Other beneficiaries of the impact include community organizations, NGOs and charities, health professionals and the general public. For example, Dr Jonathan Coates, GP in Newcastle upon Tyne and NIHR In-Practice Fellow, Durham University gave the following feedback on the Basic Income micropilot:
“Put simply, financial precarity is making philippines rcs data people sick, something I see increasingly in my clinical work. The detailed modelling in this report suggests that Basic Income could significantly reduce this precarity, with consequent positive effects on health and wellbeing…Basic Income represents an opportunity to follow in the footsteps of previous bold interventions to address the causes, not the symptoms, of illness.”
You can read more about this research including the methods used, the recommendations for policy and further impact this research have had in the accompanying case study.
Flexibility in job researching hours is only a small aspect of the barriers facing single parents. The psychological stress of job searching or moving on to low quality jobs (e.g., low-pay, poor working conditions, instable) may magnify the challenges of parenting. The fact that we observe compromised developmental outcomes among adolescent children, a group often less demanding in childcare hours comparing to younger children, highlights the importance in improving welfare conditionality packages to improve family wellbeing.