1 / 48

Was Welfare Reform Successful?

Was Welfare Reform Successful?. Today ’ s Readings Sharon Parrott and Arloc Sherman, TANF AT 10
Program Results are More Mixed Than Often Understood, http://www.cbpp.org/8-17-06tanf.htm Surf around, making sure to examine the Guide to TANF Reauthorization Issues

pello
Download Presentation

Was Welfare Reform Successful?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Was Welfare Reform Successful? Today’s Readings Sharon Parrott and Arloc Sherman, TANF AT 10
Program Results are More Mixed Than Often Understood, http://www.cbpp.org/8-17-06tanf.htmSurf 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. Today’s 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 methodology can we trust? • The GoldStandard: 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

  8. Lessons from Federally Mandated Evaluations of Demonstration Projects • National Evaluation of Welfare-to-Work Strategies (NEWWS) • NEWWS sites: • Work-first: Atlanta, GA; Grand Rapids,MI; Riverside, CA; Portland, OR • Education Education: Detroit, MI; Oklahoma City,OK; Atlanta; Grand Rapids; Riverside; Columbus, OH • Participants followed for 3 to 5 years.

  9. Results of Demonstration Projectsin Four Categories • Five-Year Effects on Use of Employment-Related Services and Costs • Five-Year Effects on Economic Outcomes for Adults • Employment and Earnings • Welfare Receipt and Payments • Combined Income • The メMost Disadvantagedモ Subgroup

  10. Results of Demonstration Projectsin Four Categories, cont. • Benefit-Cost Analysis • Effects on Family Circumstances and Children’s Well-Being • For results in each category see: http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/newws/5yr-11prog01/execsum.htm

  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. Beyond the demonstration projects, 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

  14. Did Welfare ReformRestore 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

  15. Marriage and Divorce Rates, 1950-2000

  16. DID Welfare ReformReduce illegitimacy ? • Teen Births Continue Drop; Births to Unmarried Women on the Rise • Center for Disease Control and Prevention http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/ • “Births:Preliminary Data, 2005,” • National Vital Statistics Reportshttp://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr55/nvsr55_11.pdf

  17. 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.

  18. 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.htm#Figure%202

  19. DID Welfare Reform Reduce illegitimacy ?, cont. • Also see: National Healthy Marriage Resource Center • http://www.healthymarriageinfo.org/research/?d={8C515EEE-06E6-4BD4-8301-7FD852C43591}

  20. Did Welfare Reform Control Welfare Spending? Yes, and No See: Spending on Social Welfare Programs
in Rich and Poor States, Key Findings, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, August 2004 http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/social-welfare-spending04/summary.htm

  21. Source: ASPE, 2004

  22. Did PRWORA Control Welfare Spending?Per Capita Spending on AFDC/TANF, FY1977-200 Source: ASPE, 2004

  23. Control Welfare Spending?Per Capita Spending on Medicaid, FY1977-2000 Source: Source: ASPE, 2004

  24. Control Welfare Spending?Per Capita Spending on Other Services, FY1977-2000 Source: ASPE, 2004

  25. Net Change in State Spending • Per capita  in TANF = $14 • From $54 in FY 1997 to $40 in FY 2003 • Per capita  in Medicaid = $400 • From $600 in FY 1997 to $1000 in FY 2004 • Per capita  in non-health services = $88 • From $74 in FY 1997 to $162 in FY 2004 • Per capita  in Total Spending = $474 (Source: ASPE, 2004)

  26. Source for the previous 2 slides • Therese McGuire and David F. Merriman, Has welfare reform changed State Expenditure patterns?, Policy Brief #7, National Poverty Center available at http://www.npc.umich.edu/publications/policy_briefs/brief7/

  27. Control Welfare Spending? • State total spending increased in absolute and real dollars • Medicaid, and other services increased much more than TANF assistance decreased • Federal Spending increasedin absolute and real dollars • SSI and EITC ( both indexed) increased more than Food Stamps and TANF decreased • Overall increase in total (State plus Fed) welfare spending • Would the increase be larger in the absence of PRWORA?

  28. Source: ASPE, 2004

  29. Did Welfare ReformDecrease 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.

  30. National Welfare Caseloads, March 1994-September 2004 Source: U.S. HHS, Administration for Children and Families, http://www.ncsl.org/statefed/welfare/caseloadwatch.htm#overall

  31. Alternative Criteria: Work and Income,akaPersonal Responsibility • LFPR for single mothers rose from 44 to 66 percent between 1994 and 2001 (Source: Blank, 2006) • Employment rates • Rose from 62 to 73 percent, 1995-2000 • Fell to 69 percent in 2005 (Source: Parrot and Sherman, 2006)

  32. Alternative Criteria: Work and Income, cont. • Adequacy • Average incomes rose by about $5,000 • Earnings increases were larger than welfare benefits declines • Income is not adjusted for costs of working • Modest income growth over time (Source: Blank, 2006)

  33. Work and Income, cont. • Hardship? (Adequacy) • More single-mothers report not being on welfare and not working • Fewer poor children receiving cash assistance • 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.

  34. 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 • Share of the poor living in extreme poverty reached a historic high, 43 percent in 2005.

  35. Poverty reduction, cont. 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

  36. Especially for children . . . Poverty Rates Among Children Source: U.S. Census Bureau, http://www.mindfully.org/Reform/2005/37-Million-US-Poverty1oct05b.gif

  37. 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/bg1661.cfm?renderforprint=1

  38. Extreme Poverty (<50% PL ) (Source: P60-231) • Trends 1994-2005 •  Fell from 5.9 percent in 1994 to 4.5 percent in 2000 •  Rose continuously to 5.4 percent by 2004; didn’t change in 2005. • By age in 2005: • Persons 18-24 had highest rates--9.4 percent • Persons under 18 were next at 7.7 percent • By family status: • Persons in unrelated subfamilies have highest rates of extreme poverty: 25.2 percent • Children under 6 years: 8.9 percent • By race: • Blacks have highest rates (11.7 percent) followed by non-white Hispanics (8.6 percent)

  39. Extreme Poverty Rates AmongChildren by Race Source: U.S. Census Bureau, http://www.jointcenter.org/DB/printer/chilpovt.htm

  40. Alternative Criteria: Other effects • Effects on Children • child abuse—down 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

  41. What really caused the changes in work and income? • TANF 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.

  42. Limitations of reform: A conservative’s 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

  43. Limitations of reform: A liberal’s 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

  44. 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 (base year is 2005).

  45. 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. • For more information, see: http://www.cbpp.org/2-9-07tanf.htm

More Related