Welfare To Workfare
Welfare is a public assistance program that
provides at least a minimum amount
of economic security to people whose
incomes are insufficient to maintain an
adequate standard of living. These
programs generally include such benefits as
financial aid to individuals,
subsidized medical care, and stamps that are used
to purchase food. The
modern U.S. welfare system dates back to the Great
Depression of the
1930’s. During the worst parts of the Depression, about
one-fourth of the
labor force was without work. More than two-thirds of all
households would
have been considered poor by today's standards. With a majority
of the
capable adult population experiencing severe financial misfortune,
many
Americans turned to the government for answers. In response, U.S.
President
Franklin D. Roosevelt led a social and economic reform movement
attacking the
Depression. Part of his newly enacted "New Deal" program
was the Social
Security Act, enacted by Congress in 1935. This act and
established a number of
social welfare programs, each designed to provide
support for different segments
of the population. Recently Roosevelt’s Social
Welfare Program has become a
topic of heated debate. Welfare has come a long
way since Roosevelt, it was once
a system that help those in need until they
could get back on their feet, now
welfare has turned into a system that feeds
money to a group of people that have
become to lazy to find work. Talk of
replacing the old system with a welfare
program that will emphasize putting
welfare recipients to work has become very
frequent. More and more stated are
now beginning to adopt a"welfare-to-work" program, leaving other states to
simply ponder about the
idea of "taking people off the system." Those in
favor of welfare reform
argue that a welfare-to-work program will cut the
amount of people on welfare
causing a surplus of funds. These people base
their idea on the overwhelming
success of those states who have already
adopted such a program. Nationwide,
welfare caseloads have declined
significantly since the passage of the Personal
Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996. In the few
months since the bill went
into effect the amount of welfare caseloads are down
by approximately 2
million. Figures also show that Alabama reduced its welfare
enrollment by
48%, and Indiana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Tennessee reduced
theirs by
49%. In Wisconsin welfare was reduced by 58% and Wyoming’s cases
dropped an
amazing 73% (Source: Dept. of Health and Human Services). According
to the
experts these successful states have a on main element in common, "a
serious
effort to move welfare recipients into jobs." In addition, welfare
reform is
saving both the state and federal governments hundreds of millions
of
dollars, while giving thousands of Americans who formerly received
government
handouts a sense of self-worth. Opponents of the bill have a much
different
view, they believe that the new program will have a negative effect
on society
and the economy. Labor unions, and others who are against the
legislation, are
concerned that welfare recipients, often available at lower
rates, will displace
current workers. Businesses pressured by the federal
government to handle their
share if the burden in ending welfare as we know
it, must struggle with the
uncertainty of employing workers who for years
were unemployed. Critics of the
bills also believe that the legislation goes
too far by cutting too much from
welfare spending and harming poor children.
They contend that the unemployed
poor need training in order to get a job,
and that a welfare-to-work program
including training will cost more money
not less. After assessing both side of
the issue it is my sincere belief that
a nationwide welfare-to-work program
would have a positive effect on American
society. This sort of program would rid
the nation of the wide array of
indolent people who live their life off
governmental funds, and produce a
remainder of workers in need of jobs. It is
obvious from the many statistics
that welfare-to-work has been a success in
decreasing the caseloads of
welfare, and in adding to the surplus of funds for
state and federal
governments, that could be used for beneficial changes such as
improvements
in roadways. Therefore I think that this program should be adopted
by all
fifty states.
Bibliography
Berkowitz, Edward D. America’s Welfare
State: From Roosevelt to Regan. The
American Moment Series. Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1991. Cloward, Richard
A., ed. Regulating the Poor The
Functions of the Public Welfare. London: Vintage
Books, 1993. NCAP on the
web. National Center for Political Analysis 17 Nov.
1999
http://www.ncpa.org/pi/welfare Pear, Robert. "10,000 Welfare
Recipients
Hired by Federal Agencies." New York Times. March 1, 1999
Policy.com. 19 May
1997. The Policy News & Information Service. 15
Nov. 1999 http://www.policy.com/issuewk
Pont, Pete du. "Uneven Welfare
Revolution Results." Washington Times. Jan
16, 1998