
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


You’d probably guess that a major factor contributing to homelessness is a lack of money. Yet, very few programs provide unconditional and lump sum cash to unhoused individuals as a solution. There are a number of barriers that have impeded the broad implementation of this type of assistance, which include the lack of policymaker support and public mistrust in homeless people’s ability to manage money. Our guest this week found that direct cash transfers actually result in net societal savings over time. Jiaying Zhao is an associate professor, Canada research chair and a Sauder distinguished scholar at the University of British Columbia. She co-authored “Unconditional cash transfers reduce homelessness,” which was published recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal. Zhao, who has personally experienced housing insecurity in the past, joins WITHpod to discuss the cognitive taxes of poverty, rethinking the homogenous narrative about who homeless people are, the most surprising findings from the study, intended policy changes and more.
**WITHpod Live Tour Special Announcement**
Join us on the road. Buy your tickets now at msnbc.com/withpodtour.
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
By Chris Hayes, MSNBC4.6
89968,996 ratings
You’d probably guess that a major factor contributing to homelessness is a lack of money. Yet, very few programs provide unconditional and lump sum cash to unhoused individuals as a solution. There are a number of barriers that have impeded the broad implementation of this type of assistance, which include the lack of policymaker support and public mistrust in homeless people’s ability to manage money. Our guest this week found that direct cash transfers actually result in net societal savings over time. Jiaying Zhao is an associate professor, Canada research chair and a Sauder distinguished scholar at the University of British Columbia. She co-authored “Unconditional cash transfers reduce homelessness,” which was published recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal. Zhao, who has personally experienced housing insecurity in the past, joins WITHpod to discuss the cognitive taxes of poverty, rethinking the homogenous narrative about who homeless people are, the most surprising findings from the study, intended policy changes and more.
**WITHpod Live Tour Special Announcement**
Join us on the road. Buy your tickets now at msnbc.com/withpodtour.
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

36,949 Listeners

8,696 Listeners

87,483 Listeners

7,284 Listeners

5,821 Listeners

3,882 Listeners

4,424 Listeners

6,952 Listeners

595 Listeners

12,273 Listeners

15,609 Listeners

5,772 Listeners

833 Listeners

3,347 Listeners

10,452 Listeners

952 Listeners

4,351 Listeners

1,436 Listeners

2,154 Listeners

7,064 Listeners

6,292 Listeners

1,361 Listeners

1,188 Listeners

50 Listeners

171 Listeners

48 Listeners

4,539 Listeners