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Clinton Ended Welfare, Not Poverty

By Robert Scheer, AlterNet. Posted August 30, 2006.


You'd think Bill Clinton doesn't know the difference between getting single mothers off the welfare rolls and getting them out of poverty.
Robert Scheer

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To hear Bill Clinton tell it, his presidency won the war on poverty three decades after President Lyndon B. Johnson launched it, having changed only the name. Unfortunately, however, for the mothers and their children pushed off the rolls but still struggling mightily to make ends meet even when the women are employed, the war on welfare was not the same battle at all.

Clinton masterfully blurred the two in a recent New York Times opinion column, as did most others on the 10th anniversary of the passage of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, writing as if getting mothers and their children off the welfare rolls is the same as getting them out of poverty. In the absence of any evidence that poverty is tamed, he celebrates a "bipartisan" victory, which was good for his image but not necessarily for those it claimed to help.

The ex-president gloats over the large decrease in the number of welfare recipients as if he is unaware of the five-year limit and other new restrictions that made it inevitable. Nor does he seem bothered that nobody seems to have thought it important to assess how the families on Aid to Families with Dependent Children fared after they left welfare. The truth is we know very little about the fate of those moved off welfare, 70 percent of whom are children, because there is no systematic monitoring program, thanks to "welfare reform" severing the federal government's responsibility to help the nation's poor.

The best estimates from the Census Bureau and other data, however, indicate that at least a million welfare recipients have neither jobs nor benefits and have sunk deeper into poverty. For those who found jobs, a great many became mired in minimum-wage jobs -- sometimes more than one -- that barely cover child care and other costs they incurred by working outside the home.

Yet, in rather the same way that President Bush likes to follow sentences about Sept. 11 with the words "Saddam Hussein" to imply a connection unsupported by facts, Clinton follows his boasts about welfare "reform" by announcing that "child poverty dropped to 16.2 percent in 2000, the lowest rate since 1979," as if that proves a causal relationship.

But if crushing welfare is such a boon to poor children, the effects should be snowballing the further we get from the bad old days, right? Well, no: The same census data Clinton cites for 2000 also records a 12 percent increase in childhood poverty over the four subsequent years.

Of course, Republican funding cuts to various poverty-related programs have no doubt played a role in this sad state, as has a bitter resistance to raising the federal minimum wage, which, in real dollars, is now at its lowest point in a half-century. But it is ridiculous to imply, without evidence, that welfare reform is responsible for declines in poverty but is unrelated to increases in poverty.

What we do know unequivocally is that real wages have been declining for workers, both lower- and middle-class, despite increases in productivity. As the New York Times reported on Monday, "wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation's gross domestic product since the government began recording the data in 1947, while corporate profits have climbed to their highest share since the 1960s." These numbers are even more depressing when we realize that the top 1 percent of wage earners, beneficiaries of Bush's feed-the-rich tax breaks, now earn an outsized 11.2 percent of the nation's total wages.

Now, Clinton knows full well that the playing field is neither level nor fair, so it is unconscionable to have singled out the minuscule welfare program for a big propaganda campaign to improve government efficiency. The overly examined welfare program costs $10 billion a year while the $300 billion already spent on the Iraq war is rarely raised in discussions of taxpayer burden and fiscal responsibility.

The sad reality is that "ending welfare as we know it" was championed by Clinton because it made him appear to be a "new Democrat" and not because it would improve the lives of poor kids. Otherwise, he would not dare boast in his column that "as a governor, I oversaw a workfare experiment in Arkansas in 1980," because that program was a failure.

In Arkansas today, fully half the children are described in Census Bureau data as "low income," while 1 out of 10 live in a situation that researchers call "extreme child poverty," meaning that a family of four survives on less than $9,675 per year.

Yes, Clinton all but ended welfare. Unfortunately, child poverty is again on the rise in Arkansas and throughout the nation.

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Robert Scheer is the coauthor of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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The Proof of the Pudding
Posted by: Sojourner on Aug 30, 2006 5:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for trying to make some sense out of what is happening to US society. It is possible to “cherry-pick” numbers to suit your image, and that is done so frequently, I no longer know who to believe.

The promises made at the time of welfare reform are only now capable of measurement. I would have been startled to hear Clinton’s statement about child poverty reduction, because that is not my experience in my community. True, we now have a large immigrant population, and that contributes to what was, 30 years ago, a prosperous middle-class city today joining the top ten nationwide in child poverty.

That contrasts with what I read of Britain, where a deliberate effort to reduce child poverty has been successful. So it can be done. But we are not doing it.

I have always understood the justification for government as the place for the long-term view. Instead, our politicians only look to the next election. The price, in the years ahead, will be difficulties in our schools and on our streets. Our leadership is not responsive to our needs or our pleading. It’s just the newest form of taxation without representation. Time for another Boston Tea Party?

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tea
Posted by: rsaxto on Aug 31, 2006 3:34 AM   
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We can't have another Boston Tea Party for the Bushies say that is TERRORISM! We can't help the poor live decently because fighting terrorism takes too much money. We can't withdraw from Iraq for the terrorists would win! The Bushie bullshit is so deep it is smothering America. Maybe we should develop a fish hook that will only snare Bushies and drag their asses out of government. Whatever works because Bush crap isn't working at all, it just is ruining the whole world.

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Bad as this obfuscation is in the west, imagine what they are doing to the third world
Posted by: Bobsays on Aug 31, 2006 10:11 AM   
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Clinton's example has been picked up by all the international development agencies. They all peddle micro-credit as the only solution to widespread poverty. All well and good for the handpicked few who qualify, but the rest stay in the sewer.

What we are seeing is just a rejigging by lefty politicians to appeal to the right and business, who long ago didn't want any tax dollars going to help the poor. Welfare was never meant to be a long-term system for the poor. Its founders had only intended it as a trampoline that would bounce people back into the workforce when the economy crashed. What happened in practice, was that politicians found it was a convenient way to keep part of the population quiet when the economy lost interest in bouncing these people back into the workforce.

Kicking people off welfare into jobs that don't pay a living wage is cruel. Equally, it is cruel to leave them on welfare and forget about them. We need to make sure that jobs pay a living wage, and that all people are presented with a route to better themselves.

Be very wary of UN schemes like the millennium development goals. They push an agenda that has no chance in hell of being completed by 2015, and that does not take into consideration the most urgent problem for development (no its not environmental degradation): but population control. Imagine it this way: how can you budget for anything if the boundaries are redrawn every day. If the lines are always blurred. The best poverty fighter right now is China (even Jeffrey Sachs admits that). And China has population control in the form of the one-child policy. It is how they were able to break the back of ever-growing demand. Africa needs to get its population under control, or all the AIDS pills in the world will do nothing to help them.

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Clinton Ended Welfare, Not Poverty
Posted by: sidewinder on Aug 31, 2006 1:16 PM   
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Are you insinuating that Slick Willie told a lie. Surely, you jest. Everyone knows that Slick would not/could not tell a lie.

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Clinton ended welfare, not poverty
Posted by: dougo on Aug 31, 2006 7:40 PM   
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Clinton did end welfare as we know it. He failed to end poverty as millions live it daily. I think Clinton wanted to be liked by the conservatives so he fell for the tales of welfare queens driving Cadillacs and eating better than most people. Maybe some did drive a caddy but what they didn't say was it was a ragged out 71 caddy that cost $500. All they could afford. Clinton himself was raised by a single mother and probably received the same benefits that he wanted to end for others. Poverty is on the rise and now with more cuts to the programs the poor rely on to get by, it is imperative we make government work for us, not us working for a government which takes from the poor and gives to the rich. The U.S. is the richest country on the planet. Also the most greedy and self serving. Something's got to give here.

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The Clintons...
Posted by: magistre on Aug 31, 2006 8:24 PM   
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That is the one thing people in this country do not want to hear. The Truth. The Clintons, Bill/Hillary are not nor ever have been Liberals, Progessive, et.al. They were the foot-in-the-door for Herr Bush and people do not want to admit that we've all been had. What you see in the national press is so far from reality it would be hilarious if it weren't what passes for reality.

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» RE: The Clintons... Posted by: calm
Not like in the old days
Posted by: lamar on Sep 1, 2006 6:12 AM   
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"Bill Clinton doesn't know the difference between getting single mothers off the welfare rolls and getting them out of poverty."

I guess they'll just have to get themselves out of poverty. I know this is an oversimplification, but whether you think the government should be in the welfare game but has failed in its duty, or you think government has no business with welfare, one has to realize, welfare isn't there like it used to be.

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Real Poverty Solutions
Posted by: yellow on Sep 2, 2006 12:33 AM   
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I am no fan of welfare. I doesn't end poverty and is supposed to be a temporary relief measure to tide a family over until they can get gainful employment. Some theories from the 1960s when there was a welfare rights movement insisted that welfare was a means of regulating the job market on behalf of capital. When the economy was going well as in the 1960s the roles would ironically increase because there was little slack in the labor supply anyhow and sopping up some of it with transfer payments wouldn't affect wages at a time of high growth, employment, and profits. In fact it was a way of keeping demand up by pump priming local economies through aid to the poor. The food stamp program also helped farmers support food demand and prices. Income support programs for the poor also helped support slumlords and merchants in the ghetto. Post-1980 wealth concentrating supply side economic policies created opportunities for rich developers to buy them all out and clear the slum for upper income real estate and community development. In the late 1970s and 1980s when the economy went south, welfare kicked needy people off the roles to swell the reserve army of unemployed even more so as to finally achieve the wage decelleration that capital was seeking to restore the profitability of reinvesting. By this time the structure of the US economy had changed and the fastest growing unskilled job market was not in manufacturing but in big box retail, services, hospital and nursing home orderlies, fast food, and Hotel and hospitality industries. All these are pretty dead end and low wage. The formerly high paying jobs are overseas. The poor are stuck like never before with little opportunities. The old policies were a strategy to manage or "regulate" the poor in the words of sociologist Frances Fox Piven and Richard A. Cloward.

What is needed is jobs training and creation programs. Trade Unions can play a role in lifting domestic demand to create more internal economic growth. Poor communities should be encouraged and funded in establishing their own production and service coops for things like groceries, transportation services, health care, day care, construction, and other vital services. A marshall plan for poor urban neighborhoods could be funded with all the money wasted on the military. This could be an engine for growth in other areas of the economy as well as a way of saving public revenue on negative things like law enforcement and prisons that are responses to crime produced by urban poverty. This more sweeping will face obsticles in the form of resistance from a system that profits from poverty and inequality by keeping people dependant, incomes and wages low for most. An expanding and increasingly privatized prison system has generated profitable demand for survailence and security systems from a newly emerging high tech sector of corporate America.

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True
Posted by: BobbyGreyFriar on Sep 5, 2006 10:14 PM   
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Sadly, this article confirms what I've always suspected. Clinton was more sensative to his public image than some of the alternatives, but ultimately driven by the same venal motives.

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