The widely reported number of Americans in poverty is 46.2
million, about 15 percent of the population. July’s Household Survey revealed
that 11.5 million were unemployed; 2.4 million will work but aren’t actively
looking; and 8.2 million wanted full-time work but could only a find part-time
job. And the Civilian Labor Force Participation rate was a very low 63.4
percent.
Yet CBS News reported that a survey of 2,000 employers
showed one-third of them said lots of jobs go unfilled for three months or
more. Many of the roughly three million unfilled jobs are in skilled trades and
pay good wages, making one wonder about the current “everybody needs a college
education” mania that now grips the country.
Another reason that good jobs go unfilled is that the
federal government’s assistance programs make it easy to not work, and frequently
pay more than some jobs.
The Cato Institute’s Michael Tanner, writing in the Los Angeles Times (Online) notes that, “Contrary to stereotypes, there is no evidence that people
on welfare are lazy. Indeed, surveys of welfare recipients consistently
show their desire for a job.” Yet the “U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services says less than 42 percent of adult welfare recipients participate
in work activities nationwide,” he continued. “Why the contradiction?”
“Perhaps it’s because, while poor people are not lazy, they
are not stupid either,” he writes. “If you pay people more not to work than
they can earn at a job, many won’t work.”
In looking at federal assistance programs, Mr. Tanner noted
that most reports on welfare focus on only a single program, the cash benefit
program, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. But he explained that “focusing
on this single program leaves the impression that welfare benefits are quite
low, providing a bare, subsistence-level income.” However, most get assistance
from more than one of the federal government’s 126
separate programs for low-income people, 72 of which provide either cash or
in-kind benefits to individuals.
In order to analyze how the
federal assistance programs affect recipients, the Cato Institute created a
hypothetical family consisting of a mother with two children, ages 1 and 4, and
then calculated the combined total of seven of the most common benefits that the
family could receive in all 50 states.
In Washington, D.C., and Hawaii, Vermont, Connecticut,
Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Maryland, New Hampshire and
California, that group of seven programs provide benefits worth more than
$35,000 a year. The value of the package in a medium-level welfare state is
$28,500.
Since welfare benefits are not taxed, to put the benefits
issue in perspective the Cato study calculated how much pretax income the
family would need to earn in order to provide the same amount as a
40-hour-per-week job. This calculation took federal and state income taxes,
earned income tax credits and the child tax credit into account.
The study found that welfare pays
more than an $8-an-hour job in 33 states and the District of Columbia, and that
in 12 states and the District of Columbia welfare pays more than a $15-an-hour
job. And, in Hawaii, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Rhode
Island, Vermont and Washington, D.C., welfare pays more than a $20-an-hour job.
Comparing the results with
specific jobs, the Cato study found that in California and 38 other states, it
pays more than the starting wage for a secretary and in the three most generous
states, welfare benefits exceed the entry-level salary for a computer
programmer.
While not every welfare
recipient gets these seven benefits, many do, and some receive even more than
the package used by the Cato study. “Still,” Mr. Tanner concludes, “what is
undeniable is that for many recipients in the most generous states —
particularly those classified as long-term recipients — welfare pays
substantially more than an entry-level job.”
Welfare is supposed to be a
temporary thing for most recipients, not a career. Yet in many cases
able-bodied men and women do not look for work because they can do better on
welfare.
Such a system discourages people
from taking responsibility for themselves and their families. It creates a large
faction of government dependents; a status that deprives people of self-respect
and the pride of accomplishment that results when one succeeds in life because
of their own efforts.
Even a low wage job is better
than welfare, as it often is only a first step to better jobs. U.S. Census
figures show that only 2.6 percent of full-time workers are poor, while 23.9
percent of adults who do not work are poor.
This country became what it once
was not by millions depending upon government to feed and clothe them, but by Americans
making themselves successful through determination and hard work. That is the
goal our welfare system must have.
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