[...] the report will probably be used as a pretext for demands for more $$$. It should be prima facie evidence that throwing $$ at a problem without dealing with the underlying cause is pretty much foredoomed to fail.
It will fail regardless. 'Free money' injected at the bottom will merely cause dependency - Which always needs more than can be provided, by its nature.
It will also remove risk - The carrot or the stick, one way or the other, must force productivity. If that risk is removed, there is no (or at least less) drive to do anything other than sit and watch tv and eat fudge rolls.
And lastly, eventually, the market will 'catch up' with the 'free money' And prices will adjust accordingly. This can be demonstrated in the market during the 60's and 70's when women entered the work force... Within a decade, prices went up enough to require a two incomes for a family.
There is nothing nefarious in any of these things. They are just market forces and are as predictable as the sun rising in the east.