Trends in the Level and Distribution of Income Support
59 Pages Posted: 9 Nov 2009 Last revised: 27 Oct 2024
Date Written: November 2009
Abstract
Means-tested and social insurance programs in the U.S. have been transformed over the last 25 years, with expansions in Medicare and Medicaid, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and Supplemental Security Income, and with contractions in Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. We examine the effect of these changes on benefits received by families. We find that transfer program expenditures in total rose from 1984 to 2004 but the increase was spread unevenly across different demographic groups and income classes. Very poor elderly, disabled, and childless families received greatly increased expenditures, mostly arising from Social Security, SSDI, SSI, and the health programs. Very poor single parent and two-parent households experienced declines in expenditures, driven largely by lower recipiency rates, benefit receipt, or both in the AFDC/TANF and Food Stamp programs. For example, AFDC-TANF participation for one-adult families with children and market income below 50 percent of the poverty line fell from 62 percent in 1984 to 24 percent in 2004. However, expenditures received by one- and two-parent households further up the income scale increased, largely because of expansions of the EITC. Thus there was a redistribution of income from the very poor to the near-poor and nonpoor for these one- and two-parent households, as well as an overall relative redistribution from them to the elderly, disabled, and childless.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Measuring the Well-Being of the Poor Using Income and Consumption
By Bruce D. Meyer and James X. Sullivan
-
The Under-Reporting of Transfers in Household Surveys: Its Nature and Consequences
By Bruce D. Meyer, Wallace Mok, ...
-
Further Results on Measuring the Well-Being of the Poor Using Income and Consumption
By Bruce D. Meyer and James X. Sullivan
-
Who Has Benefited from Economic Growth in the United States Since 1969? The Case of Children
By Christopher Jencks, Susan E. Mayer, ...
-
Five Decades of Consumption and Income Poverty
By Bruce D. Meyer and James X. Sullivan
-
Five Decades of Consumption and Income Poverty
By Bruce D. Meyer and James X. Sullivan
-
Consumption, Income, and Material Well-Being after Welfare Reform
By Bruce D. Meyer and James X. Sullivan
-
Unemployment Insurance Tax Burdens and Benefits: Funding Family Leave and Reforming the Payroll Tax
-
By Bruce D. Meyer and Robert Goerge