Published on Wednesday, June 02, 2021 by Common Dreams
“It turns out, relieving a lot of everyday hardship can be done very simply and directly by giving poor people money and support. Who knew?”
Volunteers fill boxes of food at a food distribution event in Kissimmee, Florida on December 10, 2020. (Photo: Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
A new study by researchers at the University of Michigan found that the direct payments Congress approved last December and this past March—totaling $2,000 per eligible individual—helped significantly reduce food shortages in households with children, lessen financial instability, and alleviate symptoms of anxiety and depression.
The results of the analysis (pdf), which draws upon household surveys conducted in recent months by the U.S. Census Bureau, were touted as further evidence that direct cash transfers are a highly effective way to combat material and emotional hardship—an argument progressives have been vocally pushing since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.
“Guaranteed living wages, healthcare, material stability, and safety—
these are key conditions for mental and general public health.”
—Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
“Free access to mental healthcare is critical, but therapy isn’t a solution for worker exploitation and subhuman conditions,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said Wednesday in response to the new study. “You need to get paid. Guaranteed living wages, healthcare, material stability, and safety—these are key conditions for mental and general public health.”
Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), a proponent of recurring relief payments, added that the effectiveness of the survival checks demonstrates “what advocates have been saying and demanding.”
Authored by University of Michigan professors Luke Shaefer and Patrick Cooney, the study finds that reported hardship declined “sharply—across multiple domains—immediately following both the Covid-19 relief bill passed in late December 2020 and [American Rescue Plan] passed in early March 2021,” and that the benefits were felt most strongly among low-income households.
“It turns out, relieving a lot of everyday hardship can be done very simply and directly by giving poor people money and support. Who knew?” Jacobin staff writer Luke Savage tweeted sarcastically.
The December relief bill, signed into law by former President Donald Trump, delivered $600 direct payments to eligible individuals and Biden’s American Rescue Plan (ARP) approved $1,400 per qualifying individual. The December package passed with bipartisan support while the ARP, which Biden signed in March, did not receive a single Republican vote.
Thanks to the two relief measures, the study found, reported food insecurity dropped by 42% and financial instability fell by 45%. The analysis also showed that the share of individuals reporting “frequent symptoms of depression and anxiety” declined by 20%.
Folks, just give people money. https://t.co/z4l7FTd7p0
— Matt Duss (@mattduss) June 2, 2021
Shaefer and Cooney argued that the two rounds of direct payments—as well as the enhanced unemployment benefits approved under both legislative packages—were so effective in relieving economic pain because the government eschewed aggressive income-based means testing in favor of aid “as broad-based as any federal income transfer support program ever implemented.”
“The vast majority of American households received [Economic Impact Payment] checks, and every recipient of unemployment insurance received the same federal supplement,” the pair wrote. “Perhaps because of the broad nature of the relief, we see hardship decline for middle-income as well as low-income households. We also see that the federal response was very popular among Americans.”
“We believe the response was effective because it relied primarily on a flexible resource in cash transfers,” Shaefer and Cooney added, noting that millions of households spent the money on food, housing, and other basic expenses. “Rather than provide targeted and in-kind aid, the government provided cash directly to American households, allowing them to use it to meet their immediate needs as they saw fit.”
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