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Finland plans to give every citizen 800 euros a month and scrap benefits

A recent poll showed 69% of people agreed with the proposal

Will Grice
Sunday 06 December 2015 08:43 EST
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(Getty)

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Finland's government is drawing up plans to give every one of its citizens a basic income of 800 euros (£576) a month and scrap benefits altogether.

A poll commissioned by the agency planning the proposal, the Finnish Social Insurance Institute, showed 69% supported the basic income plan.

Prime Minister Juha Sipila was quote by QZ as backing the idea.

“For me, a basic income means simplifying the social security system,” he said.

The proposal would entitle each Finn to 800 euros tax free each month, which according to Bloomberg, would cost the government 52.2 billion euros a year.

The country's government will make a final decision on the plan in November 2016.

The Netherlands has already been trialling a similar proposal, with Utrecht set to undergo a pilot project next year.

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