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Bleak Prospects for Welfare Programs
| Article
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11762 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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Date : |
4 / 1987 |
2,206 Words |
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William P. O''''Hare William P. O'Hare is director of policy studies at the
Population Reference Bureau in Washington, D.C., and is the
author of Poverty in America: Trends and New Patterns,
published by the bureau in 1985. |
It seems that every recent generation of Americans has found it necessary to rethink the role that government should play in providing for the welfare of our neediest citizens. In the 1930s, such an examination led to such New Deal programs as Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, and Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC). In the 1960s the rethinking of welfare issues brought about the War on Poverty and the Great Society programs, such as Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, and Headstart. Several recent events, including a White House study of welfare reform, suggest that we are again entering a period when we will seriously reconsider the role the government should play in providing for the welfare of needy Americans.
However, unlike the New Deal and the War on Poverty - which expanded government's role in providing for the welfare of our neediest citizens - the current discussions of welfare reform are marked by very different themes. The central theme of the recent White House welfare reform study reflects the general philosophy of the Reagan administration, which has consistently tried to reduce the role of the federal government in the provision of public assistance to the poor. Among analysts and observers outside the government, major themes include increased recognition of the responsibility that the poor have to help themselves, greater appreciation for the immense diversity that exists among the poor, and the ramifications of growing poverty among children.
Although the focus of public discussions has been on the poor who receive welfare assistance, a program designed to help the working poor is likely to have a more beneficial impact on the well-being of poor Americans. For starters, there are more than nine
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