Presidential candidate Andrew Yang raised $16.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2019 alone. While it's much less than the $34.5 million Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders raised, for example, Yang's campaign has become a surprise success based largely on one idea: giving Americans a $1,000 per month universal basic income payment.

Yang's platform helped get America talking about universal income again, but his plan is expensive. Now a think tank has laid out a universal basic income plan that would pay more than Yang's and be zero cost to the government. Here's what it would look like and who it could actually benefit.