FLARE Hero
Seminar
English

Income Shocks and Intrahousehold Spillovers: Evidence from a Guaranteed Income Experiment

When:
THU, 23 APR 2026
From:
11:00 AM
To:
12:30 PM
Where:
Hybrid
Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research (LISER)

11, Porte des Sciences | L-4366 Esch/Alzette 

LISER 1st floor, Conference room (Jane Jacobs)
With:
Eva Vivalt
Eva Vivalt
Partners:
FNR
Secure your spot today!
This is a hybrid event. The link will be provided upon registration.
Share:

Income Shocks and Intrahousehold Spillovers: Evidence from a Guaranteed Income Experiment

When an individual's income changes, it can affect their entire household. We consider the effects of an unconditional $1,000/month transfer, sustained over three years, on intrahousehold outcomes. 1,000 individuals were randomly selected to receive the transfer, with a control group of 2,000 participants receiving $50/month over the same time period. We see no effects on household stability, but those recipients who are in a relationship trust their partners less and are less likely to report being happy in their relationship. There are substantial spillovers on the income and employment outcomes of others in the household, with participants' partners being about 4 percentage points less likely to be employed. There are education spillovers within the household and participants are also more likely to report someone in their household having to forgo healthcare, perhaps due to increased diagnoses or access to care. A small share of the transfers flows through to other people, mainly captured in the reduction in labor of others in the household. Limited changes are observed in decision-making power or division of labor within the household. Some indicators of intimate partner violence also exhibit meaningful declines, particularly for women, although reported incidence is low. In general, women and men responded similarly to the transfers, though there seemed to be larger spillovers to the educational outcomes of others in the household when a woman received the transfer, possibly driven by spillovers to children.

Speaker
Eva Vivalt
Eva Vivalt
University of Toronto
Eva Vivalt is Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Toronto and an affiliate of J-PAL. Her research is in applied microeconomics, with interests in cash transfers and improving evidence-based decision-making.

The FLARE Research Lecture Series on Contemporary Challenges is supported by the Luxembourg National Research Fund (19466989).

Upcoming events

Stay at the forefront of innovation by attending our upcoming events, where industry expertise and professional connections converge.

Explore all department events
CONFERENCE
PUBLICATION
Image by Oleksandr Pidvalnyi from Pixabay

The report was prepared at the request of the European Commission by the European Social Policy Analysis Network (ESPAN), an EU-funded research network covering 39 European countries and managed by LISER.

Economic Insecurity and PovertyPoverty, inequality and welfare
CONFERENCE
Round table

On November 27-28, the LIS Cross-National Data Center and LISER co-hosted the 2025 (LIS)²ER–SHARE Luxembourg Joint Workshop on “Pensions and Old-age Well-being: Policy Challenges in Ageing Societies”. The two-day workshop, supported by the (LIS)²ER Initiative and the SHARE Country Team, brought together interdisciplinary researchers and policy experts to examine socio-economic issues and policy challenges faced by ageing societies in Europe. The workshop featured five thematic sessions with ten academic presentations, followed by a policy roundtable on pension reforms.

Health, family and well-being