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Referenced Laws
section 6103
42 U.S.C. 1437f(c)
Section 1
1. Short title This Act may be cited as the Guaranteed Income Pilot Program Act of 2025.
Section 2
2. Findings Congress finds the following: Too many Americans cannot achieve financial stability due to income volatility, the rising cost of living, wage stagnation, and a lack of affordable housing. Real wages have failed to keep pace with inflation, meaning the purchasing power of American households has not changed in decades. Income volatility, defined as an annual income fluctuation of 25 percent or more, impacts millions of American households. Two-thirds of Americans are worried they wouldn’t be able to cover their living expenses for just 1 month if they lose their primary source of income, while 57 percent of American adults are currently unable to cover a $1,000 emergency expense. That percentage is higher for millennials at 79 percent, and Generation Z at 85 percent, unable to cover an emergency expense. Full-time minimum wage earners cannot afford an average 2-bedroom apartment anywhere in the United States. The changing nature of the economy, including the rise of the gig economy, unemployment risks posed by automation, and the fluctuating nature of waged labor, will result in increased income volatility and prohibit upward economic mobility. During the height of COVID–19, the Federal Government provided stimulus checks to the American people in response to the economic hardship of the pandemic. The Census Bureau complied an analysis that showed that material hardship in United States households fell sharply following the passage of the COVID–19 relief bill in late December 2020, and the American Rescue Plan in March 2021. From December 2020 to April 2021, food insufficiently fell by over 40 percent, financial instability fell by 45 percent, and reported adverse mental health symptoms fell by 20 percent.
Section 3
3. Guaranteed income pilot program The Secretary, in consultation with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, shall establish and implement a 3-year pilot program (hereinafter referred to as the program) to provide a guaranteed monthly income to certain eligible individuals in accordance with this section. The Secretary, in consultation with the Commissioner and the external partner selected pursuant to subsection (d), shall develop selection criteria that the Secretary will use to select 20,000 total eligible individuals for participation in the program. Of the eligible individuals participating in the program, 10,000 shall receive a cash payment each month equal to the fair market rent for a 2-bedroom home in the ZIP Code in which the eligible individual resides, or a substantially similar amount as determined by the Secretary, in consultation with the Commissioner and the external partner. Each participating eligible individual shall receive the cash payment on the 15th day of each month. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue shall be responsible for— providing the Secretary access to tax records to administer and study the program under this section; and updating the Secretary and the external partner on changes to the taxable income of a participating eligible individual. The Secretary shall select an external partner to provide assistance with the design, administration, and evaluation of the program. An organization selected to be the external partner shall have demonstrated experience in— mixed-methods experimental design; and implementing cash-transfer programs. The external partner, and any employee of the external partner, shall be treated as a Federal employee for purposes of section 6103 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. The external partner shall collect data from participating eligible individuals as necessary to complete the study and reports required under section 4, and to conduct any additional research as the Secretary determines necessary. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any payment made to participating eligible individuals under this section shall not be taken into account as income, and shall not be taken into account as resources for a period of 12 months from receipt, for purposes of determining the eligibility of such eligible individual (or any other individual) for benefits or assistance (or the amount or extent of benefits or assistance) under any Federal program or any State or local program financed in whole or in part with Federal funds.
Section 4
4. Study and report The Secretary, in collaboration with the Commissioner and the external partner, shall conduct a study on outcomes of the program. Not later than 24 months after participating eligible individuals have been begun participating in the program, the Secretary, in consultation with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the external partner, shall provide an interim report on the program under section 3 to the Congress. Not later than 12 months after the conclusion of the program under section 3, the Secretary, in consultation with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the external partner, shall provide a final report on the program to the Congress, including— an analysis of— the effect of the monthly income subsidy provided in section 3 on— micro-economic outcomes of participating eligible individuals; the health of participating eligible individuals; and the social costs of income volatility, including connections with income fluctuation and health, housing, education, employment, childcare, and other outcomes as determined appropriate by the Secretary; and the feasibility of expanding the program under section 3 to include a larger number of participants; and the results of interviews and focus groups conducted with consenting participants of the program.
Section 5
5. Definitions In this Act: The term Commissioner means the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service. The term eligible individual means an individual taxpayer between the ages of 18–65. The term external partner means a non-partisan research agency or a non-profit academic institution with expertise in social science experimentation. The term fair market rent means the applicable fair market rent established under section 8(c) of the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f(c)). The term Secretary means the Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Section 6
6. Authorization of appropriations There is authorized to be appropriated to carry out this Act $495,000,000 for each of the fiscal years 2026 through 2030.