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Wilson Chapter 17 Social welfare

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Title: Wilson Chapter 17 Social welfare


1
Wilson Chapter 17Social welfare
2
Who deserves to benefit?
  • Insistence that it be only those who cannot help
    themselves
  • Slow, steady change in deserving/undeserving line
  • Alternative view fair share of national income
    government redistribute money
  • Preference to give services, not money, to help
    deserving poor

3
Late arrival of welfare policy
  • Behind twenty-two European nations
  • Contrast with Great Britain in 1908
  • UK had free school meals, old age pensions,
    public supported medical care.

4
Influence of federalism
  • Federal involvement "illegal" until 1930s
  • Experiments by state governments
  • Argued against federal involvement because state
    already providing welfare
  • Lobbied for federal involvement to help states

5
Majoritarian welfare programs
  • Social Security Act of 1935
  • Great Depression of 1929 local relief
    overwhelmed
  • Elections of 1932 Democrats and FDR swept in
  • Legal and political roadblocks was direct
    welfare unconstitutional?
  • Fear of more radical movements
  • Long's "Share Our Wealth"
  • Sinclair's "End Poverty in California"
  • Townsend's old age program

6
Cabinet Committee's two-part plan
  • "Insurance" for unemployed and elderly
  • "Assistance" for dependent children, blind, aged
  • Federally funded, state-administered program
    under means test
  • Means test- eligibility test for services
    Income, number of children, age etc. .

7
Medicare Act of 1965
  • Medical benefits omitted in 1935 controversial
    but done to ensure passage
  • Opponents
  • AMA
  • House Ways and Means Committee under Wilbur Mills
  • 1964 elections Democrats' big majority altered
    Ways and Means
  • Objections anticipated in plan
  • Application only to aged, not everybody
  • Only hospital, not doctors,' bills covered
  • Broadened by Ways and Means to include Medicaid
    for poor pay doctors' bills for elderly
  • Reagan speech in 1965- Not online

8
Reforming welfare programs
  • Social Security
  • Not enough people paying into Social Security
  • Three solutions
  • Raise the retirement age to seventy, freeze the
    size of retirement benefits, raise Social
    Security taxes
  • Privatize Social Security
  • Combine first two methods and allow individual
    investment in mutual funds

9
Medicare
  • Problems huge costs and inefficient
  • Possible solutions
  • Get rid of Medicare and have doctors and
    hospitals work for government (Marx would love
    this. .)
  • Elderly take Medicare money and buy health
    insurance (Adam Smith would love this. . )
  • Delaying the inevitable
  • Clinton and surplus
  • Add new benefits
  • Bush
  • Attempted new health care measures, blocked by
    his own party politics
  • Obama and recession
  • Reform the whole system, health insurance for
    everyone.

10
Client welfare policy AFDCAid to Families with
Dependent Children
  • Scarcely noticed part of Social Security Act
  • Federal government permitted states to
  • Define need
  • Set benefit levels
  • Administer program
  • Federal government increased rule of operation
  • New programs (e.g., Food Stamps, Earned Income
    Credit, free school meals)
  • Difficult to sustain political support
  • States complained about federal regulations
  • Public opinion turned against program
  • Composition of program participants changed

11
Two kinds of welfare programs
12
Majoritarian politics
  • Almost everybody pays and benefits Examples- the
    Social Security Act and the Medicare Act
  • Programs with widely distributed benefits and
    costs
  • Beneficiaries must believe they will come out
    ahead
  • Political elites must believe in legitimacy of
    program
  • Social Security and Medicare looked like "free
    lunch"
  • Costs are hidden from regular public- looks like
    free services or free money
  • Debate over legitimacy Social Security (1935)
  • Constitution did not authorize federal welfare
    (conservatives)
  • But benefits were not really a federal
    expenditure (liberals)
  • Good politics unless cost to voters exceeds
    benefits

13
Client politics
  • Everybody pays, relatively few people benefit,
    for example, the AFDC program
  • Programs pass if cost to public not perceived as
    great and client considered deserving
  • Americans believe today that able-bodied people
    should work for welfare benefits.
  • Americans prefer service strategy to income
    strategy
  • Some critics say high welfare benefits made some
    young people go on welfare rather than seek jobs
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