Baltimore Income Club Redistributes $20,000 to 50 Members After 260,000 Federal Layoffs
Updated
Updated · Business Insider · Jun 1
Baltimore Income Club Redistributes $20,000 to 50 Members After 260,000 Federal Layoffs
2 articles · Updated · Business Insider · Jun 1
$20,000 was redistributed in the Baltimore Community Guaranteed Income Club's first year, with membership rising to 50 by May from 20 at launch.
Alex Zhu started the club in April 2025 after friends and neighbors were hit by DOGE-linked federal job cuts, using a 7% post-tax income pledge and software to route payments from higher earners to lower earners.
The decentralized system sends money directly through Venmo or Zelle rather than a pooled fund, though Zhu said missed payments, transfer confusion and reluctance to ask for help created early friction.
Zhu wants to expand the club to 150 members and build a website, framing it as a local stopgap while broader guaranteed-income programs remain limited despite growing interest as AI threatens jobs.
A Baltimore club redistributes thousands via Venmo to aid jobless members. Is this the future of community support or a risky experiment?
As AI disrupts jobs, is the best safety net a tech-funded dividend or a high-trust, community-powered income club?
Can community income-sharing scale to replace government safety nets, or is its reliance on trust a fundamental flaw?