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Social Welfare Policymaking Chapter 18 Government in America: People, Politics, and Policy Updated with 15 th Edition Edwards/Wattenberg/Lineberry.

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Presentation on theme: "Social Welfare Policymaking Chapter 18 Government in America: People, Politics, and Policy Updated with 15 th Edition Edwards/Wattenberg/Lineberry."— Presentation transcript:

1 Social Welfare Policymaking Chapter 18 Government in America: People, Politics, and Policy Updated with 15 th Edition Edwards/Wattenberg/Lineberry

2 Social Welfare Policy We are a diverse nation with vastly different levels of economic success. Social welfare policies attempt to provide assistance and support to specific groups in society (single mothers, the elderly, the disabled, etc.) ◦Benefits can be cash or in-kind ◦Based on entitlements or means testing

3 What Is Social Policy and Why Is It So Controversial? Social welfare policies provide benefits to individuals, through: ◦Entitlement programs: government benefits that certain qualified individuals are entitled to by law, regardless of need ◦Examples: Social Security and Medicare (largest, most expensive social welfare programs in America), keep seniors out of poverty

4 Means Tested Programs ◦Means-tested programs: government programs only available to individuals below a poverty line ◦Examples: Medicaid and food stamps ◦These programs have helped raise many of the poor above the federal poverty line  Controversy stems from beliefs about the CAUSES of poverty  Welfare policy is caught between “the desire to help those who could not help themselves and, and the concern that charity would create dependency”

5 Income, Poverty, and Public Policy Who’s Getting What? ◦Income distribution: the “shares” of the national income earned by various groups; distribution of income is VASTLY unequal ◦Since the 1980s: rich get richer, poor get poorer ◦Income: amount of funds collected between any two points in time ◦Wealth: value of assets already owned ◦Wealth Inequality in America VideoWealth Inequality in America

6 Income, Poverty, and Public Policy This chart shows how much of the nation’s income is received by people within each fifth of the population. What changes have occurred since 1960?

7 Income, Poverty, and Public Policy Who’s Poor in America? ◦Poverty Line: considers what a family must spend for an “austere” standard of living; calculated by the Census Bureau ◦In 2009, 14.3% of the population (43.6 million Americans) were poor. This number is lower than it should be. Many people move in and out of poverty in a year’s time. ◦Most of the poor in the US work in low wage jobs ◦Poverty is concentrated among African Americans, Hispanics, the young, city dwellers and single mothers ◦Feminization of poverty: high rates of poverty among unmarried women, especially those with children

8 Poverty Rates for Persons with Selected Characteristics, 2008 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, “Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2009,” p. 15.

9 Income, Poverty, and Public Policy

10 What Role Does the Government Play? There are 2 ways the government can affect a person’s income ◦Through its power to TAX ◦Through its EXPENDITURE policies

11 Income, Poverty, and Public Policy What Part Does Government Play? ◦Taxation  Progressive tax: people with higher incomes pay a greater share (example – income tax)  Proportional tax: all people pay the same share of their income (example – flat rate tax)  Regressive tax: burden falls relatively more heavily on low-income groups—opposite of a progressive tax (example – sales tax)  Earned Income Tax Credit: “negative income tax” that provides income to very poor people in lieu of charging them income tax

12 Income, Poverty, and Public Policy What Part Does Government Play? ◦Government Expenditures  Transfer payments: benefits given by the government directly to individuals ◦ Some transfer benefits are actual money, such as Social Security checks, military retirement pensions and other entitlements ◦ Other transfer benefits are “in kind” benefits where recipients get a benefit without getting actual money, such as food stamps or low interest college loans

13 Major Social Welfare Programs

14 Helping the Poor? Social Policy and Poverty “Welfare” as We Knew it ◦Social Security Act of 1935—first major step by the federal government to help protect people against absolute poverty  Set up Social Security Program and AFDC (Aid to Families with Dependent Children), a national assistance program for poor children ◦President Johnson declared a “War on Poverty” and created many new social welfare programs, including food stamps.

15 LBJ and the Great Society Johnson created a number of anti-poverty programs, community development programs, Medicare, job training programs, etc Public support for programs to help the elderly is usually strong Harder to get support for programs that help the poor. Why? Johnson worked extensively with Congress to push his programs through. Good example of strong presidential leadership

16 Helping the Poor? Social Policy and Poverty “Welfare” as We Knew it (continued) ◦President Reagan cut welfare benefits and removed people from benefit rolls. ◦Conservatives argued that welfare programs discouraged the poor from solving their problems. ◦Attitudes toward welfare became “race coded,” the belief that most people on welfare were African Americans, which was not true (only 1/3).

17 Helping the Poor? Social Policy and Poverty Ending Welfare as We Knew it: The Welfare Reforms of 1996 (Clinton) ◦Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act  Each state to receive a fixed amount of money to run its own welfare programs  People on welfare would have to find work within two years.  Lifetime limit of five years placed on welfare.  AFDC changed to Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) ◦ Welfare rolls declined, even though income of TANF recipients is still low ◦ Today families receive an average of $363 per month on TANF

18 Living on Borrowed Time: Social Security The New Deal, the Elderly, and the Growth of Social Security ◦Social Security has grown rapidly since 1935, adding Medicare in 1965. ◦Employers and employees contribute to the Social Security Trust Fund—the “bank account” into which Social Security contributions are “deposited” and used to pay out eligible recipients.  The Trust Fund will soon be in the red as the ratio of workers to beneficiaries is narrowing.

19 Living on Borrowed Time: Social Security The Future of Social Security ◦The problem: number of Social Security contributors (workers) is growing slowly, while number of recipients (retired) is growing rapidly ◦At some time—currently 2038—payouts will exceed income. ◦Solutions of cutting benefits or raising taxes are hard choices.

20 Living on Borrowed Time: Social Security How George W. Bush Tried and Failed to Reform Social Security ◦Bush proposed diverting 2 percent of social security contributions to private retirement funds—private savings accounts ◦Problem: social security trust fund would run out of money very quickly as people put their money into private savings account—or, government would have to borrow trillions of dollars ◦Social security reform failed.

21 Living on Borrowed Time: Social Security Social Welfare Policy Elsewhere ◦Many industrialized nations are more generous than the U.S., but the tax rates are higher in those countries than in the U.S. ◦Other countries (especially Europe) have worked to reform their welfare programs, as their programs are in trouble, too.

22 Understanding Social Welfare Policy Social Welfare Policy and the Scope of Government ◦The growth of government has been driven by the growth of social welfare policies, which grow generation by generation. Democracy and Social Welfare ◦The U.S. has the smallest social welfare system. ◦There is considerable unequal political participation by those that use the programs.  Elderly are well-organized and influential; poor are not

23 Summary Social welfare policies include entitlement and means-tested programs. Entitlement programs affect social welfare status but are expensive. Welfare has been reformed. Is Social Security next?


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