Instead of following the uber-capitalism of Latvia and Lithuania, Estonia should look to Finland, which from next year will experiment with giving some of its citizens a guaranteed basic income.
Instead of following the uber-capitalism of Latvia and Lithuania, Estonia should look to Finland, which from next year will experiment with giving some of its citizens a guaranteed basic income.
With Estonian political parties seemingly wedded to the free-market, neoliberal policies that have defined the country since independence, is there any chance of an alternative?
With Estonian political parties seemingly wedded to the free-market, neoliberal policies that have defined the country since independence, is there any chance of an alternative?