REFORMING/DEFORMING
WELFARE
Jason DeParle, Welfare to Work: a Sequel, New York Times, 28 December 1997.
handler: Welfare
115
concernedadministratively less costly and complicated to provide benefits (however meagre) than to impose sanctions, the result has typically
been symbolic politics, the affirmation of values that make the established society feel better. At least, that has been the record till now.
When AFDC (popularly known as Mothers Pensions) was first enacted,
between 191120, it was designed primarily for worthy, Protestant, white
widows. Virtually all other categories were excluded; they belonged to the
unworthy poor. But from the late 1950s and early 1960s, in streamed
African-Americans and other minorities, the divorced, the separated, the
deserted and, increasingly, the never-married. Over the three decades, the
ADC/AFDC rolls exploded from two million to about thirteen million.
Expenditures jumped from some $500 million to $23 billion.2 Welfare
was declared to be in crisis. Eligibility was tightened, benefits were cut,
but costs and numbers continued to rise. Federal programmes appeared
to be out of control. Political alarm focused on African-Americans, outof-wedlock births, single parenthood and generation-long dependency.3
There was a cry for a return to first principles. In 1967 the Johnson
Administration introduced mandatory work requirements. At the time,
liberals opposed them, arguing that if married mothers were not obliged
to work, it was unjust and punitive to force single poor mothers to do so.
Conservatives replied that such women remained, as always, undeservingmorally inferior to mothers who could either rely on their husbands
or were economically self-sufficient; they should be made to find jobs.
But the work requirements failed to reduce the welfare rolls. They proved
too cumbersome and costly to administer, and the vast majority of recipients were excused from them.
Both sides remained unhappy. Conservatives continued to attack the
entitlement state on the grounds that the social contract involved
responsibilities as well as rights, which welfare undermined. Then, in
the late 1980s, the liberals changed. Instead of arguing that it was unfair
to require AFDC mothers to work, they started to insist that such women
should indeed get jobs, since social norms had changed. Now that the
majority of non-welfare mothers had entered the paid labour-force, it
2
See Joel Handler and Yeskel Hasenfeld, The Moral Construction of Poverty,
Newbury Park, CA 1991.
3
Mimi Abramovitz, Regulating the Lives of Women: Social Welfare Policy from Colonial
Times to the Present, Boston 1988.
116
nlr 4
117
proportion will certainly fail to enroll. Legal immigrants were scheduled to lose benefits as of 1 January 1997 (though this was subsequently
modified). The Supplementary Security Income (SSI) definition of disability for children has also been narrowed, adversely affecting as many
as 300,000 children.4
The thrust to work first policies predates the full panoply of the Act
under Clinton. Many states had begun implementing their own programmes between 1993 and 1995. The consensus behind them was the
conviction that welfare encourages dependency: recipients, instead of
seeking to improve themselves and become self-sufficient, breed children to get onor stay onwelfare; which then becomes a way of life,
from generation to generation. The result threatens both the nuclear
family and the work ethic. Tough work requirements, enforced by timelimits, were therefore not only supposed to reduce welfare costs, but to
inculcate the values of independence and responsibility, offering positive socialization for children. Advocates of this approach argued that
there were plenty of jobs for those who wanted to work, and that anyone
who took a job (even an entry-level position) and stuck with it, would be
bound to move up the employment ladder. The goal should be to move
not only current recipients but also new applicantsbefore they get on
welfareinto the labour market as quickly as possible, rather than place
them in longer-term training or education programmes.
Since the mid 1990s, welfare rolls have, in fact, fallen sharply. Nationwide caseloads declined from a peak of 5 million families in March
1994 to 4.4 million in April 1996, when PRWORA was enacted, to
2.8 million in December 1998.5 To what extent has the drop been due
to the Act? There are large areas of ignorance and uncertainty here,
but a good place to start is Riverside County in Southern California,
widely considered a standard-bearer for the work first strategy.6 Led
by a charismatic director, its programme emphasized job-seeking and
quick entry into the labour market. Staff were mobilized to track down
4
Childrens Defense Fund, Summary of Legislation Affecting Children in 1996 (Public
Law 10493), http://www.childrensdefense.org/fairstart_welsem.html
5
Mark Greenberg, Beyond Welfare: New Opportunities to Use TANF to Help LowIncome Working Families, Center for Law and Social Policy, July 1999, p. 2.
6
For a discussion, see Joel Handler and Yesheskel Hasenfeld, We the Poor People:
Work, Poverty, and Welfare, New Haven 1997.
118
nlr 4
handler: Welfare
119
is currently running at the historically very low rate of just over 4 per
cent. Productivity has been rising. Yet all of this has been accompanied
by a decline in real wages of less skilled and educated workers over the
past two decades. Jobs are increasingly contingent or short-term, without fringe benefits. Today, the returns from low-wage work are either
stagnant, or just barely starting to move up. Thus, despite a nine-year
boom economy, very low unemployment, and a majority that has prospered, the bottom fifth of the US population is actually worse off than it
was in the 1980s. The average after-tax household income of the poorest
one-fifth of households, adjusted for inflation, has fallena staggering
12 per cent since 1977down from $10,000 to $8,800.8 Between 1973
and 1997, the percentage of poor people increased 1.2 per cent to 11.8 per
cent while the share of the rich (those with incomes more than seven
times the poverty line, or some $105,000 for a family of four in 1997)
increased by 8.1 per cent, to 14.3 per cent.9 For a time, the gap between
womens and mens wages narrowed (primarily because women were
working longer hours while male earnings dropped, rather than because
female wages rose); but it widened again during the 1980s. The decline
in the real wages of the least skilled and educated was especially steep
among adults aged 2435, with only a high-school diploma or less; while
female dropouts earn only 58 per cent of the income of male dropouts.
8
David Johnston, Gap Between Rich and Poor Found Substantially Wider, New
York Times, 5 September 1999, discussing the recently published analysis by the
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
9
Sheldon Danziger and Deborah Reed, Winners and Losers: The Era of Inequality
Continues, Brookings Review, Fall 1999, pp. 1516.
10
Robert Lerman, Pamela Loprest and Caroline Ratcliffe, How Well Can Urban
Labor Markets Absorb Welfare Recipients?, Urban Institute, Washington 1999.
120
nlr 4
suffer a drop in wages. Whatever was the case in the past, there is
increasing evidence that low-wage workers today are not moving up the
economic ladder, as employment shifts from full-time work for a single
employer to various forms of part-time, temporary, contract or contingent work. Temporary help has accounted for more than 8 per cent of
the employment growth between 1992 and 1998.11 Part-time jobs are
more likely to be dead-end, of shorter duration, without benefits, and at a
lower hourly wage. Families headed by part-time workers are four times
more likely to be below the poverty line, compared to families headed by
full-time workers. Single-parent families are worse off. Overall, the net
result is that low-wage earners in America have the lowest earnings of all
advanced countries,12 while income inequality in the US is greater than
in twenty one other developed nations. Thus, although more Americans
are working harder, inequality and poverty are growing in the States. If
we take the official poverty line$16,660 for a family of foursome
34 million people12.7 per cent of the populationwere poor in 1998,
and 18.9 per cent of all children. Moreover, 13.8 million had incomes
less than one-half of the poverty line. Another 23.8 million are near
poor150 per cent of the poverty line.13 At this income level, there is
barely enough to get by.
handler: Welfare
121
14
Harry Holzer, Will Employers Hire Welfare Recipients?, Focus, Spring 1999,
pp. 2630.
122
nlr 4
market, these women are likely still to experience long periods without
work . . . Fewer than half of the recipients with the lowest skills are likely to
be steadily employed by their late twenties.15
handler: Welfare
123
programme was successful in job development, all this means was that
it persuaded local employers to look to the Welfare Department for referrals, as we have seen, rather than placing ads in local papers. While
this was good for welfare recipients and employers, who saved transaction costs, it excluded non-welfare job seekers. The Riverside model
emphasized quick job searches and minimum preparation (resum and
telephone interview techniques), with no education or basic training. So
it is no surprise that Riverside placements earn little more than the controls earn on their own. Programmes that do emphasize education and
training manage to get recipients into better paying jobs, but they place
fewer people, have much higher costs and incur net losses per placement. There is very little federal money for work training and very few
states are prepared to spend any significant amount for these purposes.
Assuming that a welfare parent does find a job, what happens to his or
her children? The crisis in childcareabove all for low-wage workers
cannot be overemphasized. Millions of infants, children and adolescents
are at riskpsychologically and physicallybecause of inadequate care.
Yet the current welfare reform obliges mothers of young childrenin
most states, infants three months oldto enter the paid labour force.
Childcare centres are at capacity, and even if there are vacancies, the
cost is usually too high for welfare recipients. As of 1998, New York
City lacked childcare slots for 61 per cent of the children whose mothers
were supposed to participate in workfare. State-wide, New York will
need facilities for 61,000 children by the year 2001, but only 27,500
slots are in the budget: currently 20,000 children are on waiting lists.17
Most welfare recipients resort to unregulated care by relatives, or other
family members, but even here costs are high and availability varies,
especially when children are still young and mothers have to take shift
work. How much do families pay for childcare? Market-level care costs
between $150 and $175 per week. The new Federal law does offer more
funds for childcare but, according to the Congressional Budget Office,
the amount is $1.4 billion short of what is needed.18 Working-poor mothers have to rely on cheap, low-quality, informal care.
17
Childrens Defense Fund, New Studies Look at Status of Former Welfare Recipients,
27 May 1998, www.childrensdefense.org/fairstart_statu, pp. 23.
18
Sandra Clark and Sharon Long, Child Care Prices: A Profile of Six Communities,
Urban Institute, Washington D. C. 1995, pp. 12; William Gormley Jr., Everybodys
Children: Child Care as Public Problem, Washington D. C. 1995.
124
nlr 4
Problems of health care are also acute. Sickness of either parent or child
reduces the chances of work; with worse health, the poor need more
medical care, but have greater difficulty getting health insurance and
proper treatment. Under the new Actas well as several of the state
reformswelfare recipients are only entitled to Medicaid for one year.
In the meantime, fewer low-wage employers are providing health insurance, especially for family members. The number of Americans without
health insurance is now more than 40 million.
Once we fully recognize the life circumstances of welfare recipients, it is
easy to understand why they have such a hard time competing even for
low-wage, entry-level jobs. They have low levels of education (half have
not completed high school); they have major childcare responsibilities;
uneven or sparse work experience; and are disproportionately of colour.
Even if they do manage to find and keep jobs, the upper-bound estimate of
their earnings should they work full-time, year-round . . . is no more than
$12,000$14,000; given their family sizes, this level of earnings will not
remove them from poverty. And this assumes full-time work. In fact, most
recipients only find temporary jobs, paying less than average wages. Indeed
the typical former recipient earns about one-half of this outer limit earnings level.19
Decline in rolls
If employment is so uncertain, what accounts for the dramatic decline
in the welfare rolls? Politiciansfrom Clinton to Gingrichnaturally
claim that welfare reform is working. In reality, the rolls were already
falling before many of the work requirements were enacted.20 No one
envisaged the huge drop of subsequent years; since the block-grant formula was based on 1994 caseloads, all of the states now have huge
surpluses. A few have used the money to expand services for the new
TANF programme. Wisconsin, where rolls have dropped more than
19
handler: Welfare
125
21
See, for example, David Figlio and James Ziliak, Welfare Reform, the Business
Cycle, and the Decline in AFDC Caseloads, unpublished paper, March 1999,
p. 4; Bruce Meyer and Dan Rosenbaum, Welfare, the Earned Income Tax Credit,
and the Labor Supply of Single Mothers, National Bureau of Economic Research,
Working Paper Series, September 1999; David Ellwood, The Impact of the Earned
Income Tax Credit and Social Policy Reforms on Work, Marriage, and Living
Arrangements, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard, unpublished paper,
November 1999; Council of Economic Advisors, Technical Report: The Effects of
Welfare Policy and the Economic Expansion on Welfare Caseloads: An Update, 3
August 1999, p. 5.
126
nlr 4
tion allows for a lot of discretion: not only states but individual offices
vary greatly in how leniently or aggressively they interpret the rules.
At the same time, the Earned Income Tax Credit for poorer families
not considered part of welfare reform itselfhas created incentives to
work which are thought by some to be the most important single influence on the decline of the rolls. Setting this aside, if we consider the
reforms themselves, one difficulty is to identify which of their effects is
supposed to be the most critical. There are a number of possibilities: the
welfare-to-work programmes (preparation classes, job search, employer
contacts, transportation and childcare assistance, post-employment support); the time limits; the sanctionsor combinations of all three.
22
handler: Welfare
127
128
nlr 4
from nine states, the Childrens Defense Fund says that employed families who are sanctioned tend to work less and earn less than those who
leave welfare on their own.26
It is easy to imagine Mary Ann Mooredepressed, struggling with
addiction, hassled by relatives and neighbours, trying to take care of
young twinsmissing appointments or failing to get required documentation. She could have her grant reduced or her welfare terminated
well before the two-year period. On the other hand, many will comply
but still incur sanctions because of bureaucratic errors. Many agencies
suffer from serious data problems; but if the computer fails to record a
required appointment, the recipient is automatically sanctioned. Welfare
employees, overworked and underpaid themselves, have minimal experience running employment programmes.
Post-welfare
In a recent study, the Urban Institute compared ex-recipients (leavers)
with working poor families.27 Leavers are those who stopped drawing
welfare at some point between 1995 and 1997. Of the 2.1 million adults
who left welfare for at least a month in that period, about 29 per cent
returnedan option that is now becoming increasingly difficult. Those
who did not return tended to be younger than the low-income working
mothers they were compared to. While education and disability status
are similar between the two groupsalmost a third lack a high-school
diplomathere is a big difference in marital status: many more of the
leavers are single parents (61 per cent vs 23 per cent). Most leavers
(69 per cent) quit welfare via paid employmenteither increased earnings or a new job. The employment rate of the leavers was somewhat
higher than the low-income families, and wages at least as high, but job
tenure and health insurance were less. Both groups, of course, were in
low-paying jobs. The median earnings of leavers were $13,778 in 1997,
roughly the poverty line for a family of three, but these might be supplemented by child support or Earned Income Tax Credit. Substantial
numbers worked nights, struggled to coordinate childcare, and reported
26
27
handler: Welfare
129
serious difficulties with food-bills and rent. The poorest 20 per cent of
families lost more in welfare benefitsalmost $1,400 per familythan
they gained in earnings.28
The National Conference of State Legislators, summarizing reports
from twenty one states that tracked leavers, came to the same conclusions. While mostbetween 50 and 60 per centare finding jobs,
these usually pay between $5.50 and $7.00 per hour, so families remain
in poverty. Work is unstable: about a fifth of families return to welfare
within a few months.29 In Milwaukee, although 72 per cent of leavers
worked in the first quarter (1996), half of those were either unemployed
or marginally employed a year later. Among those who left welfare, only
16 per cent earned above-poverty wages. In New York City, no more than
20 to 30 per cent found jobs.30 Overall, only a small percentage received
unemployment benefits. Less than half got food stamps or Medicaid.
Almost three-quarters of all former recipients report receiving no private
help in the first three months after leaving welfare.
What has happened to the poorest 20 per cent of families in America
about two million families, or six million peopleunder the new
regime? Between 1995 and 1997, the income of this group fell by 7 per
cent. The drop was even biggeralmost 15 per centfor the very poorest single-mother families, the bottom decile. The biggest loss, about 80
per cent of the total, was due to the fall in means-tested benefits, primarily food stamps and Medicaid. Many who have left welfare are not
getting either, even though they are eligible. Families who left welfare
lost an average of $577 a year, primarily because wages did not make
up for lost benefits. The decline in means-tested assistance was particularly severe for poor children. In 1995, 88 per cent of these received
food stamps; in 1998, only 70 per cent did. (These losses would have
been partially offset by the extensions of EITC, phased in through 1996.)
Although the absolute number of children below the poverty line fell,
28
Michael Weinstein, When Work is not Enough. Without Training, Success of
Welfare Overhaul May Falter, New York Times, 26 August 1999, C1.
29
Jack Tweedie and Dana Reichert, Tracking Recipients After They Leave Welfare:
Summaries of State Follow-Up Studies, National Conference of State Legislatures,
Welfare Reform Project, February 1998, www.ncsl.org/statefed/welfare/follow; see
also the follow-up study, 1999.
30
New Studies look at Status of Former Welfare Recipients, p 2.
130
nlr 4
Wendell Primus, Lynette Rawlings, Kathy Larin and Kathryn Porter, The Initial
Impacts of Welfare Reform on the Incomes of Single-Mother Families, Center on Budget
and Policy Priorities, 1999.
32
Data prepared by the Western Center on Law and Poverty, 1996 (on file with
author).
handler: Welfare
131
33
See Joel Handler, Welfare Reform, 19951996: The Time-Bomb Ready to Explode
on Californias Children (Southern California Inter-University Consortium on
Homelessness and Poverty, undated). Nationwide, the number of children in foster
care has grown since the enactment of the PRWORAagain, during a period of
prosperity. But so far, not much evidence from the states has been forthcoming.
34
For a study of the prevalence of violence among homeless families, see Ellen
Bussuk et al., Single Mothers and Welfare, Scientific American , October 1996, p. 62.
132
nlr 4
ing from dependency is a process that takes time, professional skill and
patience: none of which are present in the welfare system. The Salvation
Army workers were college graduates and worked with only six or eight
clients at any one time. At least half of Moores welfare workers were
only high-school graduates and handled 180 cases at a time. Without
welfare, Moore would probably hang on for a while, but the probability
of ultimate homelessness and break-up of the family would increase.
Would the twins be better off in foster care? Do we have to make a choice
between children living in extreme poverty at home or being cast into
forbidding, high-risk state institutions?
Clintons legacy
In the past, welfare reforms amounted mainly to large claims and
small changes. Myths and stereotypes inspired drastic measures, but
the policies enacted would be too draconian and costly to administer.
So today, serious workfare schemesincluding community-service
jobsare more expensive than welfare, as are other alternatives, like
shelter-care and foster-care. Under the present reforms, states have
plenty of room to fudge. Welfare rolls are declining, which reduces the
number of recipients that states have to place in work programmes. In
addition, the states can decide what constitutes work or best effort, and
may excuse up to 20 per cent of the caseload. Furthermore, even if they
did not meet their quotas for roll-reduction, serious Federal penalties are
unlikely. The typical upshot is a great deal of myth and ceremony. While
some states have very harsh rules, there does not seem to be a race to the
bottom, at least in terms of formal rulesyet. In many states, compromises are already evident.35
But for all these familiar features, the present situation is still unprecedented. The Clinton Presidency has bequeathed three disastrous changes
to the country. The first is the erosion of benefits themselves. This had
been going on for a long time, but has now accelerated. Adjusting for
inflation, the average welfare grant has declined 45 per cent in value
since 1970.36 The second change is the conviction that welfare has finally
35
36
handler: Welfare
133
been reformed for good, since caseloads have declined so steeply, leaving those on the rolls as a stigmatized residue that cant make it.
The third has been the vast increase in privatization. There are considerable profits to be made by companies that gain control of partsor
even the wholeof public welfare. So far, privatization has mostly been
sectoralfirms taking over work programmes, daycare, child-support
collection and Medicare. Over thirty states have now contracted out
various services. Perhaps the most successful corporation in this field,
Maximus, Inc., runs welfare-to-work schemes in nearly a dozen states.37
Lockheed Martin is another such enterprise, now in charge of welfare
programmes in several other states. Promising to divert large numbers
of applicants, it recently bid for the entire welfare system of Texas.38
Both states and private contractors are increasingly reluctant either to
collect or to disclose information. Caseworkers have a great deal of discretion as to how to administer the work requirements: applicants can
easily be deflected without any record. As privatization spreads, it will
become even more difficult to find out exactly what is happening on
the ground. Firms have strong incentives to cream and manipulate the
data. States can always reduce rolls by alleging fraud, since most families supplement their income in ways they may not report. Hitherto, if
states sanctioned a family, they lost the Federal contribution to the costs
of its maintenance. Post-Clinton, the states are making money under the
block-grant formula. This kind of welfare reformwhat Michael Lipsky
has called bureaucratic disentitlement39is particularly pernicious,
because its victims increasingly have no redress. Legal Services was
never able to handle the need, and now it is badly crippled. Essentially,
the poor no longer have legal help.
Conventional debate about welfare in America is fundamentally perverted. For the real problem is quite plainly not welfare, but poverty. Yet
37
Lorraine Woellert, Maximus, Inc.: Welfare Privatizer, Business Week, 31 May
1999. If Maximus were a state, it would have the 29th largest caseload; its annual
earnings have grown to $127 million.
38
William Hartung and Jennifer Washburn, Lockheed Martin: From Warfare
to Welfare, The Nation, 2 March 1998; Adam Cohen, When Wall Street Runs
Welfare, Time, 23 March 1998. The Lockheed bid failed, in part because of a vigorous campaign against it by the public employees union.
39
Michael Lipsky, Bureaucratic Disentitlement in Social Welfare Programs, Social
Service Review, vol. 58:1, March 1984.
134
nlr 4
despite the fact that the number of those who are poor is increasing,
and their poverty is deepening, this is not a topic for mainstream discussion. Welfare was once supposed to relieve poverty. Today, it is defined
simply as the opposite of self-sufficiency. Who cares whether recipients
remain poor, if they leave welfare for employment? Most are worse off
than before, but the rolls have been reduced. As for children, why worry
about them? Let the next generation look after itself. So long as this outlook prevails, there is no prospect of addressing the root ills of American
society. Poverty is much more extensive than welfare, and serious proposals to help the poor cost money.
The most radical solutions on offer come mostly from Europe, where the
American model of job-creation through low-wage labour is not a universal ideal. But there is also a more widespread sense that technological
changes make it unlikely that the labour markets of the twenty-first
century would ever provide enough jobs anyway. Furthermore, should
the creation of lower-end jobs even be encouraged, if they involve
degrading conditions and harmful consequences for familiesabove
all, women and children? Wouldnt it be better to expand social benefits
for people who are already excluded from the labour marketinstead of
forcing single mothers into low-wage work, to reward their home-care
properly? Here the alternative becomes a universal Basic Income
unconditionally paid to all on an individual basis, without means test
or work requirements.40 For anyone who can see the poverty trap in
the lowest-paid forms of wage labour and still believes in the business
cycle, this is a powerful case. But in todays vicious political climatenot
only in the United States, but increasingly in Western Europe as well
generous transfer payments to the non-working poor, alas, are still a
pipe-dream.
This is not to say that amelioration of any kind is impossible. Not only
does America enjoy a Federal budget surplus but the states have some
$27 billion in hand, supposedly earmarked for welfare recipients and the
poor. These are circumstances which could swiftly change. But recently
issued TANF regulations now allow states to provide benefits and services to low-income working families even if they have never received
40
Phillipe Van Parijs, Competing Justifications of Basic Income in Van Parijs, ed.,
Arguing for Basic Income: Ethical Foundations for a Radical Reform, London 1992, pp.
343.
handler: Welfare
135
welfare and their incomes are above welfare eligibility level. They could
use these funds to subsidize not only a wide variety of work-related
expenses (childcare, transportation), but housing, food, education, social
services, asset formation, relocation and incentives to employers to provide on-the-job training. Since the great majority of welfare recipients
are connected to the labour market, an increase in the minimum wage
and reform of unemployment insurance must be priorities. Most jobs
are obtained through informal networks, which many welfare recipients
lack. In addition, poor single mothers often need post-employment support when they run into domestic or commuting difficulties. So there
is a compelling need for community-based, employment-related organizations to provide information, assistance, monitoring and advocacy
services for the working poor.
These are some of the things that could be done, even in the current
reactionary climate. They are universal programmes that would help
both welfare recipients and the working poor; and start to bring men
back into the discussion, which has to be done if progress is to be made
with families. But there will still be those who need more assistance.
This population is varied. Some recipients will need relatively small
amounts of training, help in networking, building self-esteem and so
forth. Others will need moderate amounts and some, perhaps people
such as Mary Ann Moore, will need considerable support. The success
of service programmes varies, of course, with the relative difficulty of
the cases they take onthe more ambitious they are, the more problematic the results. We still know very little about what works and even
less about how to replicate local experiments. People with serious problems need patience, understanding and resources. Above all, sanctions
must be avoided. They rarely change behaviour; they inflict considerable damage; and they largely serve the function of making the rest
of society feel superior and in controlthe last thing needed by poor
people who, with great difficulty, in the face of massive odds, are trying
to better their lives.
136
nlr 4