While most of us rejoiced at the news that we would receive our month's pay before Christmas, it didn't take long before we'd blown the majority of it in the January sales, on drinks at the bar on New Year's Eve, and on a new gym kit in the hope that it would actually inspire us to get fit that year.
However, it seemed Finland could have been the solution to all our money woes, as it had just given 2,000 of its citizens free money. Yes, really.
Unfortunately, there was a catch.
According to Business Insider, starting on Monday and lasting until 2019, the federal social-security organization Kela gave out about £480 every month to 2,000 jobless Finns in the hope of learning how the distribution of free money helped the unemployed get back into the workforce.
Regardless of whether they found employment, decided to invest the money, or splurged on a holiday, participants in the experiment received the same tax-free cash at the beginning of each month.
The idea was inspired by the concept of universal basic income (UBI), which had been argued to be one of the best theories to solve poverty.