Poorest miss out on benefits, experience more material hardship, since 1996 welfare reform
Although the federal government's 1996 reform of welfare brought some
improvements for the nation's poor, it also may have made extremely
poor Americans worse off, new research shows.
The reforms radically changed cash assistance—what most Americans
think of as 'welfare'— by imposing lifetime limits on the receipt of aid
and requiring recipients to work. About the same time, major social
policy reforms during the 1990s raised the benefits of work for
low-income families.
In the wake of these changes, millions of previous welfare
recipients, largely single mothers, entered the workforce. At the same
time, welfare has become more difficult to obtain for families at the
very bottom, who often have multiple barriers to work. As a result, in
the new welfare system, the working poor may be doing better while the
deeply poor are doing worse.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
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