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| EXAMINING WELFARE REFORM | |
August 23, 2001 |
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Four experts discuss whether recent reforms to the welfare system are working. |
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Well, it's such a vast topic, and so variable from state to state. Has welfare reform worked and what pushes you to that conclusion? |
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| Has welfare reform worked? | ||||||||||||||||||||
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In just the three-year period there was a 40 percent increase in employment by never married mothers. And third, I would cite poverty statistics -- that poverty has declined substantially. If we use a broader Census Bureau measure that includes what I would call the work support system, the earned income tax credit, food stamps, Medicaid and poverty has declined more than twice as much during the 1990s as the 1980s. So I would say welfare reform has been a success. There are problems; I assume we'll get a chance to talk about those. RAY SUAREZ: Gwendolyn Mink, has it worked ask what pushes you to that conclusion?
RAY SUAREZ: Eloise Anderson, what do you make of the last five years and what drives to you to the conclusions you've made about welfare reform?
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| Policy and people | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Peter Edelman, you were a skeptic from the get go, you left the administration.
And then the thing we don't talk about that nobody in this conversation has talked about. All of the people at the bottom who were worse off, we've studied this, we know it from the census numbers, we know that the 20 percent of single moms at the bottom are actually, with all this prosperity, worse off than they were when this started, because they've lost more in benefits than they've gained in earnings. And children have been hurt. Now, there are success stories, absolutely, and when mom is working and there's so many cases that we've heard about that I agree children are better off. But there's got to be good child care, and mom has to know, they have to have the hours of the day when mom is out there working, somebody has got to be responsible. And we're seeing some new research coming out now that says, especially for adolescents, the results have been troublesome, and we really need to pay attention to that. RAY SUAREZ: Eloise Anderson, you've been working at the state level. How do you answer those specific critiques when it comes to things like child care?
The adolescent issue is very interesting, because I think that it's not only welfare recipients' children who are adolescents who are having problems. I think it's working moms and two-parent working families; adolescents are having the same problems. Adolescence is a time in life where you need to be highly super advised. So it's not just adolescents, it's American adolescents having problems. The question is what do we want to do about that, which I think is a different issue than the welfare issue. The whole notion about low-income jobs, well, most of these women don't have skills that have higher jobs. One of the ways they will get skills is that when they realize that it's going to take effort on their part, theyre going to have to give up things in order to get those skills and then go after those skills, and that is not something government can put in there, motivation to do that, and if they're out there working every day and see other opportunities, they will take those opportunities. |
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| Climbing the ladder | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Gwendolyn Mink, will some of the people who have come off welfare, as Eloise Anderson suggests, eventually be able to climb the ladder in the economy?
RAY SUAREZ: This has put a lot of people who were home full-time back into the work force. And you must have anticipated that when the legislation was being written.
If they go to work, even at these low wage jobs that both of my colleagues here disparage, they're making at least $10,000 a year, then, if they have two children, they get $4,000 for the earned income tax credit and $2,000 from food stamps, that's $16,000, they're out of poverty, they are much better off. Those are the real two alternatives we face. We have greatly improved these mothers' chances, and millions of these mothers, maybe a million and a half have seized that opportunity and most of them are better off. Now, we do need to solve the problems that Peter Edelman and that Eloise Anderson and many others have mentioned. But we are moving in the right direction. These mothers and American society are much better off because of reform. RAY SUAREZ: Well, you noted at the outset, Peter Edelman, that the economy produced a lot of jobs -- during the period that we call the period of welfare reform. PETER EDELMAN: Yes, indeed. RAY SUAREZ: Did we pick all the low hanging fruit, or are we now getting to the toughest cases -- core cases on these case loads -- that will not be as easy to move off welfare?
I believe in a work-based system. I think we did need to reform the system we had. It was terrible. I wouldn't have reformed it in this way because it's left the possibility for really punishing people and pushing them off and not leaving them in a place where they can do the best for their families. But right now we have these hard cases to worry about and we have a recession coming on. Im very, very worried about it. This policy was, if it's a good policy, was really a good policy for prosperous times. And we have not got in place now the safety net that has to be there for when the business cycle goes the other way. That's a tremendous challenge for the society. I'm afraid we're going to see serious problems if we do not respond and help people as the recession begins to push people out of the labor force. |
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| The role of the economy | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RON HASKINS: May I make a brief comment about the economy? RAY SUAREZ: Go ahead.
So to say that hot economy sucks people off welfare and helps them establish independence is false. It did not work. The economy worked because of welfare reform and the tough reforms that Mr. Edelman is concerned about that cause people to look at their lives and say okay, Im going to try, Im going to leave welfare and achieve some of the things that Eloise Anderson pointed toward, and that people are better off financially as well. It was not the economy primarily; it was welfare reform primarily. RAY SUAREZ: Eloise Anderson, go ahead.
I will agree that there are people on this program that need a very different kind of effort than just giving them a job. But I am not sure that the welfare organizations the way they're designed across the country are prepared to deal with the multi-barrier people we have. It is a wrong system approach to that. And to talk about people needing not to work in order to be okay, I think flies in the face of everything we've learned in the disability program. RAY SUAREZ: What do you mean by multi-barrier people? ELOISE ANDERSON: You have people who have substance abuse problems, people who have mental health problems and substance abuse problems. You have people who have all kinds of other issues going on. There's one study out saying that some of the women on AFDC are depressed. One of the things we know in the disability programs and every disability program, they cry, "we want work, we want our people to work, our people do better when they work." If you're a substance abuser, you do better if you work. If you got a mental health problem, you do better if you work. If you are DD -- if you're a person who is developmentally disabled, you do better if you work. The only place in which I have ever heard that people don't say you do better is if you're a welfare recipient. They say well you got to stay home and you'll fell better. That is absolutely nonsense.
GWENDOLYN MINK: Well, one of the major things to take away from that has to do with the depth of stigma and the depth of racial discrimination in the labor market and in decision-making by employers. One of the reasons that it's harder if you're a person of color to enter into the labor market in a very stable way and to jobs that pay living wages is precisely because of discrimination. You can look at the wage gap, you can look at economic opportunities for people who want to be full-time in the labor market, and the evidence is clear. And so when we think about where to go next in welfare policy, we need to redouble our efforts at combating discrimination and making sure that all anti-discrimination laws apply. RAY SUAREZ: Guests, thank you all for joining us tonight. |
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