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This report analyzes the experiences of welfare cyclers, a group
that has received relatively little attention in previous research on welfare
dynamics. For this study, cycling is defined as receipt of welfare
benefits during three or more discrete spells during a four-year observation
period. The goals of this report are to understand the incidence of cycling
and the types of families who cycle on and off the rolls, and, if possible,
to shed light onto why they repeatedly return to assistance. The report also
considers whether welfare cyclers appear to be more advantaged or more disadvantaged
than other welfare recipients in the labor market. One view of cycling is that
cyclers move on and off welfare, repeatedly, during transitional periods as
they attempt to leave welfare. Eventually, cyclers may attain stable employment
and leave assistance more permanently. An alternative view of cycling is that
cyclers may work for pay only briefly and return to welfare for longer spells
with little progress toward self-sufficiency.
To explore these issues, we compare welfare, employment, and other outcomes
for cyclers to those of two other groups within the welfare caseload: short-term
recipients and long-term recipients. For this study, a short-term recipient
is defined as someone who had one or two spells and a total of up to 24 months
of welfare receipt during the four-year (48-month) observation period. Long-term
recipients are defined as sample members with one or two spells and a total
of 25 to 48 months of welfare receipt during the observation period.
The report tracks the patterns of welfare receipt, employment, and other outcomes
of 161,007 single-parent welfare recipients, aged 18 to 59, from five MDRC studies
of welfare reform initiatives during the mid- to late 1990s. Three of these
studies are experimental (random assignment) evaluations of welfare reform initiativesConnecticut
Jobs First, Florida Family Transition Program (FTP), and Vermont Work Restructuring
Project (WRP). The other two are nonexperimental studies of the effects of welfare
reform in large urban areas: Cleveland (Cuyahoga County) and Philadelphia Urban
Change.
The period of sample intake for this study took place during 1993 through 1997
and varied in duration from one year to five years across the five sites. For
the three experimental evaluations, sample intake occurred when sample members
were randomly assigned to a program or control group. (Only program group members
are included in the sample for most analyses). For the two Urban Change sites,
the years of sample intake were chosen to maximize data availability and to
cover a similar time period as the evaluation sites. Sample intake in Cleveland
and Philadelphia took place when sample members were first recorded as receiving
a welfare payment during these years.
As a result of the sample intake procedures for these studies, about 40 percent
of the sample entered the study as new recipients, individuals who were
just beginning their first observed spell of welfare receipt. The remaining
60 percent were ongoing recipients, individuals who entered the study
in the middle of an observed spell of welfare receipt.
For each sample member in the five sites, the observation period began with
the month of sample intake and ended four years (48 months) later. For the first
members to enter the sample, most or all of the observation period took place
during the years before their state welfare agency implemented their Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) regulations in response to the Personal
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA). The rest of
the sample experienced TANF’s services, time limits on eligibility to receive
welfare benefits, and other requirements throughout all or most of the observation
period.
The findings from this report are as follows:
- Cyclers constituted a relatively small portion of the welfare caseload.
Pooled together and weighted equally by site, 8.5 percent of the sample became
welfare cyclers during the four-year observation period. About 47 percent of
sample members became short-term recipients and 45 percent became long-term
recipients. Rates of cycling ranged from 3.8 percent of sample members (in Philadelphia)
to 13.7 percent (in Florida FTP). In four sites, the incidence of cycling increased
by about 2 percentage points for a large subsample with five years of observed
data on welfare receipt (see Figure 1).
- Cyclers’ background characteristics differ from those of short-term and
long-term recipients.
Cyclers’ background characteristics suggest compelling reasons for their subsequent
pattern of welfare receipt. Among the pooled sample, the average age of cyclers
at sample intake was 28 yearsslightly more than two years younger than the
average age of short- and long-term recipients. Cyclers also tended to start
having children about a year to a year and a half earlier in their lives and
were the most likely of the three groups to be parents of a child under the
age of 6. Prior research suggests that young, single parents with young children
often have a hard time holding steady employment. Such individuals may have
difficulties sustaining employment given their family responsibilities, such
as childcare.
Cyclers appear to be less disadvantaged than long-term recipients but more
disadvantaged than short-term recipients in terms of their previous history
of employment and welfare receipt. For instance, cyclers and short-term recipients
recorded similar levels of finding employment before sample intake, but cyclers
were slightly more likely to lose their jobs. Similarly, 58 percent of those
who became cyclers during the subsequent observation period were ongoing recipients
at their time of sample intake, compared with 49 percent for short-term recipients
and 73 percent for long-term recipients.
- During the observation period, cyclers fared better in terms of employment
and welfare receipt than long-term recipients, but not as well as short-term
recipients.
On average, cyclers received 27 months of cash assistance within the four-year
observation period, compared with 12 months for short-term recipients and 40
months for long-term recipients. At the end of the observation period, about
40 percent of cyclers were receiving welfare, only 6 percentage points below
the level for long-term recipients. In comparison, almost no short-term recipient
remained on assistance in month 48.
Nearly all sample members in each group found employment during the observation
period. Over 90 percent of cyclers worked for pay during at least one quarter,
the highest incidence of employment among the three groups. However, cyclers
had somewhat greater difficulty maintaining employment than short-term recipients.
For instance, about 35 percent of short-term recipients worked during at least
three-fourths of the quarters in the observation period (an indicator of stable
employment), compared with 28 percent of cyclers and only 12 percent of long-term
recipients.
Partly as a result of their less stable employment during the observation period,
cyclers’ average total earnings of $16,885 were $8,000, or 33 percent, below
the mean for short-term recipients. On the other hand, cyclers earned nearly
$7,000 or 60 percent more than long-term recipients (see
Table 1).
Differences in job quality also contributed to this difference in total earnings.
Among 4,285 survey respondents selected from the main research sample, cyclers
who were working at the time of their interview received an average of $7.53
per hour in wages, about $0.70 less than their counterparts among short-term
recipients. Cyclers employed at interview were also much less likely than short-term
recipients to be enrolled in their employers’ medical plan. On both of these
measures of job quality, the average for cyclers only slightly exceeded the
level for long-term recipients.
Finally, cyclers demonstrated a greater propensity to combine work and welfare
than both short-term and long-term welfare recipients, but were less likely
than short-term recipients to rely on earnings alone. For example, for cyclers,
quarters with both earnings and welfare receipt accounted for just over a third
of all quarters in the observation period, compared with only 14 percent and
26 percent of quarters for short-term and long-term recipients respectively.
Short-term recipients, however, had more quarters of earnings alone, compared
with cyclers, an indication of greater self-sufficiency. Among the three groups,
long-term recipients showed the lowest overall levels of employment and most
often relied on welfare payments alone.
- On average, cyclers had less access to support (financial and otherwise)
from other adults and were more likely to have additional children during
the observation period compared with short-term recipients.
Among survey respondents, about one-fifth of cyclers reported that they were
living with a spouse or partner at the time of their interview, compared with
one-third of short-term recipients. Cyclers were similarly less likely than
short-term recipients to be living with another wage earner at the time of their
interview. Finally, a higher percentage of cyclers reported that they gave birth
to or adopted another child after sample intake. Most likely, the birth of a
child caused disruptions to the employment situation of cyclers and increased
their need for financial support, compared with short-term recipients. Results
for cyclers on these measures of household membership and support more closely
resembled those for long-term recipients.
- During an additional follow-up year, cyclers did not “catch up” to short-term
recipients in employment stability and self-sufficiency, although they continued
to fare better than long-term recipients.
About 91 percent of sample members in four sites (not Connecticut Jobs First)
had a fifth year of earnings and welfare data following sample intake. These
data were used to compare welfare and employment outcomes for sample members
who became cyclers, short-term recipients, or long-term recipients during the
observation period.
At the end of year 5, about 40 percent of each group worked for pay and the
majority of each groupeven long-term recipientsno longer received
welfare benefits. Each group demonstrated greater self-sufficiency during the
post-observation period, as evidenced by their higher rates of employment without
welfare and lower rates of combining work and welfare. Less positively, many
cyclers continued to experience unstable employment in year 5. For instance,
among cyclers who worked for pay at any time during year 5, only about 43 percent
were employed during all four quarters, an important measure of employment stability.
Furthermore, the rate for cyclers was more than 9 percentage points below the
level for short-term recipients and was no higher than that for long-term recipients.
Again, cyclers exhibited stronger attachment to the welfare system than short-term
recipients, but less attachment than long-term recipients, as represented by
the percentage that received TANF benefits in the last month of year 5. In this
month, cyclers were 17.5 percentage points more likely than short-term recipients
to be receiving cash assistance, but 8.6 percentage points less likely than
long-term recipients. In addition, nearly 30 percent of cyclers worked for pay
at the end of year 5 and did not receive welfare benefits. This average exceeded
the level for long-term recipients by 4 percentage points but was 7 percentage
points below the level for short-term recipients. Cyclers were also about four
times more likely than short-term recipients to combine work and welfare (11.8
percent to 2.9 percent) at the end of year 5and did so only slightly less
often than long-term recipients. In other words, fewer cyclers are able to sustain
themselves with employment alone.
- The incidence of cycling increased during the years following passage
of PRWORA.
In Cleveland and Philadelphia, the sites with the longest sample intake periods,
rates of cycling were about 3 percentage points higher among welfare recipients
who entered the research sample following passage of PRWORA, when compared with
welfare recipients who entered the research sample previous to its passage.
Furthermore, cyclers constituted a larger portion of the welfare caseload by
end of the 1990s than earlier in the decade. For instance, in Cleveland, cyclers
represented 18 percent of all recipients who received a welfare payment in December
1999, up from 10 percent in January 1993. A similar increase occurred in Philadelphia,
although the incidence of cycling remained below 10 percent of the caseload
at the end of the decade.
Additional, though indirect, evidence of the possible effects of PRWORA on
welfare cycling was obtained by comparing the incidence of cycling among sample
members in the three evaluation sites to those of their corresponding control
groups. (As noted above, control group members were otherwise excluded from
this analysis.) Program group members experienced welfare programs similar to
TANF, whereas control group members experienced pre-TANF programs. However,
in none of these three evaluations did the rate of cycling for the program exceed
the rate for the control group.
It should be kept in mind that in the pre-/post-PRWORA comparisons in Cleveland
and Philadelphia, members of the post-PRWORA groups entered the sample during
a much stronger labor market than their counterparts in the pre-PRWORA group.
In contrast, in the three evaluations, both program and control group members
entered the sample at the same time and experienced the same (relatively strong)
labor market. These findings suggest that PRWORA was one of several factors
related to increases in cycling rates seen in Cleveland and Philadelphia. Most
likely, the economic expansion of the late 1990s also played a role.
In summary, cyclers were shown to be a group in the middleless disadvantaged
in the labor market than long-term recipients, but less able than short-term
recipients to attain stable employment and work without welfare. Furthermore,
cyclers were the most likely to be parents of toddlers and preschoolers. However,
compared with short-term recipients, cyclers had less access to financial and
other support from a spouse or partner. For policymakers and administrators
of state and local TANF programs, these findings suggest that cyclers should
derive particular benefit from enhanced supports for work and post-employment
services intended to promote employment retention and advancement.
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