Targeted prevention helps stop homelessness before it starts
Date:
July 13, 2023
Source:
University of Notre Dame
Summary:
Homelessness has become an increasingly worrisome crisis in our
nation over the past several years, but a new study shows that
efforts to prevent homelessness work. Researchers found that
individuals and families offered emergency financial assistance
were 81 percent less likely to become homeless within six months
and 73 percent less likely within 12 months. Furthermore, their
estimates suggest that the benefits to homelessness prevention
exceed the costs as communities get $2.47 back in benefits per
net dollar spent on emergency financial assistance.
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FULL STORY ========================================================================== Homelessness has become an increasingly worrisome crisis in our nation
over the past several years, but a new study from the University of
Notre Dame shows that efforts to prevent homelessness work.
The issue has reached such proportions in California, for example, that
mayors of several major cities have declared a state of emergency on homelessness. In response, leaders in California have invested billions
in homelessness programs, including some that target prevention.
Prevention efforts, however, have led to questions -- even from
organizations committed to addressing homelessness -- as to whether such programs are effective, due to the difficulty of targeting assistance to
those with the greatest risk of becoming homeless. To test the impact
of providing financial assistance to those susceptible to losing their
housing, researchers at Notre Dame conducted a randomized controlled
trial to evaluate the effect of emergency financial assistance (EFA) on families receiving support through the Santa Clara County Homelessness Prevention System, which is co-led by Destination: Home, a nonprofit organization dedicated to ending homelessness in Silicon Valley.
David Phillips, a research professor in the Wilson Sheehan Lab for
Economic Opportunities (LEO) within Notre Dame's economics department,
and James Sullivan, a professor of economics and co-founder of LEO,
found that people offered EFA were 81 percent less likely to become
homeless within six months of enrollment and 73 percent less likely
within 12 months, as reported in their study recently published by The
Review of Economics and Statistics.
The study evaluated individuals and families at imminent risk of
being evicted or becoming homeless who were allocated EFA between July
2019 and December 2020, with the average household receiving nearly
$2,000. Recipients were chosen from among a larger group of people
eligible for the program based on their vulnerability to homelessness
and on a randomized system set up by LEO and Destination: Home. This
temporary financial assistance helped pay rent, utilities or other housing-related expenses on their behalf.
A common approach to fighting homelessness is to provide shelter to those
who are already homeless, but the researchers argued that once a family
or individual becomes homeless, they face even more difficulties -- such
as finding permanent housing, basic necessities and health care. They are
also more likely to become involved in the criminal justice system and experience frequent hospital visits. LEO's study found that a preventive approach focusing directly on helping those who are on the brink of homelessness can also be effective.
"Our estimates suggest that the benefits to homelessness prevention
exceed the costs," the researchers said. They estimated that communities
get $2.47 back in benefits per net dollar spent on emergency financial assistance.
"Policymakers at all levels are struggling to make really hard decisions
about how to allocate scarce resources to address this pervasive problem," Sullivan said. "But this study shows that you can actually target the intervention to those at risk, which moves the needle on homelessness
enough to justify making the investment." Phillips added that while homelessness prevention programs are not a panacea to other problems often associated with the most visible forms of homelessness - - such as health
and substance abuse issues -- it is still an effective way to help people.
"Every person who ends up homeless is a little different from the next,
and the reasons they're there are different, but it's the kind of help
they need at the moment they need it, before everything falls apart,"
Phillips said.
One of LEO's main tenets is to take a rigorous approach to fighting
poverty by helping service providers apply scientific evaluation methods
to better understand and share effective poverty interventions. Said
Sullivan, "A big part of LEO's mission is to create evidence that helps
improve the lives of those most vulnerable. Because we have far greater
needs than we have resources to address them, we have a real incentive to allocate those resources to the programs that are most effective. This
evidence helps shape the decisions of those on the front lines fighting homelessness and poverty." Jennifer Loving, chief executive officer of Destination: Home, said the LEO study has implications both locally and nationally. "This could inspire other jurisdictions to stand up their
own homelessness prevention systems, using this research as a model or
starting point for how to do that on their own -- as well as justification
to policymakers for funding," Loving said.
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========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. David C. Phillips, James X. Sullivan. Do Homelessness Prevention
Programs
Prevent Homelessness? Evidence from a Randomized Controlled
Trial. Review of Economics and Statistics, 2023; 1 DOI:
10.1162/rest_a_01344 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230713141223.htm
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