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Scott Santens

Individuals who received the $1,000/mo or $500/mo payments were more likely to find a stable, full-time job than before they received the basic income. Results also showed 45% of participants secured housing, while $589,214 was saved in public service costs.

"It's freedom. It's freedom from poverty..."

businessinsider.com/denver-bas

9 comments
Estarriol, Cat owned Dragon

@scottsantens not just poverty, also freedom from one of the main causes of stress.

Joaquin :fedora:

@scottsantens I love how every single UBI study has the same results and yet it doesn't get implemented at a large scale bc "handouts". Clown society

Rae Patterson

@redscroll @scottsantens

The people who object to "handouts" to the "undeserving" seem to have pretty strong ideas about what people they have never even met "deserve."

Maggie Maybe

@redscroll @scottsantens I love how most most people don’t even complain about handouts when it’s going to wealthy people (remember PPP loans?) who just hoard the money, but they flip out if it goes to someone who’s going to spend it in their community and stimulate the local economy.

Urzl

@redscroll @scottsantens It's the same as any other study of productivity or the like - someone in power commissions a study by qualified experts, provides the data and the experimental subjects, then disavows the results as "ivory tower academia" when the inevitable result is "it's better for everybody if you treat people better".

Increased pay, vacation, benefits, welfare/safety net, it's all in the same "we all know the right thing to do but the people in power don't care" category.

Maggie Maybe

@scottsantens I can’t stop thinking about how even an extra $500 a month could help so many people qualify to rent apartments who didn’t meet the minimum income requirement before that.

I’ve been disabled since 2012, I didn’t start getting disability income in until 2016, but once I did I was still homeless because SSDI was not 3 1/2 times any of the rent. Even when I had a part-time job that made my average income out to be many dollars more than minimum wage if my total income was averaged over a 40 hr week, I still did not have a high enough income to qualify to rent.

But SSDI, plus my part-time job, plus $500 would have been 3 1/2 times rent a one bedroom apartment. This would solve so many problems.

Here in NH if you owe child support and you have no income you are still expected to pay $50 a month (unless that went up over the past 5 years), which doesn’t really do anything for someone taking care of a kid but it’s better than nothing. At least people without a job would still be able to stay current on child support if they had $500 a month, they wouldn’t risk losing licenses they need to generate income.

@scottsantens I can’t stop thinking about how even an extra $500 a month could help so many people qualify to rent apartments who didn’t meet the minimum income requirement before that.

I’ve been disabled since 2012, I didn’t start getting disability income in until 2016, but once I did I was still homeless because SSDI was not 3 1/2 times any of the rent. Even when I had a part-time job that made my average income out to be many dollars more than minimum wage if my total income was averaged over...

crazyeddie

@scottsantens If you're always struggling to find your next meal you've NO time to job hunt and interview and crap. If you are already homeless I have no idea what you do--I've never been in that situation. Not for real anyway. I've been without address before though and that's already a huge pita.

Danny Boling ☮️

@scottsantens

Has there ever been a UBI experiment that DIDN'T end with a similar result? If there is, I've never heard about it.

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