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Welfare for the poor vs.
welfare for the rich
Ask those on welfare how
reform is working
By Jean Rosenkranz
As welfare reauthorization works its way through
Congress, the first-hand witnesses to welfare reform are conspicuously
absent. If President Bush and Congress really want to know what
has worked and what hasn’t worked in the current Temporary Assistance
to Needy Families (TANF) program, why not ask its recipients?
Those who laud the success of welfare reform base
their claim on the 62 percent drop in case-loads since 1996.
They fail to mention that poverty, however, has decreased only
by about two percentage points. Reduced case-loads matter little
if poor people are still unable to feed their children, pay
their bills and meet their basic needs.
Let’s ask the 40 percent of former recipients
who now have neither jobs nor TANF benefits about the success
of the program. Ten percent of that group are now homeless.
Those who max out of their 60-month lifetime limit are permanently
barred from any future welfare benefits, including the children
who comprise 75 percent of all welfare recipients. Let’s ask
the 60 percent of former recipients who are now employed about
the success of the program. The average wage of the “successful”
60 percent is under $7 per hour — a wage that comes nowhere
near raising them to the self-sufficiency standards set by their
respective states. Let’s also ask the 1,352 South Dakota welfare
parents (the majority of whom are mothers) struggling to hold
their families together on an average monthly TANF payment of
$325. That payment computes to $3.85 per hour for 20 hours and
$2.56 per hour for 30 hours of work or community service hours
required of TANF recipients.
If the work requirement is increased to 40 hours
in the welfare reauthorization bill that becomes law, then these
parents will have the “dignity and self-worth” of working for
$1.92 an hour. I note a Rapid City Journal editorial that termed
the TANF payment a “handout.” This $325 “handout” must pay for
utilities, rent (or partial rent in the case of rent subsidy),
clothing, school supplies, hair cuts, laundry, personal hygiene
items, gasoline, car insurance, car maintenance (and often a
car payment or other previously incurred debts). It also must
cover non-food items not eligible for food stamps as well as
food when the average food stamp allowance of 77 cents a meal
doesn’t quite stretch a full month.
We would be hard-pressed to find Americans who
would refer to tax deductions for mortgage interest, capital
gains, taxes and pension contributions, or to Social Security,
government retirement benefits, farm price supports and veterans
benefits as handouts. It seems that middle-class subsidies are
respectable; lower-class subsidies are handouts. If welfare
reform has been such a success, why does the US Conference of
Mayors and the National Coalition for the Homeless report significant
increases in emergency food assistance requests and emergency
shelter requests in 2001 at 23 percent and 13 percent, respectively?
Why do we have a higher rate of childhood poverty in the United
States than any other industrialized nation?
Source: Rapid City Journal
Corporate taxes are welfare
for the wealthy
A surge in corporate tax welfare outlays could
drive corporate income taxes down to their lowest level since
the early 1980’s—when Reaganomics ruled the roost — and the
second-lowest level in at least six decades, reports Citizens
for Tax Justice in a recent report. New corporate tax breaks
in President Bush’s so-called “stimulus” package means the average
taxpayer must make up for more $170 billion in each of the next
two years.
General Electric, America’s most profitable corporation,
reported $50.8 billion in US profits over the past five years,
but paid only 11.5 percent of that in corporate taxes. Corporate
tax welfare has been growing at a steadily increasing rate,
the reports claimed, citing tax write-offs for stock options,
congressional indifference to offshore corporate tax shelters
and other tax breaks. The report said such benefits allow many
companies to earn billions in profits, yet pay little or nothing
in federal income taxes.
General Motors drove away with a fat wallet, as
well. The firm paid no taxes in three of the past five years,
despite $12.5 billion in US profits; GM’s tax rate for the past
three years was a negative 1.3 percent.
The Rich Get Richer…
Over the past 20 years, the income gap between
the wealthy families and low-and middle-income families in the
US rose to historic highs, despite sustained periods of economic
growth in the 1980s and 90s, according to the AFL-CIO magazine
America@Work.
New York saw the biggest increase in income inequality
over that time—real income for the bottom fifth of families
fell $800. The average income for the top one-fifth increased
by $56,800.
Both the Economic Policy Institute and the Center
on Budget Policy and Priorities have studied the income imbalance.
For a copy of their study, Pulling Apart, A State-by-State Analysis
of Income Trends, visit www.epinet.org or www.cbpp.org.
Estate Tax Repeal Defeated
Last week the US Senate refused to permanently
repeal the federal estate tax. If this bill had passed it would
have only benefited the richest 2% of Americans, and negatively
impacted the rest of the country.
Senator Phil Gramm, the Texas Republican who sponsored
the legislation and is not running for another term amid the
embarrassment of his wife’s involvement in the Enron debacle,
complained that he feared the tax will go into effect again
in 2011. Under the $1.35 trillion tax cut that President Bush
signed into law a year ago the estate tax is to be phased out
entirely by 2010, but a “sunset clause” effective in May 2011
will restore the estate tax to the regulations in effect in
May 2001.
The bulk of these wealth accumulations are from
investments such as stocks, bonds and real estate. Without the
estate tax, these gains would never be taxed at all, since income
tax forgives those deferred taxes at death. Why should a form
of income that primarily goes to the rich be exempt from any
taxation at all? The so-called “death tax” will have no effect
on 98% of Americans, and half of all estate taxes are paid by
the richest 0.1% of Americans. These are not the people who
need a helping hand from the government and other taxpayers.
In addition to benefiting only a few of the richest
families in America, estate tax repeal would have serious economic
consequences for the rest of us. This is money that will be
sorely needed to pay for improving education, access to health
care, highways, as well as to secure the future of programs
such Social Security and Medicare. The obvious impact of estate
tax repeal therefore would be either a crushing increase in
the tax burden borne by middle and low income Americans, or
extreme cutbacks in government services, not to mention fiscal
chaos at the federal level.
Source: International Association of Machinists
and Aerospace Workers (IAM)
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