Phelia
in a submarine
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2008
- Posts
- 7,432
I think a better approach may be providing basic provisions. A housing allowance paid directly to the provider or bank/mortgage holder. Food and drink on an EBT/SNAP card type basis - usable only for groceries, no alcohol or tobacco. Same with medical and maybe clothing. In bigger urban areas with decent transit systems, a monthly transportation credit.
Maybe a smaller monthly cash/debit allowance to take care of the wants and desires.
I'm not sure a lump sum distribution would be the best. Too many don't know which bills need to be paid first.
The whole point is that these rules are based on YOUR assumptions and value judgment projections, not evidence. Study and study has shown that if you give people money, no strings attached, they will spend it responsibly. As soon as you start to add rules, you are a) increasing cost of administration and overhead and b) undermining your own objectives - these programs work better without them.
Seriously people. READ THE BOOK.