By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The marked decline in welfare numbers since 1996 is
heralded by many as a welfare reform success, but questions
remain about why people leave welfare and what happens to
them next. Dr.
Julie N. Zimmerman, assistant Extension professor of rural
sociology at the University of Kentucky, has been involved
with this issue for several years. In a recent Southern
Rural Development Center Information Brief, she said the
declines in recipients of Temporary Assistance to Needy
Families began before the current reform, and questions what
these falling numbers really mean. "Declining
recipiency has been held out as proof of the success of
welfare reform, but this conclusion is premature for several
reasons," Zimmerman said. Reduced
welfare numbers was just one of the goals of welfare reform.
Others include increasing the number of two-parent families
and reducing the number of out-of-wedlock births.
Additionally, national welfare rolls dropped 41 percent
between 1993 and last summer, a trend that began well before
the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunities
Reconciliation Act. In 1993,
the Southern region had 29 percent of the nation's welfare
caseload, but by 1998 these numbers had declined by 55
percent and now account for 22 percent of the nation's
total. "The
South has experienced the greatest decline in welfare
recipients," Zimmerman said. "This means the region has
changed places, moving from the region with the highest
number of welfare recipients in 1993 to the region with the
second lowest number of recipients in 1998." During
this time, Mississippi's welfare rolls dropped 71 percent,
the most in the region. "It is
not clear why the number of welfare recipients has
declined," Zimmerman said. "Evidence from state evaluations
provide a glimpse into the myriad of possible
reasons." These
include getting a job, being made ineligible by changing
requirements, children becoming too old for benefits or
marrying an employed spouse who brings sufficient income to
a household. Some leave for their own reasons and others are
forced out for noncompliance. Zimmerman
pointed out that many who leave welfare rolls because they
got a job are still at economic risk. "Since
low-skilled jobs are often the first to be cut in times of
economic uncertainty, attributing declines in recipiency to
welfare reform during a time of economic prosperity could
lull us into a false sense of success," Zimmerman said.
"Also, if about 50 percent are finding work nationwide,
what's happening to those who are not finding
work." Another
questions deals with the states which have not seen large
welfare declines. Zimmerman said these states may face
greater barriers to recipients finding some kind of
employment. States with large numbers of persistent poverty
counties do not have the same employment opportunities as
other areas have. "Some
state evaluations have found that an initial job may provide
insufficient income, but some subsequent jobs can pay better
and offer better opportunities," Zimmerman said. "However,
in rural areas there are fewer opportunities for advancement
beyond the first job that takes a person off
welfare." Dr. Bo
Beaulieu, director of the Southern Rural Development Center
headquartered at Mississippi State University, said although
the national number of welfare cases is falling, regional
rates of decline vary considerably. "The
southern and north central regions of the United States have
declines above the national average at 55 and 46 percent
respectively," Beaulieu said. "The rest of the country did
not meet the national average of 41 percent decline, with
the northeast region falling 36 percent and the western
region dropping 23 percent." Zimmerman
said these issues raise other questions that are being
studied, but research takes time. More research is now
looking at individual areas within states to learn the full
impact of welfare reform. Zimmerman is working with the
Rural Policy Research Institute to compile a database to
help locate these rural studies. "While
caseload reductions have been used to declare the success of
this massive reorganization of the social safety net, these
figures only report that the numbers are declining. They do
not tell us why it is occurring," Zimmerman said. "Without
more information on what is happening to the families and
children after they leave the system, it is premature to
declare these declines as evidence of success." More
information on this trend can be found in the Southern Rural
Development Center's January 1999 Information Brief, part of
a series on welfare reform. Released:
June 21, 1999
Community
News
Falling Welfare
Numbers Raise Many Questions
Contact: Dr. Bo Beaulieu, (662) 325-3207
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/commnews/cn99/990621bb.htm
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