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Rebecca Hasdell
Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the Stanford Basic Income Lab
insights
The potential trade-offs between UBI and other programs are largely unaddressed.
The contexts where interventions are introduced are relevant for anticipating how interventions may work across settings and are also important for determining what types of programs are considered as unconditional and universal.
Findings are generally positive that UBI-type programs alleviate poverty and improve health and education outcomes and that the effects on labor market participation are minimal.
There is an obvious research evidence gap in the evaluation of an experimental, sustained UBI, which is considered the ‘gold standard’ for evidence.
sources
What We Know About Universal Basic Income: A Cross-Synthesis of Reviews
reports
Basic Income
tags
Future Research
Implementation
Stability
Education
Health
Poverty
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