Saturday, October 05, 2019

$500 a month for free: Data shows how Stockton recipients spent the money Previous





Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs discusses a program he initiated to give $500 to 125 people during an interview in Stockton in August.. New data shows people have spent 70 percent of that money on things like food, clothing and utility bills. [RICH PEDRONCELLI/AP FILE 2019]Next


By Adam Beam, The Associated Press
Posted Oct 3, 2019 at 5:10 PMUpdated Oct 3, 2019 at 5:14 PM



The first data from a Stockton experiment where needy people get $500 a month from the government shows they spend most of it on things such as food, clothing and utility bills.

The 18-month, privately funded program — the first of its kind led by a U.S. city — started in February and involves 125 people in Stockton. It is one of the few experiments testing the concept of “universal basic income,” an old idea getting new attention from Democrats seeking the 2020 presidential nomination.

Mayor Michael Tubbs has committed to publicly releasing data throughout the experiment to win over skeptics and, he hopes, convince state lawmakers to implement the program statewide.

“In this country we have an issue with associating people who are struggling economically and people of color with vices like drug use, alcohol use, gambling,” he said. “I thought it was important to illustrate folks aren’t using this money for things like that. They are using it for literal necessities.”

The Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration, or SEED, is partially paid for by a $1 million grant from the Economic Security Project, an organization that has raised millions to fund and explore universal basic income programs. Another $2 million comes from foundations and individual donors; the city of Stockton is not financing the program, Tubbs said.

For people scraping by to pay rent or put food on the table, “something as small as $500 has been enough to allow them to breathe,” Tubbs told the Sacramento Bee. “There’s an ethos of pulling yourself up by the bootstraps. Well, we’re providing the floor to put their feet on to put the boots on, and the cash to buy the boots.”



But critics say the experiment, likely won’t provide useful information from a social science perspective given its limited size and duration.

Matt Zwolinski, director of the Center for Ethics, Economics and Public Policy at the University of San Diego, said people aren’t likely to change their behavior if they know the money they are getting will stop after a year and a half. That’s one reason why he says the experiment is “really more about storytelling than it is about social science.”

Plus, he said previous studies have shown people don’t spend the money on frivolous things.

“What you get out of a program like this is some fairly compelling anecdotes from people,” he said. “That makes for good public relations if you are trying to drum up interest in a basic income program, but it doesn’t really tell you much about what a basic income program would do if implemented on a long-term and large-scale basis.”

The researchers overseeing the program, Stacia Martin-West at the University of Tennessee and Amy Castro Baker at the University of Pennsylvania, said their goal is not to see if people change their behavior, but to measure how the money impacts their physical and mental health. That data will be released later.

People in the program get $500 each month on a debit card, which helps researchers track their spending. But 40 percent of the money has been withdrawn as cash, making it harder for researchers to know how it was used. They fill in the gaps by asking people how they spent it.

Since February, when the program began, people receiving the money have on average spent nearly 40 percent of it on food. About 24 percent went to sales and merchandise, which include places like Walmart and discount dollar stores that also sell groceries. Just over 11 percent went to utility bills, while more than 9 percent went to auto repairs and fuel.

The rest of the money went to services, medical expenses, insurance, self-care and recreation, transportation, education and donations.

“These folks are just like you and me,” Tubbs said. “There’s nothing crazy about their choices.”

Of the participants, 43 percent are working full or part time while 2 percent are unemployed and not looking for work. Another 8 percent are retired, while 20 percent are disabled and 10 percent stay home to care for children or an aging parent.

“People are using the money in ways that give them dignity or that gives their kids dignity,” Castro-Baker said, noting participants have reported spending the money to send their children to prom, pay for dental work and buy birthday cakes.

Zohna Everett, 48, and her husband are among the recipients. When the experiment started she was unemployed and her husband was making $110 a day as a truck driver. They were always late paying their bills, and the pressure caused problems with their marriage.

Once she got the money, Everett set it up to automatically pay bills for her electricity, car insurance and TV. She donates $50 a month to her church and still has some left over for an occasional date night with her husband. And the extra income was enough of a cushion to allow her husband to pay off her wedding ring with their other income.

She said she and her husband now both have jobs working at the Tesla plant in Fremont.

“I think people should have more of an open mind about what the program is about and shouldn’t be so critical about it,” she said. “A poor person knows how to budget.”

Guaranteed or universal basic income programs to address wealth inequality and complement existing safety net systems in the United States have become an increasingly popular policy idea.

California Sen. Kamala Harris and Michigan Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib have both recently proposed bills offering tax credits for working and middle class individuals and families that could be accessed as a monthly check.

Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang has focused his campaign on a universal basic income proposal he calls a “Freedom Dividend.” And cities such as Chicago and Newark, New Jersey, have begun exploring the possibility of starting similar pilot programs.

“We’re in a space where we’re just trying to figure out what is the most ethical, humane way that we can implement a new way of looking at the social contract and economic justice,” Martin-West said.

SEED will continue to release data on how participants are spending their money on an online dashboard, which will go live Saturday at www.stocktondemonstration.org/dashboard.

The Sacramento Bee contributed to this report.





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