In the fall of 2016 C.E., the Canadian province of Ontario announced it would launch one of the most closely watched economic experiments in North America: a basic income pilot program designed to test whether guaranteed payments could reduce poverty and improve the lives of low-income residents.
Key details
- Basic income pilot: Ontario’s government announced plans to test a guaranteed income program targeting low-income individuals and families, with monthly payments intended to replace or supplement existing social assistance.
- Poverty threshold payments: Individual participants could receive up to approximately $1,320 (Canadian dollars) per month — around 75 percent of the poverty line — with couples eligible for higher combined amounts, minus 50 cents for every dollar earned through work.
- Guaranteed minimum income: The pilot was designed to study whether a structured income floor could improve physical and mental health, housing stability, and employment outcomes for people living below the poverty line.
Why Ontario moved on basic income
Canada has a long history with the concept of guaranteed income. In the 1970s C.E., a federally funded experiment in Manitoba called Mincome quietly demonstrated that a basic income floor could reduce hospitalizations and keep teenagers in school longer — findings that sat largely unread in government archives for decades before a researcher rediscovered them.
Ontario’s 2016 C.E. announcement drew on that legacy. The province commissioned former senator Hugh Segal to write a discussion paper outlining the pilot’s design. Segal, a Progressive Conservative, argued across party lines that the existing patchwork of welfare programs was both ineffective and degrading — and that a simpler, more dignified income floor could do more good at comparable cost.
The timing also reflected a broader anxiety about the future of work. Automation, contract labor, and the gig economy were eroding the stable employment that traditional social safety nets were built around. A McKinsey Global Institute analysis estimated that tens of millions of jobs globally were vulnerable to automation over the coming decades. Ontario’s pilot was partly a bet that guaranteed income could serve as a buffer in that transition.
How the pilot was structured
The program was planned for three years and targeted residents in three communities: Hamilton, Thunder Bay, and Lindsay. Participants would be selected from among people currently living on low incomes. The design was not a universal basic income in the classical sense — it was means-tested, meaning it phased out as earnings rose — but it represented a significant step toward testing the concept at meaningful scale.
Ontario’s government framed the pilot as a chance to gather real evidence. Researchers would track health outcomes, employment rates, food security, and housing stability among participants, comparing results to a control group. The goal was to generate data rigorous enough to inform policy, not simply to make a political statement.
Basic income pilots had been gaining momentum globally. Finland launched its own experiment around the same time, providing 2,000 unemployed citizens with €560 per month unconditionally for two years. Researchers in Kenya, through the nonprofit GiveDirectly, were running one of the largest long-term cash transfer studies in history. Ontario was joining a global conversation that was, for the first time in decades, moving from theory toward evidence.
Lasting impact
Ontario’s pilot launched formally in 2017 C.E. and enrolled roughly 4,000 participants. Early results were promising. Participants reported improved mental health, better food security, and in many cases greater willingness to pursue education or leave precarious jobs for better ones — findings consistent with what Manitoba’s Mincome data had suggested 40 years earlier.
Then, in 2018 C.E., Ontario’s newly elected Progressive Conservative government cancelled the pilot before it could run its full course, citing cost concerns. The cancellation drew international criticism from researchers who argued that truncating the study destroyed data that could never be recovered.
Even so, the Ontario experience fed into a growing body of global evidence. The Stanford Social Innovation Review and other outlets documented how basic income research was shifting mainstream economic opinion. Subsequent pilots in Stockton, California, and across parts of Europe continued to build the evidentiary record. Ontario’s experiment — even cut short — helped normalize the question: not whether people deserve a floor, but how best to build one.
Blindspots and limits
The Ontario pilot was not universal basic income — it was a targeted, means-tested program, and its early cancellation means the full picture of its effects will never be known. Critics also noted that the payment amounts, while meaningful, remained below what most researchers consider a true living income in an expensive province like Ontario. The experience raised as many questions as it answered about political will and the durability of social experiments across election cycles.
Read more
For more on this story, see: The Independent
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- Indigenous land rights recognized for 160 million hectares at COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on global health
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
- 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
- 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
- ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.
More Good News
-

For the first time, human-caused extinction rate falls below 0.001%
For the first time in recorded history, the rate at which human activity drives species to extinction has dropped below 0.001% per year. Scientists call it the most consequential ecological recovery in human history — built on protected areas, Indigenous stewardship, and decades of coordinated global action.
-

Washington state enacts a millionaires tax to fund schools and families
Washington state millionaires tax marks one of the boldest state-level tax equity moves in recent U.S. history, imposing a surcharge on capital gains and investment income earned by the state’s wealthiest residents. The revenue will fund K-12 public schools, early childhood programs, and relief for small businesses long burdened by the state’s business and occupation tax structure. The law is especially significant because Washington has historically had one of the most regressive tax systems in the country, with lower-income residents paying a far higher share of their income in taxes than the wealthy. By targeting investment income, the state begins…
-

Detroit RxKids sends .4 million in free cash to new mothers in its first month
Detroit RxKids cash program distributed .4 million in its first month of citywide operation, reaching hundreds of pregnant women and new mothers across one of America’s most economically strained cities. The program, designed by Flint water crisis whistleblower Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, provides 00 monthly during pregnancy and 00 monthly through a child’s first year with no spending restrictions. Detroit has among the highest infant mortality rates of any major U.S. city, making the intervention urgent and overdue. Research consistently shows unconditional cash transfers improve maternal health, reduce food insecurity, and support early brain development without reducing workforce participation.

