In Pandemic Downturn, Canada’s Drive For Guaranteed Basic Income Picks Up Speed

Chairs are stacked outside a restaurant in Montreal on Sept. 29 as the Quebec government orders restaurants, bars and casinos to close for 28 days effective midnight Sept. 30, after a recent spike in new daily coronavirus cases.

Christinne Muschi / Reuters

Among the enormous burdens of fending off the coronavirus pandemic, many countries closed whole sectors of the economy, while boosting emergency spending to keep citizens afloat. Now in Canada, momentum is building for another extraordinary measure: a basic income guarantee.

Simply put, it’s when residents receive cash from the government, without conditions, to ensure they meet their basic needs.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has delivered pandemic emergency benefits to millions of unemployed workers since late March and students since May, that together totaled more than $60 billion.