Money

To eradicate poverty, we need policy actions that address the root of financial hardship. A basic income does just that.

A basic income can be a strong investment in mental health

Over half of Canadians feel by the cost-of-living crisis, according to a recent poll. As life becomes more unaffordable for more people, we need governments to create policies that will improve public health and well-being.

One such policy is a : an unconditional cash transfer from government to ensure people can meet their basic needs and live with dignity.

A basic income guarantee differs from the universal basic income (UBI) model often discussed. While a UBI is set at the same amount and made available to everyone, a basic income guarantee is targeted to those need it, through a benefit that rises as income declines.

looks into one basic income program, the Ontario Basic Income Pilot that was launched in 2017 but abruptly ended the following year. We conducted a study to understand how Ontario鈥檚 pilot impacted the lives of those who participated in it.

We interviewed 46 participants across four cities included in the pilot. We asked about their experiences before the pilot, during their participation in it and after its abrupt end.

Ontario鈥檚 basic income pilot

In 2017, the Ontario government, under then-premier Kathleen Wynne, launched the to test the efficacy of an unconditional cash transfer. , and the pilot was slated to run in Hamilton, Lindsay, Brantford and Thunder Bay over a three-year period.

Set at 75 per cent of the (one of Statistics Canada鈥檚 three poverty lines), the pilot provided $1,415 monthly for single people and an additional $500 for people with disabilities (up to $1,915 monthly), with every dollar earned subject to a 50 per cent claw-back.

Despite a , incoming premier Doug Ford abandoned it in 2018. Participants weren鈥檛 forewarned but learned of its cancellation like everyone else 鈥 on the news or through social media.

The government claimed the pilot did not help people become 鈥.鈥 The lack of evidence to justify this claim, along with , suggests the pilot鈥檚 premature cancellation was an ideological decision.

Impact on participants鈥 mental health

, written by the late-Senator Hugh Segal, affirmed that 鈥渘o individual will be made worse off during or after the pilot, as a result of participation in the pilot.鈥 Our study, however, indicates that the mental health of many participants was demonstrably worsened in the pilot鈥檚 demise.

With a three-year promise of stable income, participants told us of being able to plan better for their futures. Some pursued higher education, others found better paying and more stable jobs or started their own businesses. Some moved into better housing, leaving behind mold-infested or poorly maintained dwellings, only to plead with their landlords to break their new leases after the pilot was cancelled.

We found that increased income security improved participants鈥 mental health, reduced their stress and allowed them to improve diets with healthier food options. Some spoke of no longer having to rely on food charity as they could go the grocery store like everyone else.

Interviewees described what life is like in poverty: not being able to go out for a cup of coffee with friends or buy gifts for your children on their birthdays, not being able to entertain family over the holidays or go out and socialize.

Some had not disclosed their financial situation to family or friends because their sense of shame was so profound. Yet, feeling unable to discuss their situation essentially cut them off from valuable sources of social support.

Structural violence

Ontario鈥檚 premature cancellation of the pilot was an act of 鈥 a policy decision that caused needless and avoidable harm and suffering. Anthropologist explains that structural violence refers to 鈥渢he invisible social machinery of inequality that reproduces social relations of exclusion and marginalization.鈥

Structural violence upholds the poverty, racism, sexism and other social inequities that lead to higher rates of illness, suffering and premature death. It is often invisible and can result from policy omissions, but the termination of the pilot was a public, deliberate decision.

By throwing participants鈥 lives and carefully laid plans into chaos, and thrusting them back into poverty, our research shows the Ontario government鈥檚 policy decision caused significant harm.

Our research is consistent with a larger body of evidence demonstrating that unconditional cash transfer programs, like basic income, . As young people are , these programs provide the necessary protection to mitigate the lifelong damaging impacts of childhood poverty.

We also know that welfare systems are . These haven鈥檛 been subject to the rigorous experimentation that a basic income has, yet they persist, despite the voluminous research documenting their harms.

The cost of mental illness in Canada already amounts to (in direct health-care costs and lost productivity) but without intervention could increase to $291 billion by 2041.

how poor mental health is a direct consequence of poverty. Money not only helps meet people鈥檚 material needs but also alleviates their worries. Reducing poverty translates into significant savings for the economy and the public purse. .

Eradicating poverty

Poverty is not caused by personal failings. It is the social environment people live in that has the 成人大片 impact on life trajectories.

To eradicate poverty, we need policies that address the root of financial hardship. A basic income does just that. that show a basic income, using parameters similar to the Ontario pilot鈥檚, could cut poverty by up to 40 per cent. This is an affordable option with the potential for broad positive effects.

We already have the for families and the for older adults that provide forms of a basic income guarantee, although these benefits must be enlarged to be truly adequate. What we need now is a program that provides a robust income floor beneath which no one can fall.

As citizens, we have few ways to hold leaders accountable for acts of structural violence, like cancelling the pilot. is ongoing; it remains to be seen whether this will prove successful.

Whatever their ideological leanings, politicians have a duty to advance policies that bolster public health and well-being. Improving mental health through a basic income is a wise investment, one that will prevent the needless suffering of generations to come.

, Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair (Tier 2) in Advancing the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and , Professor of Health Studies,

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .