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Enhance
States' Flexibility to Reward Work and Benefit Children
Although poverty reduction was not a TANF goal in 1996, most states'
conforming legislation included earnings supplement provisions designed
to reward work and raise family income. Now the new bill is proposing
to make improving the well-being of children an addi-tional overarching
purpose of TANF. New research evidence shows that earnings supplement
programs increase employment and income and that, when the supplements
are generous, elementary school-aged children benefit (although
adolescents do not). These are the only reliable findings pointing
the way to improvements in young children's well-being, and thus
to accomplishing the Bush administration-backed reform bill's new
goal. Moreover, by tying cash payments to earnings, these programs
have cut through the dilemma that has baffled welfare policy since
the English Poor Laws: No longer do payments to poor families inevitably
mean less work effort. This development has enabled states to refocus
on welfare's original purpose - to help children - without reducing
the self-sufficiency efforts of their parents. Thus, states can
now choose between program strategies that emphasize caseload reductions
and strategies that emphasize benefits for children, without jeopardizing
the program's focus on increasing paren-tal employment.
Several aspects of the current law, however, make it difficult for
states to craft strategies that benefit children. At the heart of
the problem is the inherent conflict between earnings supplement
and time-limit policies. Time limits tell recipients to "get
a job, leave welfare, and bank your remaining months of eligibility."
Earnings supplements tell recipients to "get a job, stay on
welfare, and let welfare supplement your earnings." Implementing
the two policies together virtually guarantees that a substantial
number of people who take jobs while on welfare will unwittingly
exhaust their months of welfare eligibility.
To avoid this outcome, states have two choices. One is to use the
federally required state maintenance-of-effort dollars to create
a separate, or "segregated," state program for the working
poor. By relying on state funds instead of federal funds, the federal
time-limit clock is not ticking. The second option is to classify
earnings supplement benefits as "nonassistance," a categorization
that allows certain payments such as employer subsidies, job retention
bonuses, and work expense payments not to be considered assistance
under TANF and, thus, not to be counted against the time-limit clock.
Unfortunately, both strategies have shortcomings. The first places
the fiscal burden of paying for supplements entirely on the state.
The second exposes states to federal audits and the risk that the
federal government will not accept the states' definition of nonassistance.
Without assurance of federal TANF reimbursement for long-term earn-ings
supplement payments, states have been reluctant to choose these
options.
TANF reauthorization could end these risks either by allowing states
the option of stopping the federal time-limit clock when recipients
take full-time jobs or by expanding and clarifying the definition
of nonassistance to include ongoing cash payments or earnings supplements
made to full-time workers. The administration's proposal to clarify
what counts as nonassistance presents such an opportunity. Either
strategy would enable states to create separate programs with federal
financial participation to pay earnings supplements to the working
poor outside the welfare system, effectively resolving the inherent
message conflict that now exists between time limits and incentives,
without fear of losing federal reimbursement. In a fixed-block-grant
environment, this change would have no federal fiscal implications.
While the means appear arcane, the end is eminently clear. Message
confusion between time limits and earnings disregards undermines
both program strategies. By giving states greater latitude and the
promise of federal financial participation when they choose to run
separate programs for the working poor, time limits would continue
to apply to welfare recipients who were not working, while earnings
supplement policies could reward those who do the right thing and
take jobs. And if the resulting state programs are sufficiently
generous, available evidence suggests that better school performance
among elementary school children would result.
The income of low earners would also be bolstered by ensuring that
qualified workers receive the Food Stamp, health insurance, and
child care benefits for which they remain eligible. Congress has
built a safety net around work, but studies that have followed welfare
leavers have found that fewer than half of the low-wage workers
who qualify for these benefits receive them. Some job-takers, unaware
that they remain eligible for a range of benefits, do not stay in
contact with the welfare office after they get jobs; other recipients
are inadvertently cut off by the stringent quality-control system's
penchant for unnecessarily penalizing cases with earnings. The administration's
proposed changes to the Food Stamp Program would make it substantially
more worker-friendly; similar changes could be beneficial in the
health insurance and child care areas. To the extent that low-income
families who are not former welfare recipients obtain these work-support
benefits, inequities between this group and former welfare recipients
would diminish. Back
to summary of policy implications
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