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by enragedcacti
1011 days ago
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> The fact that the non-cash recipients "caught up" suggests the exact opposite, seems a bit problematic. The control recipients still received benefits designed to help the homeless so it isn't surprising that they also improved. What is exciting is that the cash: 1) gave much more immediate results, therefore reducing suffering 2) generated net savings via reduced social service use So we have a method that is better and cheaper for a screen-able subset of the homeless population, it might not be a "game changer" but its an improvement over the status quo worth exploring further. |
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And again, the study ignores 85% of the homeless population, you simply cannot extrapolate these results from the highly-responsible/functional group to the wider population.
Finally, the "net societal gain" of $777 was only about 10% of the distributed cash, but ignores the cost of administering such a program and the costs of, and compensation to, the coaches and workshops (the $777 was simply based on "reduced shelter use"). Fully loaded, those costs would almost certainly exceed the modest reported savings.