Welfare Reform Essay

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    Welfare Reform In 1996, President Clinton signed a bill ending welfare as we know it; however, its true demise remains yet to be seen according to James Payne. In his new book, Overcoming Welfare: Expecting More From the Poor--and From Ourselves, Payne explains the problems with government operated welfare programs. The bill signed by President Clinton is not the first attempt at welfare reform. Payne argues that after more than a century of welfare

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    The Welfare Reform Act of 1996 was an attempt by the government to get people to be more efficient and less reliant on the government. There was a sort of “exchange” between the government and citizens. Citizens work and in return they receive financial assistances. This is referred to as the TANF, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families. It was supposed to motivate people to work, or that was the goal. Recipients were required to work at least 20 hours a week. This was actually successful in decreasing

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    Anericans and Hispanics. A study showed that this group are twice likely to fall below poverty line compared to their white counterparts. The call to reform the welfare system of President Clinton has been heard but though faced with numerous hurdles and bureaucracy, the welfare reform is a relative success. After rejecting the two previous reforms concocted by the Republican-controlled Congress, the House and Senate came back with a third bill that President Clinton adamantly signed even after fair

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    and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA) was one of the biggest legislation signed by Bill Clinton that focused on welfare. The main goals of this law were to lessen the dependency on federal government welfare while increasing employment and reducing poverty. The program established a 5-year lifetime time limit for welfare benefits. Because the welfare program was focused on increasing employment while decreasing poverty, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, TANF, was initiated

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    Welfare was designed to reduce poverty, yet the poverty rates have only increased. The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program (welfare) was designed to help families struggling with financial hardships for a short period of time. It is not a lifelong program like so many assume it is. President Franklin D. Roosevelt once said, “Continued dependence upon relief induces a spiritual and moral disintegration fundamentally destructive to the national fibre. To dole out relief in this way is to

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    Welfare System: In Need of Reform During the past two decades, predominantly since the mid-1990s, congress has intensely restructured the nation’s system of cash welfare assistance for low-income families. The welfare system was intended to be a safety net for those facing economic poverties in order to help workers get back on their feet. However, welfare programs seem to have spiked the unemployment percentage and increased expenditure on social welfare programs at expeditious rates. Although supporters

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    Essay Unanswered Questions about Welfare Reform

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    Unanswered Questions about Welfare Reform      Welfare is a means of financial assistant for poverty stricken individuals. Year after year presidents have attempted to reconstruct the welfare system so it does not act as a backbone for those who do not want to work, and year after year success seemed out of reach. That is, until President Bill Clinton thought he had the answer. He signed the new welfare reform act in August of 1996, vowing to “end welfare as we know it.” Terminating a 62 year-old

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    A.) Statement of problem: Welfare programs continue to be a controversial issue because Welfare programs are usually targeted for federal budget cuts. The U.S. welfare system was created to provide benefits to low-income citizen. however people tend to abuse the system which has caused stricter regulations for eligibility and use. We have to ensure that recipients use the system correctly. So therefore we can help to ensure protection over the programs that so many people use.

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    them. In today’s political scene in the US mostly only extremely staunch conservatives feel that we should offer no aid to the poor of America. So, then the argument becomes how to best help them. Welfare is widely considered to be the main way that America helps the poor. So what is welfare exactly? Welfare can be defined as aid in the form of money or necessities for those in need distributed through an agency or program. In general liberals feel that America should offer a large amount of aid and

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    1. Introduction Welfare in the United States has its roots in FDR’s Great Depression era policies of the New Deal. As part of the Social Security Act, cash transfers were made from the Federal Government to families with children and little-to-no income. In 1996 the system of welfare in the United States was drastically transformed under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act, which replaced Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) with Temporary Assistance to Needy Families

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