Was Welfare Reform Successful - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

Was Welfare Reform Successful

Description:

TANF AT 10?Program Results are More Mixed Than Often ... Riverside, CA (GAIN): Short-term educational activity and delayed entry to look for 'good' job ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:40
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: jennifer85
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Was Welfare Reform Successful


1
Was Welfare Reform Successful?
  • Todays Readings
  • TANF AT 10?Program Results are More Mixed Than
    Often Understood, Sharon Parrott and Arloc
    Sherman http//www.cbpp.org/8-17-06tanf.htm. Surf
    around, making sure to examine the Guide to TANF
    Reauthorization Issues
  • Blank, Was Welfare Reform Successful?
    Economists Voice, www.bepress.com/ev, March,
    2006.
  • DeParle, Ch 16 Boyfriends Milwaukee, Spring
    1999

2
Todays Questions
  • What criteria should be employed when evaluating
    the success of welfare reform?
  • What are the prospects for valid evaluations of
    the effects of welfare reform?
  • What methodology can we trust?
  • What do the experts say about the success of
    welfare reform?

3
What criteria should be used to evaluate welfare
reform?
  • Should we evaluate TANF in its own terms?
  • TITLE TEMPORARY ASSISTANCE FOR NEEDY FAMILIES
    (TANF) BLOCK GRANT OF THE PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY
    AND WORK OPPORTUNITY RECONCILIATION ACT OF 1996
    A bill to restore the American family, reduce
    illegitimacy, control welfare spending and reduce
    welfare dependence.

4
What criteria should be used to evaluate welfare
reform?, cont.
  • Should we ask if TANF has
  • Restored the American family?
  • Decrease divorce and cohabitation and increase
    marriage
  • Reduced illegitimacy?
  • reduce the number of children born to unmarried
    mothers
  • Controlled welfare spending?
  • Reduce the amount of money spent on welfare
  • Reduced welfare dependency?
  • Decrease the caseload
  • If it has accomplished these goals should we
    declare welfare reform a success?

5
Alternative criteria
  • Or should we also judge TANF by criteria
    developed to evaluate previous welfare programs?
  • Does the reform reduce poverty? (adequacy)
  • Does the program encourage personal
    responsibility? (work incentives)
  • Does the reform treat participants and
    non-participants fairly?
  • Does it treat persons in similar situations
    similarly? (horizontal equity)
  • Does it treat people in different situations
    differently? (vertical equity)

6
Alternative criteria, cont.
  • Does it target just the poor? (target efficiency)
  • Are the rules easily understood by all?
    (participants and tax payers)
  • Can be the programs be easily accessed by those
    eligible? (hassle factor)
  • Can the program be administered without error or
    fraud?

7
What are the prospects for valid evaluation?
  • 50 different programs in fifty different States
  • No federal funds allocated for national
    evaluations
  • States are not required to conduct TANF
    evaluations
  • Much of what we know comes from State
    experimental programs authorized by the Family
    Support Act of 1988

8
Lessons from Federally Mandated Evaluations of
Demonstration Projects
  • National Evaluation of Welfare-to-Work Strategies
    (NEWWS)
  • NEWWS sites Atlanta, GA Grand Rapids,MI
    Riverside, CA
  • Participants followed for 3 to 5 years.
  • Work-first programs increase employment and
    reduce welfare receipt relative to not having
    such a program
  • Major effect speed entry into a job
  • Increases in earnings did not offset reductions
    in case benefits and food stamps

9
Lessons from Federally Mandated Evaluations of
Demonstration Projects, cont.
  • Education-first programs
  • No difference in impacts between work-first and
    education-first programs for participants in many
    programs
  • Where differences were recorded, work-first
    outperformed education-first
  • None of the education-first programs increased
    incomes over 5 years

10
Lessons from Federally Mandated Evaluations of
Demonstration Projects, cont.
  • Mixed Approach Portland, OR and Riverside, CA
    (GAIN) Short-term educational activity and
    delayed entry to look for good job
  • Significant increases in earnings (25 to 49)
  • Significant decreases in cash assistance (15-24)
  • No increase in incomes

11
Ongoing Federally Funded Demonstration Projects
  • Federal dollars support evaluations of
    demonstration projects for specific subgroups of
    the recipients
  • The hard to employ
  • Substance abuse and/or chronic mental health
    problems
  • Disabilities
  • Victims of domestic abuse
  • Families living in rural areas

12
Ongoing Federally Funded Demonstration Projects,
cont.
  • Programs that aim directly to affect family
    formation outcomes
  • Encourage marriage between unmarried parents
  • Support to sustain marriage among low-income
    couples

13
What methodology can we trust?
  • The Gold Standard control versus treatment
    groups
  • Identify two groups of eligible persons,
    families, etc. with identical demographic and
    socioeconomic compositions
  • Subject one group to the treatment
  • Prohibit the other (control) group from
    experiencing the new rules
  • Compare the outcomes for each group through time

14
How are Conclusions Actually Drawn?
  • Spotty privately sponsored analyses
  • Evaluating Trends in
  • national data bases (CPS)
  • State/National administrative data
  • Limitations
  • Cross-sectional data--snap shots
  • Data do not reflect what happened to families
    when they left welfare

15
Did TANFRestore the American Family ?
  • National Healthy Marriage Resource Center
  • http//www.healthymarriageinfo.org/
  • (Go to Research and Trends)
  • Marriage rates
  • Attitudes toward Marriage
  • Attitudes toward Cohabitation

16
Marriage and Divorce Rates, 1950-2000
17
DID TANFReduce illegitimacy ?
  • Teen Births Continue Drop Births to Unmarried
    Women on the Rise
  • Center for Disease Control and Prevention
    http//www.cdc.gov/nchs/
  • BirthsPreliminary Data, 2005,
  • National Vital Statistics Reports
    http//www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr55/nvsr55_11
    .pdf

18
Review Ch7FamilySize.ppt
  • The total number of live births to all unmarried
    women is rising
  • The number of births to black unmarried women is
    down
  • The percentage of births to unmarried mothers is
    rising
  • The percentage babies born outside of marriage is
    rising for whites and declining for blacks
  • The percentage of low birth weight babies is
    rising slightly.

19
Hamilton BE, Ventura SJ, Martin JA, and Sutton
PD. Preliminary births for 2004. Health E-stats.
Hyattsville, MD National Center for Health
Statistics. Released October 28, 2005.
http//www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/pubd/hestats
/prelim_births/prelim_births04.htmFigure202
20
Did TANFControl Welfare Spending?Per Capita
Spending on TANF, FY1997-2003
Source Spending on Social Welfare Programs?in
Rich and Poor States, http//aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/soci
al-welfare-spending04/summary.htm
21
Source Ibid.
22
Control Welfare Spending?Per Capita Spending on
Medicaid, FY1997-2003
Source Ibid.
23
Did TANFDecrease Dependency ?
  • Welfare rolls fell by around 60 percent between
    1996 and 2000.
  • Caseloads continued to fall after 2000 as poverty
    began to rise.
  • Caseloads did not increase with recession
  • Personal responsibility
  • Employment rates for single mothers rose from 62
    in 1995 to 73 in 2000. In 2005 they had fallen
    to 69.
  • Source TANF AT 10?Program Results are More Mixed
    Than Often Understood, Sharon Parrott and Arloc
    Sherman http//www.cbpp.org/8-17-06tanf.htm.

24
National Welfare Caseloads, March 1994-September
2004
Source U.S. HHS, Administration for Children and
Families, http//www.ncsl.org/statefed/welfare/cas
eloadwatch.htmoverall
25
Alternative Criteria Work and Income
  • Adequacy
  • Average incomes rose by about 5,000
  • Earnings increases were larger than welfare
    benefits declines
  • Income is not adjusted for costs of working
    costs of working lower disposable income to
    pre-reform levels.
  • Source Blank, 2006

26
Work and Income
  • Hardship? (Adequacy)
  • More single-mothers report not being on welfare
    and not working
  • Women involuntarily terminated have lower incomes
    and worse outcomes--how are they surviving?
  • Source Parrott and Arloc Sherman, 2006
  • http//www.cbpp.org/8-17-06tanf.htm.

27
Poverty Reduction
  • Poverty fell initially
  • Poverty rates for single-mother households fell
    to historically low levels by late 1990s
  • ? Slight increase in past 4 years
  • Increases in employment greater than declines in
    poverty
  • Share of the working poor rose and is higher than
    in early 1990s

28
Poverty reduction
  • 1994 2000 2004
  • All ages
  • All races 14.5 11.3 12.7
  • Blacks 30.6 22.5 24.7
  • Hispanics 30.7 21.5 21.9
  • Under 18
  • All races 21.8 16.2 17.8
  • Blacks 43.8 31.2 33.6
  • Hispanics 41.5 28.4 28.9

29
Especially for children . . . Poverty Rates
Among Children
Source U.S. Census Bureau, http//www.mindfully.o
rg/Reform/2005/37-Million-US-Poverty1oct05b.gif
30
Poverty Rates Among Black Children, cont.
Melissa G. Pardue, Sharp Reduction in Black
Child Poverty Due to Welfare Reform, The
Heritage Foundation Backgrounder 1661, June
12,2003 http//www.heritage.org/Research/Welfare/b
g1661.cfm?renderforprint1
31
Extreme Poverty (lt50 PL ) for all persons
  • Trends 1994-2004
  • Fell from 5.9 percent in 1994 to 4.5 percent in
    2000
  • Rose continuously to 5.4 percent by 2004
  • By age in 2004
  • Persons 18-24 had highest rates--9.0 percent
  • Persons under 18 were next at 7.6 percent
  • By family status
  • Persons in unrelated subfamilies have highest
    rates of extreme poverty 26.7 percent
  • Children under 6 years 9.0 percent

32
Extreme Poverty Rates Among Children by Race
Source U.S. Census Bureau, http//www.jointcenter
.org/DB/printer/chilpovt.htm
33
Alternative Criteria Other effects
  • Effects on Children
  • child abusedown since early 1990s
  • Some positive achievement and behavioral effects
    on young children associated with use of
    center-based child care
  • Some small negative effects on adolescents
    associated with lack of parental supervision
  • Source Blank, 2006

34
What really caused the changes in work and income?
  • Work enforcement
  • Diversion effects.
  • Sanctions, time limits, messages??
  • Good economy
  • Many jobs, even for the unskilled.
  • Rising real wages.
  • New benefits
  • Especially EITC
  • a higher minimum wage (Sept. 1997)
  • Relative role of these factors is disputed.

35
Limitations of reform A conservatives agenda
  • By and large, welfare reform was a grand success
  • Finish work enforcement.
  • Recent reauthorization of TANF.
  • Keep welfare leavers at work
  • An hours threshold for EITC.
  • Raise the incomes of leavers
  • EITC, minimum wage.
  • Extend work enforcement to men
  • Using criminal justice and child support.
  • Strengthen marriage.
  • Source Larry Mead

36
Limitations of reform A liberals agenda
  • Too soon to claim success
  • Collect and analyze nuanced data on
  • Well-being of low-income families no longer on
    welfare
  • Child effects
  • Family effects
  • Determine what combination of negative and
    positive incentives work best
  • Increase child care subsidies
  • Expand health insurance for low-income working
    adults
  • Sustain safety net for those for whom employment
    is just not possible
  • Source Blank, 2006

37
Key Elements of TANF Reauthorization (Signed
into law, February 8, 2006)
  • Eliminates the separate work participation rate
    requirements for two-parent families (thus
    applying the same lower rate to all families).
  • Increases minimum state work participation rates
    from 50 for FY2006 to 70 for FY2010.
  • Revises requirements for calculation of
    participation rates and recalibration of the
    caseload reduction credit.

38
Key Elements of TANF Reauthorization Work
Requirements
  • Adds a new part C (Fatherhood Program) to promote
    responsible fatherhood.
  • Requires TANF programs to be mandatory partners
    with One-Stop Employment Training Centers created
    under the Workforce Investment Act of 1998
  • Includes 150 million to support programs
    designed to help couples form and sustain healthy
    marriages.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com