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America
US welfare "reform" forces more children to separate
from their parents
By Debra Watson
14 August 2002
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In the two years that followed the ending of the guaranteed
welfare benefits by the Clinton administration, one half million
more children in the US were added to the nearly two million already
living without either of their parents. By 1999 as many as 2.3
million children were in foster care or living in the homes of
grandparents, other relatives or friends, according to a recent
report by the RAND Corporation, the National Bureau of Economic
Research and the University of California.
Among low-income children the share living without a biological,
adoptive or stepparent in the household rose a full percentage
point, to 6 percent in 1999, up from 5 percent in 1997. At the
same time there was a decline in the number of single parent families.
President Bush, along with conservative and liberal politicians
alike, hailed the reduction of the number of one-parent families
as a confirmation that the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) promoted family
values. When the act comes up for reauthorization later
this year, Bush wants Congress to divert $100 million annually
from federal welfare dollars to programs designed to promote marriage.
New research, however, indicates a large part of the decrease
in the number of single-parent families was due to parents being
forced to abandon their children so they could get a job under
the welfare-to-work provisions of the new law. The decline appeared
to be the greatest among black families and accompanied reports
of record numbers of mothers entering the workforce.
By analyzing smaller demographic groups within the larger population
categories used in earlier research, researchers produced evidence
contradicting the one-sided optimism emanating from official Washington
and establishing a direct connection between welfare reform and
the breakup of families.
Recognizing that welfare reform actually began in several states
in the early 1990s, the researchers compared the family status
of children in 1989 with data compiled up to March 2001. By looking
back to years before any state had federal waivers in place, they
captured effects of welfare reform missed in earlier studies.
By 1996 half the states were employing federal waivers to dismantle
various aspects of Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC).
Federal legislation in late 1996 changed the name of the federally-funded
AFDC program to Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF).
Funds were converted to block grants to states and strict work
requirements and lifetime time limits were imposed.
In one population heavily impacted by welfare, black children
living in the central city, the longer states had experimented
with welfare reform and the more enthusiastically they enforced
the new restrictions, the greater the increase in children living
with neither parent. After taking into account other social factors,
they estimated welfare reform led to a doubling of the percentage
of black central city children living with neither parent, or
an additional 206,000 persons. The authors note it is rare
in social science research to find such large effects of policy
on behavior.
Another trend they identified indicates that welfare reform
is forcing women into marriages that are likely to break up, with
a higher incidence of separation and divorce.
One welfare official in the Bush administration cynically claimed
welfare reform was exposing unfit parents. The researchers showed,
however, that households where children went to live after being
separated from their parents were no better off financially than
the ones they left.
Extreme poverty in households with children
The economic stresses on low-income families are severe and
increased between the mid-1990s and the end of the decade, despite
the record stock market boom. In April the Urban Institute published
a report showing 300,000 more persons in single-parent families
lived in extreme poverty in 1998 than in 1996. The researchers
used a disposable income measure including wages, government benefits
and costs such as childcare.
A family of three is considered extremely poor when its income
falls below $7,135 (in 2001 dollars) or one-half the official
poverty level. Researchers acknowledged this threshold was probably
too low because they did not factor in increased out-of-pocket
costs for medical care borne by parents in low-paying jobs without
health insurance.
Julys issue of the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent
Medicine reported on a survey compiled by emergency room doctors
and others in several cities across the country. It showed increasing
numbers of younger children unable to get enough nutritious food
to stay healthy, and pointed to the effects of full and partial
sanctions imposed on families by the 1996 legislation. The new
law uses sanctions to terminate or reduce benefits for infractions
of rules including those related to welfare-to-work. It also decreases
benefits when changes in income or expenses occur.
Children three years old or younger in families whose welfare
benefits had been terminated or reduced were found to have a 50
percent higher risk of being food insecure than those in families
whose benefits had not been decreased. They also had a 30 percent
higher risk of having past hospitalizations and a 90 percent higher
risk of being hospitalized at the time of an emergency room visit.
In families where welfare benefits had been reduced but not
eliminated, young children were still almost three times more
likely to be admitted to the hospital at an emergency room visit.
These findings were true even though 80 percent of the children
were receiving supplemental food under the Womens, Infants
and Childrens (WIC) program and nearly all94 percentstill
qualified for government-subsidized medical care.
In Boston and Minneapolis researchers compared all US-born
families, including both those that had or never used welfare.
There was a 40 percent higher risk of being food insecure, a 30
percent higher risk of being underweight, and a 50 percent higher
risk of being hospitalized during an ER visit in 2001 than there
had been two years earlier.
The authors note that food stamps failed to mitigate the effects
of sanctions or of reductions in benefits even when the reduction
resulted from increases in earned income.
Recession and unemployment add to family stresses
As alarming as they seem, the previous reports reflect conditions
before the recession began in early 2001, i.e., while the economy
was still experiencing its longest expansion in postwar history.
A report from the Childrens Defense Fund, a liberal child
advocacy group, indicates the situation has worsened considerably
in the past 15 months.
There were high levels of unemployment among families with
children by the end of 2001. From late 2000 to late 2001 the number
of children with one or more unemployed parents rose by 1.2 million,
or 41 percent. The one-year surge in children with an unemployed
parent wiped out most of the reduction in children with a jobless
parent that occurred during the previous five years of economic
growth.
The percentage of single mothers employed had increased from
63 percent in late 1995 to 74 percent in late 2000, and had accounted
for more than half the increase in working parents between 1995
and 2000. But between 2000 and late 2001 the number of unemployed
single mothers rose by 25 percent, or 171,000 persons.
Thus former welfare recipients who were exploited as low-wage
labor during the boom were among the first to be thrown out of
work once the economic downturn began.
Despite the increase in need resulting from the effects of
the recession, states actually spent $546 million dollars less
on cash assistance for low-income families with children in 2001
than they did the year before. By 2001 all but one state had families
who had exceeded their time limits for TANF benefits and were
eligible to be barred from any assistance for the rest of their
lives.
See Also:
US welfare bill attacks the
poor
[13 June 2002]
Recession intensifies social
polarization in the US
[8 June 2002]
Millions of poor US families
face utility shutoffs
[12 July 2002]
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