warrants a lot of rethinking the strategy. Providing 2,500 Swiss Francs per month to every citizen may have been a bit too optimistic. Especially when taking into account how children would receive 625 CHF on top of that.

Moreover, Y Combinator recently announced conducting an experiment with basic income in Oakland. The plan is to pay select people a basic income over the next five years and study their consumerism behavior. Similar experiments are scheduled to take place in Europe later this year and in 2017.

Related Post

It comes as no surprise to find out the Swiss government was not for the universal basic income by any means. Funding this idea is the big hurdle to overcome, as money cannot be created out of thin air [unless one is a central bank]. Large tax hikes are one option worth exploring, although the consumer would take offense to that.

Another proposal would see all electronic transactions being micro-taxed moving forward. This is another way to ensure cash remains in circulation in Switzerland, rather than going cashless altogether. The numbers would add up for this particular proposal, yet it remains a mystery as to why the government opposed that idea as well.

Source: TechCrunch

Images credit 1,2

If you liked this article follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin and altcoin price analysis and the latest cryptocurrency news.

JP Buntinx

JP Buntinx is a FinTech and Bitcoin enthusiast living in Belgium. His passion for finance and technology made him one of the world's leading freelance Bitcoin writers, and he aims to achieve the same level of respect in the FinTech sector.

Share
Published by
JP Buntinx

Recent Posts

10 Trusted Cloud Mining Platforms to Earn Free Bitcoin Daily in 2026

  Cloud mining continues to gain massive traction as 2026 inches closer. In tough economic…

12 hours ago

Jupiter Pushes Onchain Finance Forward With Its Biggest Upgrade Wave Yet

Solana Breakpoint wasn’t just another conference this year. It doubled as a stage for Jupiter…

1 day ago

Ripple Payments Lands First European Bank With AMINA Bank AG

Ripple has scored a major regulatory milestone in Europe. AMINA Bank AG, a Swiss-regulated digital…

1 day ago

a16z’s 2026 Crypto Vision: Stablecoins Surge, Tokenization Grows, and Asia Becomes the Next Battleground

a16z just dropped its annual report, and the message is clear: crypto isn’t slowing down.…

2 days ago

Ethereum Activates BPO-1 Upgrade, Boosting Blob Capacity and Expanding the Network’s Scaling Roadmap

Ethereum has activated BPO-1, a protocol adjustment that increases blob capacity per block from 6…

2 days ago

CryptoBench: AI Meets DeFi, Head-On

CryptoBench just landed. Developed by ChainOpera AI and Princeton AI Lab, under the guidance of…

4 days ago