Ireland’s basic income scheme for artists points at how governments could help sectors in crisis
- Written by Andrew White, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Culture, Media & Creative Industries, King's College London
The Irish government has announced that a pilot scheme providing artists and creatives with a weekly stipend of €325 (£283) will be made permanent. The scheme, which was first introduced in 2022, was launched in an attempt to mitigate the growing financial instability many in the creative industries face.
The basic income for the arts[1] (BIA) initial pilot ran from 2022 to 2025 and helped 2,000 artists. The results of an independent study[2] found that it had a noticeable positive impact on the lives of those who received it.
There have been many basic income[3] schemes around the world in the 21st century, but virtually all of them have been discontinued upon the ending of their pilot phase. So as all societies face the possible threats to jobs and livelihoods by AI, many policymakers and researchers will be watching the progress of the Irish government’s permanent basic income scheme.
One scheme that survived past the pilot stage is the Alaska permanent fund[4], which has paid an annual dividend to every Alaskan resident since 1982. But unlike the Irish scheme, the payments fluctuate annually and usually don’t reach the level of income which is needed to support a person’s basic needs – known as a subsistence payment.
So many basic income schemes have failed because right across the political spectrum, people are usually uneasy about how they might undermine the value of working for a living[5]. The perceived cost of basic income schemes is also a barrier to their extension. Support for a basic income in Finland, which ran a pilot in 2017 to 2018, significantly dropped when respondents were informed of the increases in taxation[6] needed to fund it.
Read more: How Greek musicians weathered an economic crisis could help UK performers handle COVID fall-out[7]
References
- ^ The basic income for the arts (journalofmusic.com)
- ^ an independent study (www.gov.ie)
- ^ basic income (theconversation.com)
- ^ Alaska permanent fund (pfd.alaska.gov)
- ^ working for a living (www.researchgate.net)
- ^ increases in taxation (julkaisut.valtioneuvosto.fi)
- ^ How Greek musicians weathered an economic crisis could help UK performers handle COVID fall-out (theconversation.com)
- ^ strong support from the general public (www.gov.ie)
- ^ furlough programmes (www.citizensinformation.ie)
- ^ other basic income schemes have found (julkaisut.valtioneuvosto.fi)
- ^ four more hours a week (assets.gov.ie)
- ^ received €1.39 in return (www.gov.ie)
- ^ Computer science culture often means anybody’s data is fair game to feed the AI algorithm – but artists are fighting back (theconversation.com)
- ^ 2024 Irish election (www.rte.ie)
- ^ number of recipients (www.rte.ie)
- ^ reluctant to reveal their good fortune (www.irishtimes.com)
- ^ privileging of artists (www.tandfonline.com)
- ^ €41 billion (www.esri.ie)
- ^ UK's creative industries bring in more revenue than cars, oil and gas – so why is arts education facing cuts? (theconversation.com)
- ^ €25 million (basicincome.org)







