The idea of the UBI is at least
150 years old. Its two earliest known formulations were inspired by
Charles Fourier, the prolific French utopian socialist. In 1848, while
Karl Marx was finishing off the Communist Manifesto around the corner,
the Brussels-based Fourierist author Joseph Charlier published Solution
of the Social Problem, in which he argued for a "territorial
dividend" owed to each citizen by virtue of our equal ownership
of the nation’s territory. The following year, John Stuart Mill
published a new edition of his Principles of Political Economy,
which contains a sympathetic presentation of Fourierism ("the most
skillfully combined, and with the greatest foresight of objections,
of all the forms of Socialism") rephrased so as to yield an unambiguous
UBI proposal: "In the distribution, a certain minimum is first
assigned for the subsistence of every member of the community, whether
capable or not of labour. The remainder of the produce is shared in
certain proportions, to be determined beforehand, among the three elements,
Labour, Capital, and Talent."