Thursday, November 28, 2019
Welfare State Essays - Federal Assistance In The United States
  Welfare State    The role of welfare within our society has always been controversial. This  problem emphasizes the need to understand the roles of variable factors when  pertaining to the subject of welfare within our society. The proposed analysis  will address the phenomenon of welfare assistance and several factors which may  contribute to the increase or decrease of welfare assistance to the poor in 4  ways: (1) by defining major concepts and any other concepts about which there is  likely to be misunderstanding (2) by further examining the past history  pertaining to the subject of welfare assistance within the United States; (3) by  developing the formulation of a hypothesis which will provide for an explanation  of welfare; and finally (4) determining whether or not the benefits of welfare  assistance outweigh the cost. Ultimately, the purpose of this research analysis  is to investigate variable factors that may contribute to the increase or  decrease of welfare assistance. This cost benefit analysis is an attempt to  explain the tentative assumptions of others pertaining to the subject of  welfare, in order to determine and explain the relationship of welfare to the  economic cost and benefits. Cost-Benefit Analysis Before welfare assistance can  be analyzed there is a need to define the terms that will be used. Policies like  welfare assistance are worthwhile only if the benefits to society are greater  than the costs. When choosing among a set of policies, the policy with the  greatest net benefit (benefit over cost) should be chosen. Hence, this is where  the term cost-benefit analysis comes from. Cost-benefit analysis is a technique  for determining the optimal level of an economic activity such as welfare. In  general, an activity such as welfare assistance should be expanded as long as it  leads to greater benefits than costs. In purely economic terms, does the benefit  of welfare assistance justify the costs of welfare assistance? (Mishan 13) Why    Use Cost-benefit Analysis? Since 1981, government agencies have been required to  perform cost-benefit analyses called Regulatory Impact Analyses (RIA's) for all  major regulations within the United States. Many statutes require that  cost-benefit analysis be undertaken and the results be reported to Congress (Mishan    2). Cost-benefit analysis can also be a good way to measure how effective a  policy such as welfare assistance has been, or to find ways in which a program  can be improved. But, regardless of how it is used, the preparation of a cost  benefit analysis provides a useful framework for consideration of the possible  effects of a proposed policy. Past History of Welfare Assistance One of the  first welfare programs to provide income support to the poor was a federally  backed plan called the Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) program. This legislation  was introduced with the establishment of the Social Security program during the    Great Depression. (Rowley, and Peacock 43) The ADC program which had started  nearly sixty years ago is now better known as the Aid to Families with Dependent    Children (AFDC) program, which provided a federal entitlement to economic  support for single parents with children younger than 18 who fell below a  threshold of assets and income (Rowley, and Peacock 44). Federal guidelines  allowed for each state to set its own predetermined needs standards for families  of different sizes and living locations. Both the federal government and the  states supplied funding for the AFDC program (Rowley, and Peacock 50). In 1996    Congress adopted the Temporary Aid to Needy Families (TANF) program by enacting  the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act which  ultimately changed the structure of federal financial assistance to the states  thereby abolishing the AFDC program. Another social welfare program was the    Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program. Congress established the    Supplemental Security Income program in 1972, with payments beginning in January    1974. It replaced the former Federal-State programs of Old-Age Assistance (OAA),    Aid to the Blind (AB), and Aid to the Permanently and Totally Disabled (APTD)(    Myles, and Pierson 9). An individual may have qualified for payments on the  basis of age, blindness, or disability. Any person aged 65 or older was also  eligible. President Richard Nixon enacted the Supplemental Security Income  program with the signing of the Supplemental Social Insurance Act. The benefits  under this program were originally targeted to the elderly who did not qualify  for social security and the blind and disabled whose income and assets fell  below the specified thresholds. A third major welfare assistance program is the    Medicaid program. The Medicaid program is a health care support program targeted  toward the poor. Medicaid was originally suppose to provide the same health care  to the poor as privately    
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