By Noah Rothman
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
The new left-wing publication The Argument arrived
on the intellectual scene this week to much fanfare. Armed with a solid masthead, a contributors
list that includes more than a few household names (in this business, at
least), and funded by deep pockets, the magazine promises readers an abundance of efforts to refine the oxymoronic concept of supply-side progressivism.
The magazine is up and running, and it is already
challenging conventional left-wing wisdom, as advertised. In one illuminating
dispatch, writer Kelsey Piper takes on one irritatingly durable shibboleth
to which progressives so often genuflect: the notion that if you just “give
people money,” their conditions, and society’s, will improve. Her approach,
however, is not adversarial. She is just as shocked as you are, dear reader, to
discover that “income transfers” do not improve individual outcomes and
personal satisfaction. Indeed, they may make things worse.
“Many of the studies are still ongoing, but, at this
point, the results aren’t ‘uncertain.’ They’re pretty consistent and very
weird,” Piper marveled.
Multiple large, high-quality
randomized studies are finding that guaranteed income transfers do not appear
to produce sustained improvements in mental health, stress levels, physical
health, child development outcomes or employment. Treated participants do work
a little less, but shockingly, this doesn’t correspond with either lower stress
levels or higher overall reported life satisfaction.
Homeless people, new mothers and
low-income Americans all over the country received thousands of dollars. And
it’s practically invisible in the data. On so many important metrics, these
people are statistically indistinguishable from those who did not receive this
aid.
The author “cannot stress how shocking” she finds these
results, but it’s not clear why. Piper subsequently expands on the research
that contributed to her bewilderment, and it seems rather intuitive that those
who received income supplements both worked less but reported no personal
psychological or material benefit (for either themselves or their families) as
a result. Just giving people money did not and “will not” make its recipients
“measurably healthier or happier, or get them better jobs, or improve their
children’s intellectual development.” Why would anyone feel more “economically
secure” if their security is predicated on the perpetual disbursement of
taxpayer dollars from mercurial politicians?
Piper wasn’t just channeling the sentiments of her
readers but also the authors of the studies she cited, who expressed how
“surprised” they were by their findings. Piper and her lay readership may just
be encountering this subject matter, but the scholars with whom she spoke have
no excuse. We’ve been talking about a “universal basic income” as one of many
wild-eyed progressive desiderata for a decade now. It’s not as if we don’t have
access to the extensive research into this idea. Progressives might have
averted their eyes from the results of those experiments, but the right did
not.
In May 2019, I summarized some of the findings produced by efforts to
provide certain communities or geographic entities with something that looks
like “UBI.” The results all pointed in the same direction:
Finland recently experimented
with a program that provided 2,000 unemployed people with a basic income and no
reporting requirements for two years. While the recipients experienced more
happiness and less stress than the control group, the administrators found to
their distress that the program members were not encouraged by their guaranteed
income to go out and find a job. They simply lived off the pilot program’s per
diem. What’s more, the Finnish government concluded that the program, applied
to all its 5.5 million people, would require across-the-board income-tax hikes
of nearly 30 percent. The nation discontinued the experiment. In July 2017,
Ontario also experimented with a UBI and encountered many of the same problems
as Finland.
This was all predictable, due to
prior experience with the idea in…the United States. The “negative income tax,”
as it was called, was essentially a minimum income that phased out as earnings
increased. In 1968, the White House Office of Economic Opportunity selected a
series of communities in New Jersey to test the NIT. The number of hours worked
by the program’s beneficiaries declined, and those who lost a job while on this
form of assistance took longer to find new work than did those without it.
What’s more, as the Stanford
Research Institute (SRI) found, the experiment did not increase nuclear family
cohesion, as theorists expected. Instead, it exacerbated the conditions that
were leading families to come apart. “The SRI researchers,” the study read,
“hypothesized that the availability of the income guarantee to some families
reduced the pressure on the breadwinner to remain with the family, while the
benefit-reduction rate also reduced the value to the family of keeping a wage
earner in the unit.”
And this takes no stock of the cost of this proposal. At
the end of the last decade, hedge fund manager Ray Dalio pegged the cost of
providing every American with $12,000 per year — the poverty threshold at the
time — at roughly $3.8 trillion per year (in a year in which total federal
outlays, including defense spending and entitlements, amounted to $4.4
trillion). And that was before Covid, the stimulus and American Recovery Act,
and the subsequent inflation that resulted in higher borrowing costs for everyone,
including Uncle Sam.
None of this is to say that Piper’s work is redundant or
that her publication is not valuable. The proliferation of serious intellectual
ventures of any ideological stripe is an absolute good. It means more writers
working, more cases being made, more conflict over untested assumptions,
sharper debates informed by data and evidence, and arguments proffered by
people who are jealous stewards of an institution’s reputation, not merely
their own. We need more of all that.
And Piper deserves credit for dropping the credulity that
opened her piece when she confronts the deceptive arguments promulgated by
UBI’s advocates via press release. Maybe she thought she had to gingerly broach
the possibility that the progressive left has been wrong all these years for
the benefit of an audience that responds to observations like those as a
13th-century inquisitor would to apostasy. The punches she pulled are, however,
revealing.
No one should have needed The Argument to tell
them that giving people money was neither viable as public policy nor effective
as a social intervention. But those who do will have this magazine to inform
them of the elementary truths and the evidence in support of them that
conservative opinion journals have been writing about for decades.
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