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  • I'm in Finland. It's one year after the launch

  • of a first-of-its kind experiment here in the country.

  • We're talking about universal basic income.

  • Here's how it works.

  • Researchers randomly selected 2,000 unemployed people

  • between the ages of 25 and 58 from around Finland.

  • Each month those 2,000 people receive €560,

  • which is about 670 bucks, tax-free.

  • What they do with the money is entirely up to them.

  • The purpose of the experiment is to address unemployment here in Finland.

  • The government hopes that it will encourage unemployed people to

  • take jobs instead of being afraid of losing their unemployment benefits.

  • So one year into the experiment, is it working?

  • We went to Finland to find out.

  • It wasn't easy finding someone who is actually receiving the free money.

  • Researchers are keeping the names of the recipients

  • private to try to keep the results consistent.

  • But we did manage to find Mika Ruusunen on Facebook,

  • and he agreed to meet us at his office in Tampere,

  • about two hours north of Helsinki.

  • So, we are going meet Mika now at his office.

  • He's here, he's agreed to meet us during his lunch break.

  • The fact that we're meeting him at his office is actually a promising sign.

  • It means that he has a job, so we'll see what he has to say.

  • Hi, Mika?

  • Hi!

  • Nice to meet you.

  • Nice to meet you, too.

  • Thanks so much for having us here today.

  • Okay, great, excellent!

  • Let's get started!

  • Mika was doing an internship at an IT company, where he now works full-time,

  • when he found out he was selected for Finland's basic income trial.

  • When you first found out that you were going to be part of the trial,

  • did you tell people or did you want to keep it a secret?

  • When I first received the letter I opened it and I didn't understand it at all.

  • And so I gave it to my wife and asked her, "What the heck is this?"

  • Mika had been unemployed for 16 months before

  • he decided to go back to school to switch career paths into IT.

  • Do you find there's less bureaucracy than there was

  • when you were receiving benefits for being unemployed?

  • Yeah definitely, that's the best part of the basic income.

  • That it would mean much less bureaucracy.

  • People who are using the system are already using the system.

  • The basic income encourages people to do work.

  • Mika said the €560 a month wouldn't be enough to live on.

  • But it's given him flexibility for things like a family vacation

  • or the possibility of starting his own business.

  • He's proud to be part of the experiment in Finland,

  • but he's not sold on the idea that you should

  • continue receiving free cash even when you're well-off.

  • There's no getting out.

  • If I won a million bucks at the lottery they would still give it to me.

  • It's a pretty weird idea.

  • It's strange.

  • Our next step was to find out what the researchers think

  • about the universal basic income experiment so far.

  • Kela is the arm of the Finnish government that's implementing the trial.

  • So we're at the office here at Kela in Helsinki.

  • We're about to meet with one of the main researchers now.

  • Researcher Miska Simanainen said he won't actually hear

  • from any of the participants until the trial concludes at the end of 2018.

  • But the experiment has already revealed

  • one of the biggest issues with universal basic income,

  • funding.

  • We had to make many practical compromises

  • during the design process of the experiment.

  • Researchers only had enough funding to hand out cash to 2,000 people.

  • And they chose to limit their sample to participants who were unemployed.

  • Do you envision a world where eventually there could be

  • everyone in Finland has universal basic income?

  • There is a strong consensus between political parties that

  • the current social security system should be reformed.

  • But we found there is disagreement about how to reform the system.

  • Is the idea that universal basic income is actually going to

  • take the place of some of the other benefits here in Finland?

  • That's the way that the discussion is that

  • if we're going to give you universal basic income,

  • then we're going to cut from other sectors.

  • This is Antti Jauhiainen, he's the author of a book about welfare in Finland.

  • He sees universal basic income not as a way to

  • replace the current welfare system, but as an added benefit.

  • Our path shouldn't be to create low-wage jobs

  • but to really improve education and to improve people's skills.

  • And I think giving the kind of freedom that through

  • universal basic income would provide, might help with that.

  • It looks like the trial is off to a good start here.

  • But it still seems like it's a long way away from

  • universal basic income being universal here in Finland.

  • Hey guys it's Elizabeth, thanks so much for watching.

  • If you want to check out more of our stories, we have an Explains about universal basic income

  • and other CNBC Explains up on our YouTube page.

  • While you're at it give us some suggestions, we're looking for other ideas.

  • And subscribe to our channel.

  • See you later!

I'm in Finland. It's one year after the launch

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