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Social Welfare System. ....Those goods and services that a society believes to be a collective responsibility. Although the terms convey a sense of order, social welfare in this country has been rather patchy and unplanned. Social Welfare System.
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Social Welfare System • ....Those goods and services that a society believes to be a collective responsibility. • Although the terms convey a sense of order, social welfare in this country has been rather patchy and unplanned.
Social Welfare System • The U.S. has the highest poverty rate of six industrialized countries. • The U.S. has the highest rate of young-child poverty of any Western industrialized country. • Yet, assistance programs in the U.S. have brought millions of people out of poverty and provided medical care, education, food, housing and cash assistance to the poor
The Social Welfare System • Social Security • 1935 the federal goverment took responsibility for helping needy families, the aged and the disabled with the Social Security Act. • It is paid entirely through payroll taxes; FICA. • This is your contribution to your retirement. • It is matched by your employer.
Social Security • Has been very successful antipoverty program. • 1959 - 35% of the elderly lived in poverty • 1998 - 10% live in poverty
AFDC • Aid to Families with Dependent Children • Temporary Assistance to Needy Families • TANF • Provides income to families with dependent children • Generally single parent families, but on a limited basis two parent families • About 95% of single parents are women
AFDC • Was part of the Social Security Act • Personal Responsibility and Work Act 1996 removed federal control and provided states with block grants • Conservatives saw this as a victory over an out of control welfare system; Liberals called it “legislative child abuse.”
Supplemental Security Income • Federal program for the aged, disabled, and blind, including children • created as part of the Social Security Act of 1974. • consolidated two other programs of assistance • 1997 there were 6.6 million SSI recipients. • States supplement SSI payments • 1993 Congress ordered states to be billed for administrative costs of services
General Assistance • Gives cash grants to people who do not qualify for AFDC, SSI, or Social Security • funded by states and local funds • usually benefits are very low • tends to be a catchall for individuals who are in need of assistance but do not qualify for other types of welfare services.
Food Stamps • Paid for by the U.S. Department of Agriculture • Administered by state welfare departments • Provides food for low-income people, but also provides subsidies to farmers. • Stores and banks also receive money for participating. • 1994 - 24,476,000 received food stamps
WIC • Women, Infants, and Children • provides vouchers to purchase specific foods • baby formula • milk • eggs • fruit juice • provides nutrition screening and counseling to pregnant and postpartum women • eligible if family income is below 185% of poverty line and are at nutritional risk
Medical Aid Programs • Medicare • anyone age 65 or older who was at one time covered at work by Social Security is eligible • Medicaid • only low-income people are eligible for this type of assistance
Medicare • Helps pay hospital and medical costs • Anything not paid by Medicare is often paid through supplemental insurance • as medical costs rise the elderly are paying more for their health care • There is no long-term care provision in Medicare for nursing home or in-home assistance
Medicaid • Pays for health care for: • low income families with children • low income elderly • people with disabilities • Federal government pays for 58%; states pay the rest • States administer the program set much of the policy
Medicaid • In 1997 - 39.7 million people received Medicaid • 49% of households below the poverty level received Medicaid • 51% of people who are eligible do not receive Medicaid
Many other social services • Unemployment Insurance • Earned Income Tax Credit • Personal Social Services • Day care for children of working parents • Homemaker service • Foster care • Community residences for mentally ill • Shelters and many more
Where does the money come from • Various levels of government • city • county • state • federal • Private Sources • However, in most cases agencies are mix of both public and private funds.
Where the money goes • Contracting out - state and local governments contract with private firms to do the bureaucratic work that states used to • Privatization is where the government pays corporations (primarily doctors and hospitals). • Now in: child care, ambulatory health care, substance abuse care, psychiatric, home care, and even some prisons
Changes in the economy • We have a booming economy • But, who is it booming for? • Lots of wealth created - 99% has gone to the top 20% of households • Bill Gates now owns more than 40% of American households ($40 billion) • The number of billionaires in this country has increased from 13 (1982) to 170 (1997)
Changes in the economy • Moved from an industrial economy to a service economy • Service sector jobs tend to pay less, unless in the high-technology fields • Wages have generally gone down since the 1970s • The number of people who work yet are still poor is at its highest level in decades
Changes in the economy • Children are the hardest hit by poverty, especially children of color • There has been a rise in single-parent families which are much poorer than two parent families • Women make up the majority of single parent families • Increasing poverty leads to increasing homelessness
Poverty Thresholds • Size of Family Unit Estimated Threshold • 1 person (unrelated individual)..... $8,500 • Under 65 years ................... 8,667 • 65 years and over ................ 7,991 • 2 persons .......................... $10,869 • Householder under 65 years ....... 11,214 • Householder 65 years and over .... 10,080 • 3 persons .......................... $13,290 • 4 persons .......................... 17,028 • 5 persons .......................... 20,115