As Ireland’s $1,500-a-month basic income pilot program for creatives nears its end in February, officials have to answer a simple question: Is it worth it?

With four months to go, they say the answer is yes.

Earlier this month, Ireland’s government announced its 2026 budget, which includes “a successor to the pilot Basic Income Scheme for the Arts to begin next year” among its expenditures.

Ireland is just one of many places experimenting with guaranteed basic income programs, which provide recurring, unrestricted payments to people in a certain demographic. These programs differ from a universal basic income, which would provide payments for an entire population.

  • Sparking@lemmy.zip
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    12 hours ago

    As laudable as a program as this is, it stings a bit being in Ireland, which has essentially become a tax haven for multinational corporations. It is nice to support the arts, but it shouldn’t come off the backs of shadily robbing world governments of billions in tax revenues. The cultural impacts of this have become extremely toxic, and hostile to the arts overall internationally.

    • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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      4 hours ago

      Ireland, which has essentially become a tax haven for multinational corporations

      And crappy singers from mid-tier boomer bands.

    • BilSabab@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Tax haven country gives artists some money to get by. The worst thing about it is the hypocrisy.

    • devedeset@lemmy.zip
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      11 hours ago

      It also seems like a strange job program. I’m close with someone who works for a US company that incorporated in Ireland. The company is required to have a number of Irish employees who live in the country. Those employees don’t do anything.

      • nyctre@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        You do realize that it’s mainly the poor people who are suffering when the rich don’t get taxed, right? It’s the governments getting robbed, yes, but that wasn’t the main takeaway from that comment.

        • Reginald_T_Biter@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          Everyone in here crying about artist getting money and trying to make me think it’s a bad thing is summarily dismissed from my mind.

          • BilSabab@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            i think the problem is that it is Ireland that does that because Ireland is infamously a big tech tax haven so it makes any policy they make automatically bad because capitalism

            • Reginald_T_Biter@lemmy.world
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              2 hours ago

              The problem is people are crabs in a bucket. Same shit when minimum wages go up, or on a lower community level, when people’s friends do well they get shitty too. People are the worst.