By Michael Tanner
Monday, August 19, 2013
Most decisions in life are the result of a cost-benefit
analysis. When residents in Connecticut consider getting a job, they assume
they would be better off having a job than not. They’d be wrong. Because in
Connecticut, it pays not to work.
Next Monday, the Cato Institute will release a new study
looking at the state-by-state value of welfare. Nationwide, our study found
that the value of benefits for a typical recipient family ranged from a high of
$49,175 in Hawaii to a low of $16,984 in Mississippi.
In Connecticut, a mother with two children participating
in seven major welfare programs (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families,
Medicaid, food stamps, WIC, housing assistance, utility assistance and free
commodities) could receive a package of benefits worth $38,761, the fourth
highest in the nation. Only Hawaii, Massachusetts and the District of Columbia
provided more generous benefits.
When it comes to gauging the value of welfare benefits,
it is important to remember that they are not taxed, while wages are. In fact,
in some ways, the highest marginal tax rates anywhere are not for millionaires,
but for someone leaving welfare and taking a job.
Therefore, a mother with two children in Connecticut
would have to earn $21.33 per hour for her family to be better off than they
would be on welfare. That’s more than the average entry-level salary for a
teacher or secretary. In fact, it is more than 107 percent of Connecticut’s
median salary.
Let’s not forget the additional costs that come with going
to work, such as child care, transportation and clothing. Even if the final
income level remains unchanged, an individual moving from welfare to work will
perceive some form of loss: a reduction in leisure as opposed to work.
That’s not to say welfare recipients in Connecticut are
lazy — they aren’t. But they’re not stupid, either. Surveys of welfare
recipients consistently show their desire for a job. There is also evidence,
however, that many are reluctant to accept available employment opportunities.
Despite the work requirements included in the 1996 welfare reform, only 24
percent of adult welfare recipients in Connecticut are working in unsubsidized
jobs, while roughly 41 percent are involved in the broader definition of work
participation, which includes activities such as job search and training.
We shouldn’t blame welfare recipients. By not working,
they are simply responding rationally to the incentive systems our public
policy-makers have established.
Of course, not every welfare recipient meets the study’s
profile, and many who do don’t receive all the benefits listed. (On the other
hand, some receive even more.) Still, what is undeniable is that for many
recipients — particularly “long-term” dependents — welfare pays substantially
more than an entry-level job.
In a Connecticut recipient’s short-term cost-benefit
analysis, choosing welfare over work makes perfect sense. But it may hurt them
over the long term because one of the most important steps toward avoiding or
getting out of poverty is a job. In fact, just 2.6 percent of full-time workers
are poor, compared with 23.9 percent of adults who do not work.
Even though many anti-poverty activists decry low-wage
jobs, starting at a minimum wage job can be a springboard out of poverty. And
while it would be nice to raise the wages of entry-level service workers,
government has no ability to do so. (Study after study shows that mandated wage
increases result in increased unemployment for the lowest skilled workers).
If reducing welfare dependence and rewarding work is the
goal, Connecticut legislators should consider ways to shrink the gap between
the value of welfare and work by reducing current benefit levels and tightening
eligibility requirements. For its part, Congress should consider strengthening
welfare work requirements, removing exemptions and narrowing the definition of
work.
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