Tomas Vargas Jr. used to work part time as a youth facilitator for convicted juveniles in Stockton, California. He also repaired cars and did other odd jobs. “I was sitting there, just trying to make the checks work,” he says. That was before he was randomly selected to be part of a guaranteed income pilot program: to receive a sum of $500 per month for two years, no questions asked.
That pilot laid the groundwork for more mayors around the country to follow suit, many of whom are part of Mayors for a Guaranteed Income, a coalition of 55 mayors, and counting, aiming to ease people’s financial burdens with supplemental income. The founder of the coalition, and that Stockton pilot, former Mayor Michael Tubbs, joined us on the World Changing Ideas podcast to discuss MGI, which won a 2021 World Changing Ideas Award in the Politics and Policy category.
Fundamentally, guaranteed income is an anti-poverty measure. “It comes from a Kingian tradition in terms of how do we eliminate poverty in our country,” Tubbs says, referring to Martin Luther King Jr., who decades ago proposed guaranteed income as a way to alleviate poverty. Tubbs also notes how it’s an idea that historically has been embraced by unlikely allies like economist Milton Friedman and former President Richard Nixon. (Today, though, Tubbs is still trying to get the first Republican mayor on board.)
Unlike universal basic income, which qualifies everyone, guaranteed income prioritizes those who’ve been stuck in “economic purgatory” for generations: those who struggle to survive on their income, yet are often are making “too much” to qualify for welfare. In this model, instead of meager government benefits, poorer residents receive cash, no strings attached—to be spent in the way they see fit for their families. “The idea is to turn notions of deservingness on [their] head,” Tubbs says. “They don’t necessarily need us to tell them exactly how to spend every single cent.”
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