The US Welfare State

 
 
 

Vocabulary

 

vast poverty rich/richer/richest
suffer existence malnutrition
crisis increase unfortunate
myth headlines manufacture (2)
ready terrible treatment (2)
refund trick (2) accounting
include payment measure (2)
receive care (2) disservice
welfare credit (3) beneficiary
refund race (2) friction (2)
effort count (3) benefits (2)
load Medicaid dependency
earn play out average (2)
annual transfer benefits (2)
rate triumph fall/fell/fallen (2)
illness across (2) percentage
receive eliminate senior (2)
census excellent relative (2)
ignore observe household
hardly dole out destitution
bureau officially air conditioning
own obvious overwhelming
aside addiction dependency
lack sneakers not to mention
air turn into essentially
have to abysmal bad/worse/worst
subsist funding good/better/best
ramp recipient reward (2)
prime break out responsibility
employ fifth (2) break/broke/broken
bottom ramp up independent (2)
wage narcotic unemployed
cut off factor in fall/fell/fallen
income check (3) respectively
price decision conclusion
rely spiritual shelter (2)
induce consign disintegration
moral fiber (2) fundamental
shelter relief (2) conclusive
require existence administer
subtle spirit (2) destructive
tragedy plummet able-bodied
failure struggle able-bodied
able EBT card comfortable
zone incentive destructive
rob (2) stagnate nether world
expect treasury growth (2)
loss potential compassion
solve transfer steal/stole/stolen
thrive survey (2) poor/poorer/poorest
subsidy

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Video

 

 
 
 
 

Transcript

 

Does America — the richest country on Earth — have a poverty problem?

Are vast numbers of people going without shelter or food?

Are poor children suffering from malnutrition?

If you read the headlines, you might believe this is true.

It’s not.

America’s poverty crisis is fiction, a myth manufactured to make us feel like we’re not doing enough to help the unfortunate.

We should feel bad about our treatment of the poor. We are doing them a terrible disservice, but not for the reason you think.

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .


 

So, where does this myth come from? It comes from an accounting trick.

Ready for this?

The official measure of poverty does not include 88% of the welfare benefits low-income families receive from the government.

Refundable tax credits for which the beneficiary receives a check from the Treasury, not counted. EBT debit cards loaded with SNAP benefits, not counted. Benefits from over a hundred other programs, including Medicaid and housing subsidies. The government doesn’t count any of this as income, even though in the real world, it obviously is.

Let’s see how this plays out. The average household in the bottom 20% of income earners receives on average annual government transfer payments of about $45,000.

When those transfer payments are counted as income, the poverty rate falls from its official level of 12% to only 3%. The percentage of children living in poverty plummets from 17% to 3%. Seniors 9% to 1%. Counting transfer payments also eliminates most of the differences in the poverty rate across races.

Census data from 2017 shows that 11% of whites and 21% of blacks are poor. But when counting all transfer payments as income received, the relative poverty numbers fall to 2% for whites and 4% for blacks.

You’ll find these numbers and much more in Phil Graham and Donald Budau’s excellent book, The Triumph of Economic Freedom. As Graham and Budro observe, the only reason the poverty rate has not fallen in over 50 years is that the Census Bureau simply ignores most welfare benefits.

What about consumption? Are poor Americans living in destitution? Hardly. The Census Bureau’s American Housing Survey shows that more than 40% of officially poor households own their own homes. Almost 90% have air conditioning. Even more have flat screen TVs and smartphones.

So, who are the truly poor in America? The homeless. And the reason for their poverty is overwhelmingly mental illness or drug addiction. Aside from this group, almost no one lacks food or shelter, not to mention cable TV and Air Jordan sneakers.

Does that mean the war on poverty has been a success? The answer, unfortunately, is no. Worse than no, it has been an abysmal failure.

Here’s why.

The increased dependency on the government has largely severed the bottom fifth of income recipients from the rewards and responsibilities of work. Yes, many people break out of this dependency and live productive independent lives. But many, too many do not.

In 1967, as funding for President Lyndon Johnson’s war on poverty began to ramp up, 68% of prime working age individuals in the lower income groups were employed.

Forty years later, that number had fallen to 36%.

Why?

Because you don’t have to work. In 2017, the bottom 20% of working age households earned only $7,000 per year in wages. In the next highest 20% of working age households, 85% of the people worked, earning a yearly average of $32,000.

But factor in government transfer payments, which are cut off when one earns above a certain amount, and these two groups make essentially the same, $49,000 and $50,000, respectively.

Two-thirds of working age Americans in the lower income group have reached the obvious conclusion.

Why work when you can be paid for not working?

But this decision not to work comes at a terrible price. President Franklin Roosevelt understood what happens when citizens come to rely on the government for their daily existence.

He said, “The lessons of history show conclusively that continued dependency upon relief induces a spiritual and moral disintegration fundamentally destructive to the national fiber. To dole out relief in this way is to administer a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit.”

This is the real tragedy of the welfare state. By providing able-bodied people with a comfortable existence without requiring effort, we are consigning them to a nether world, a gray zone of stagnation.

We are robbing them of the friction and the struggle that is necessary for growth. Think of the potential loss under a mountain of government checks.

Who knows what businesses these men and women could create, what skills they could master, what problems they could solve. Instead, they live from government transfer payment to government transfer payment. They subsist, but they do not thrive.

This is not compassion. If we really cared, we’d expect more from people so they’d expect more from themselves. By disincentivizing work, we are stealing their future. The war on poverty has turned into a war on human potential. We are all the poorer for it.

I’m Xavier DuRousseau for Prager University. Thank you for watching this video.

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Questions

 

Homeless. Everyone in the United States is rich or middle class. True or false?

Lower Class, Poor. Are most Americans poor? Are most Americans poor, working class, middle class, upper-middle class, or rich, or we don’t know? Do the vast majority of poor people in the US live in destitution? Are most poor Americans destitute?

Working Class. Does the US Government simply give cash to people in need?

Lower-Middle Class. Poor Americans live in filth and squalor. Is this right or wrong? Are poor Americans deprived of life’s necessities?

Middle Class. Does everyone agree that Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society” or “War on Poverty” was a resounding success in reducing poverty?

Upper Middle Class. “President Franklin Roosevelt said, ’The lessons of history show conclusively that continued dependency upon relief induces a spiritual and moral disintegration fundamentally destructive to the national fiber. To dole out relief in this way is to administer a narcotic, a subtle destroyer of the human spirit.’

This is the real tragedy of the welfare state. By providing able-bodied people with a comfortable existence without requiring effort, we are consigning them to a nether world, a gray zone of stagnation.

We are robbing them of the friction and the struggle that is necessary for growth.”

What does this mean? In other words . . . .

Upper Class, Rich, Wealthy. Does the presenter say that people on welfare could be cleaning bathrooms and streets, harvesting crops, and doing construction work?

Millionaire, Billionaire. According to the speaker, the government should help the poor by giving them more benefits. Is this correct or incorrect?
 
 
 
Unemployed. Do you agree or disagree with the speaker? I totally agree, I somewhat agree, I am in the middle, I agree and disagree, I disagree, I strongly disagree, it depends.

Worker, Employee. What have parents, teachers, politicians, journalists, and other authority figures said about how people should live their lives?

Self-Employed, Freelancer. Are there “poor” individuals in your community or society? Who are they? Why are they poor? How do the poor get by?

Boss, Supervisor. Are there programs, public assistance, welfare, social benefits, government benefits, charities, volunteer organizations that help the poor? Describe them.

Manager. What might happen in the future?

CEO, President, Director. What could or should people, businesses, and governments do?
 
 
 
 
 

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