How Effective Is (More) Money? Randomizing Unconditional Cash Transfer Amounts in the US
Dr. Ania Jaroszewicz
Postdoctoral and Institute Fellow
Quantitative Social Science
Harvard Business School
We randomized over 5,000 US individuals in poverty to one of three conditions during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic: receiving a one-time $500 unconditional cash transfer (UCT; half a month’s worth of total household income for the median participant; N = 1; 374), a $2,000 UCT (two months’ income; N = 699), or nothing (N = 3; 170). We measured the effects of the UCTs on participants’ financial well-being, psychological well-being, cognitive capacity, and physical health through surveys administered one week, six weeks, and 15 weeks after cash receipt. For 43% of our sample, we also observe bank account balances and financial transactions. While the cash transfers increased expenditures for a few weeks, we find no evidence that they had positive impacts on our pre-specied survey outcomes at any time point. We further nd no signicant differences between the $500 and $2,000 groups. These findings stand in stark contrast to the (incentivized) predictions of both experts and a nationally representative sample of laypeople, who|depending on the treatment group, outcome, and time period|estimated treatment effect sizes of +0.16 to +0.65 SDs. We test several explanations for these unexpected results, including via two survey experiments embedded in our trial. The data are most consistent with the notion that receiving some but not enough money made participants’ needs|and the gap between their resources and needs|more salient, which in turn generated feelings of distress.