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You Call This Reform?

By Randy Albelda and Heather Boushey, TomPaine.com. Posted August 24, 2006.


A decade after welfare reform, most former recipients still live in poverty. But now they have crappy jobs, too.

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This week marks the 10th anniversary of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act -- commonly known as "welfare reform." The much hailed legislation abolished a cornerstone of the New Deal known as the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program which was criticized for discouraging work. But 10 years later, we know that the program Congress put in its place -- Temporary Assistance to Needy Families -- encouraged work, but many remain in poverty and struggle to make ends meet.

Since welfare reform was passed, poor women have moved into jobs in record numbers. In 1996, more than half (54 percent) of low-income mothers with children under 6 years old were in the labor force. By 2002, that share jumped to over two-thirds (67 percent).

But, the workplace has not adapted to the needs of the millions of new working single mothers. Studies of people leaving welfare consistently find that the wages of those leaving welfare average between $7 and $8 per hour , which are above the minimum wage but leave families close to or even below the poverty threshold. Further, most people found jobs that do not offer the kinds of benefits middle- and upper-class workers take for granted. Only about half of those leaving welfare report having employer-sponsored health insurance and no more than half had paid sick leave or pension coverage. Most do not have access to paid maternity/paternity or family leave and many do not even have access to unpaid leave.

In short, welfare reform was effective in getting more mothers to work, but not at making jobs work for low-wage mothers.

And, don't be fooled by the higher employment numbers into thinking that welfare reform eliminated poverty. Around the time of welfare reform's passage, Congress increased some of the benefits of working -- raising the minimum wage and expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit in 1996, and creating the Child Health Insurance Program in 1997. Yet it has not significantly expanded benefits in recent years. Rather, as states struggled to balance their budgets in the early 2000s, many work-support programs have been cut. Meanwhile, the real value of the minimum wage is lower today than it was when welfare reform passed, and so far Congress has resisted raising it at every turn.

Welfare recipients are virtually all single-parent families and they now face the same problems faced by millions of low-income working families: not enough time and not enough income. For working parents, gainful employment requires not only a good job, but also reliable child care. While the wages of most parents leaving welfare are relatively low, child care costs remain high -- more expensive than attending the state university in most states -- and subsidized slots continue to be elusive.

For many families, moving to work has meant become "working poor," rather than "welfare poor." Work supports are available for some low-income workers, but evidence indicates that the percentage of eligible families receiving food stamps, earned income tax credits, housing assistance or child care vouchers is quite small relative to the need. Those lucky enough to access work supports find that they often phase out too rapidly, as each rise in income reduces benefit levels. Thus, employment creates the "running in place" dilemma: Every additional dollar earned means close to a dollar lost in benefits.

And, those finding jobs are the lucky ones. While the poverty rate has fallen dramatically since 1996, welfare caseloads have fallen even more. Between 1996 and 2004 , the poverty rate for single mothers fell from 42 to 36 percent, a 14.3 percent decline, but the percentage of families using welfare fell by close to 60 percent, meaning that far fewer poor families are being served by welfare. Families who face enormous barriers to employment still need cash assistance, especially when family circumstances preclude a single parent from holding any job or a full-time job.

Nobody liked the old welfare system. It provided disincentives to employment, treated people poorly, and didn't provide enough income to support a family.

But, the current system isn't working very well, either. Too many families struggle too hard in a country that has enormous wealth. Ten years later, many low-income working families are wondering when we will insist that work should work for families -- that jobs pay enough to afford the basics, that they come with health care and access to paid sick leave, and that every parent has access to safe, affordable and enriching child care for their children while they're at work.

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Randy Albelda is a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Heather Boushey is a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

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Why are you surprised?
Posted by: BlueStateBitch on Aug 24, 2006 4:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's pretty obvious that our government doesn't give a crap about anyone except those who contribute large amounts of money to political campaigns. Hence, those on the bottom get next to nothing.

Until we as Americans stop accepting our profit-driven, wasteful, everyone-for-themselves culture and begin to set up a more fair and equitable system, we will continue to have a desperately poor underclass. Just another symptom of a sick society.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Actually, Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Actually, Posted by: picket
» RE: Actually, Posted by: MatthewSavage
» CANADA IS A FASCIST/RACIST STATE Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: Umm.. what? Posted by: Techubus
» Uhh... wha? Posted by: MatthewSavage
» RE: Conservasaurus has no clue Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Actually, Posted by: Wacre
» Gee - I have good happy thoughts! Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: Actually, Posted by: Dianka
Welfare Reform
Posted by: playitsam on Aug 24, 2006 6:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A lot of people have crappy jobs even if they pay more. A good deal of the problem is "single motherhood." As long as girls from poor families perpetuate the cycle by having babies prematurely, nothing will change. In a perfect world I would like to see every young woman have access to birth control. The fact is that more have access than they realize. Planned Parenthood is a terrific alternative. I think you'll find that the cycle continues because there is no value placed in getting an education. This is not just a problem with the poor. It is also inceasingly a problem with non-college educated workers period. It's time for liberals to stop apologizing for this kind of behavior. We need to stand up and be counted. No child is illegitimate. However, children absolutely do better with two mature parents.

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» RE: Welfare Reform Posted by: WitchyNy
» Oh, stop it! Posted by: pzo
» RE: Oh, stop it! Posted by: ALANHESTER
» RE: Oh, stop it! Posted by: Golightly
» RE: Welfare Reform Posted by: Dianka
» RE: Welfare Reform Posted by: Madam Hatter
Gaming The System
Posted by: NoPCZone on Aug 24, 2006 6:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The whole social safety net has been gamed by the corporate interests to screw over the poorest and least of our society. Everything from Unemployment & Disability to AFDC & Housing has been set to maximize the yield for interests that profit from poverty and human misery while giving very little support to those in need. The very sad truth is that most of the people in poverty in the US are children and they are not being taken care of.

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Destigmatizing bastardy
Posted by: Gun Bunny on Aug 24, 2006 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in the 1960s, especially for the underclass, created the problem of which you write. I am reminded, especially, of the game called something like "Jewels in the Crown"in which local 13 - 16 year old boys would compete with each other to have sex with as many different girls as possible. That certainly contributed to the 82% illigitimacy rate among lives that we had in DC. It will take time to undo all the damage done by the self-serving welfare industry. This is just the first ten years.

Once the underclass realized that the government would no longer simply subsidize business (and procreation) as usual, it dragged itself up and went to work. OK, so the jobs aren't teaching the multiplier effect and the velocity of money to the the children of immigrants, but they are still jobs that require self discipline and allow the dignity of participating in the economy. To paraphrase Huxley, the world needs betas.

On the other hand, it's really not difficult to succeed: control your impulses, manage your fertility, avoid drugs and get an education. What's so bloody difficult about that?

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» RE: Destigmatizing bastardy Posted by: picket
» RE: Destigmatizing bastardy Posted by: ALANHESTER
Welfare for the rich, Self-reliance for the poor.
Posted by: shangrilalad on Aug 24, 2006 9:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We can’t blame anyone more than Bill Clinton for the desperate circumstances afflicting the poor. No matter what he says, Clinton doesn’t give a rat’s ass for the poor. Of course, few politicians do, they prefer blaming the poor as undeserving of help. Capitalism has utterly corrupted America. Selfishness and greed has become almost a state religion inspired by Reaganism.

Sooner or later we will all pay dearly for abandoning Christian values for materialism.

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Yes, poverty is one of the major symptoms of a society gone rotten.
Posted by: Sojourner on Aug 24, 2006 10:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We will spend most of our time arguing over whether US domestic policy should be ruthless (conservatives) or provide social services (liberals), and the pendulum will continue to swing back and forth.

Conservatives will point out that the poor learn how to *game* the welfare system, and they are right. Liberals will point out the enormous eventual waste and expense resulting from neglect of childcare, and they are right.

I have heard these same arguments all my lifelong. Somehow both sides need to find a way to talk to each other. These unresolved issues portend increasing social disorder. Not only does that mean human suffering, it is bad for the markets.

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CASTRATION IS THE ANSWER!!!!
Posted by: WitchyNy on Aug 24, 2006 10:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All these FATHERS are the problem..........Lets make it a law to castrate any male who gets a woman with child if he is not already married to her!

Man have to learn to control themselves!

While we are at it...lets castrate any man who does not support his children...and lets castrate any man if he has more than two children...

Rich or Poor...CASTRATION is the answer!

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» Wow Posted by: kit79
Comes down to control.
Posted by: Rask on Aug 24, 2006 12:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The current system is just a form a control. It is not about not giving a care about people. The people in power care about us - they care for us to be powerless. They wish have more control and more order. To do that, they limit choices other people can make for themselves.

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» RE: Comes down to control. Posted by: ALANHESTER
OR--
Posted by: jende on Aug 24, 2006 12:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OR we could educate children to plan for marriage and family. We could also subsidize single parents with pre-school children until the kids begin school. Then we could train the parents for jobs that keep them close to home and available when the kids come back from school. We could also place single-parent children in state homes where they live and go to school, while seeing their working parents daily and visiting them on weekends. We could also establish more work-at-home jobs out of the many that do not require workers to travel back & forth and remain all day in an office. We can improve the current situation without the unproductive and punishing extremes of total subsidization or total single-parent employment--if we really want to do so.

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» RE: OR-- Posted by: ALANHESTER
where are the "right to life" people now?
Posted by: zooeyhall on Aug 24, 2006 3:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why aren't the right to life people up in arms about this, what with all their yacking about the family values, and "children are a gift from God, etc. etc"?

This type of issue really shows their hypocrisy. "Sure, let's protect the unborn and preach about the evils of birth control or whatever. But once they are born, they are fit to be only slaves of the plutocracy, cannon fodder, or die."

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"Reform" by any other name. . .
Posted by: monkeywrench on Aug 24, 2006 3:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There used to be a couple of names for "welfare reform" that have fallen out of place in modern, genteel (and wealthy), society: "indentured servitude," and "slavery."

And when the U.S. economy finally "augers in" and the middle class is finally beaten to a pulp, what shall we call the debtor's prisons which will inevitably spring up, and their free labor? I think Mao Zedong had a name for those: "re-eduction centers" (Yeah, that it! sounds really uplifting!. . .Karl, try to work that into George's next speech, o.k.?. . .)

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Ain't that something!
Posted by: talkville on Aug 24, 2006 10:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't we all know that all these people just LOVE being poor? Besides, the Big Boxes like Wal Mart needed a "customer base"; hardly surprising. On with the great reformation! Now there's a new status to attain: "I'm not poor, I'm working poor"!

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WHY IS IT..........
Posted by: ALANHESTER on Aug 25, 2006 2:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That people can get passionate about 2 millions people receiving aid (less than 3% of the total federal budget) but no one gets upset when the Pentagon squanders BILLIONS, and Congress votes to avoid auditing the Pentagon?

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well, obviously
Posted by: Michelle on Aug 26, 2006 6:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was obvious to me and pretty much anyone else who looked critically at the 1996 legislation that this:

In short, welfare reform was effective in getting more mothers to work, but not at making jobs work for low-wage mothers

Was part of the agenda of it.

More accurately, it was designed to further race, class and gender inequality (structural) and supply a fresh batch of racist, sexist and classist rhetoric to promote the myth of meritocracy (cultural) and, as usual, hide what's really going on.

It was never meant to do good for welfare recipients, at least not the non-corporate ones.

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Gary J Minter
Posted by: garyjminter on Aug 27, 2006 7:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are no easy answers, but during the past two years I've seen a lot of things in China that caused me to rethink the US welfare system....

In China, about 80% of the people are "poor" rural farmers, with almost no cash, but they have homes and food in the countryside....and of course TV sets!

Many rural poor flock to the cities looking for jobs...they all want to work, there is no true welfare here...most of the rural migrants to the cities earn about 100 to 150 US dollars per month, and live in tiny, crowded apartments...but they feel good because they earn cash and can save enough to send to their families back home on the farm, as many immigrants (both legal and "illegal") to the US do.

Those who don't work in China get little if any welfare or help from the government, so everyone must work unless they are from a wealthy family. There is a rapidly growing gap between rich and poor in China. Some people with government jobs or who are owners of businesses are positioned to become wealthy very fast, and their families benefit. I've seen hundreds of teenage girls buying cell phones that cost more than a half-years wages for the working poor in Beijing.

Yet, it is good for people to work and be productive members of society, and the work, whether it is as an owner of a tiny shop or in a factory or as a waitperson or construction worker, gives dignity and independence and a feeling of self-worth.

Gary J Minter
http://spaces.msn.com/aidschina

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» RE: Gary J Minter Posted by: Madam Hatter
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