. >> for aila jeskanen from tampere, the basic income means above all security.ormer hotel employee hasn't found a permanent job for a long time, despite applying for 150 in the past year. she comes to the city library several times a week to look for work online, but it is hopeless, she says. she's too old, not qualified enough. >> i probably worked less than a month last year. i did odd jobs here and there. i helped someone move house yesterday for eight hours. just these typical temporary jobs. >> aila makes doll house furniture, which she wants to sell. these little doors are in especially high demand right now. she doesn't know what she'll do when the basic income stops. >> i'm getting older. i'm nearly 56. it really makes me worry. >> juha is making the most of it while it lasts. since he started receiving the basic income, his creativity has known no bounds. he and a few friends want to pool together to buy this empty cultural center and invite artists to move in here and work. the project's called art bnb. he desperately wants to get it going, but the gro