RECOMMENDED READING

Cash payments to families with children will begin this month, thanks to the Biden administrationā€™s stimulus that significantly enlarges and extends child benefits. This wonā€™t end the debate over the best way to reduce povertyā€”it will only become more pressing as the benefitā€™s one-year expiration date approaches. Is this the best way to help struggling families? Some argue we are repeating mistakes of the 1960sā€“1990s AFDC (ā€œwelfareā€) program that left many dependent on government aid, with little incentive to find work, while even some conservatives favor generous child allowances. As both sides look for a clear answer, European countries with strong welfare states provide some unexpected lessons that can point us toward bipartisan solutions.

Before the arrival of COVID-19, the U.S. was seeing growing numbers of people, especially men, dropping out of the workforce. Given the far-reaching effects of the pandemic, this will likely continue, even when labor demand is back to normal. The strong pull of streaming, video games, and social media will only make that trend worse. In this environment, one possible downside of cash payments is an additional incentive not to work.

Any program of cash payments should include a way to nudge people into work, as appropriate for individual situations. Unfortunately, as the high rates of labor force dropout in the U.S. attest, we do not have a good track record on that. The comprehensive welfare states of Western Europe, such as in Scandinavia, show a penchant for strong efforts to get people into work and off welfare. Many of these countries have generous child allowances, but underlying these generous welfare benefits is an assumption of everyoneā€™s contributions to wider society, at least to the extent able, in what can be called ā€œconditional reciprocity.ā€ The prized equality of Scandinavia, for instance, has always been accompanied by an emphasis on duty: ā€œDo your duty, claim your rights.ā€

This philosophy creates stronger pressure on people to work than is common in the American system, where the government often hesitates to tell individuals what to do. The American conception of freedom means a stronger inclination to leave each other alone. The Nordic states, however, have two faces. One is the egalitarian, open face that takes care of everyone through welfare programs. But the other is a strong pressure for people to conform, and that is part of what makes their welfare system work, instills corporate responsibility, and keeps executive compensation from getting too high.

Non-Nordic countries can also have “tight” welfare systems. Switzerland puts strong pressure on people to work, and authorities may also ask other family members to support adult individuals before welfare payments kick in, much as in some Asian countries where family expectations to support needy relatives is strong. Three years ago, the Swiss gave permission to investigators to use GPS tracking devices to go after potential welfare cheats. The Netherlands is now taking stronger measures to ensure people on welfare are attempting to work, including sanctioning them if they donā€™t dress ā€œappropriatelyā€ for work interviews. At the extreme, which I certainly wonā€™t recommend, is China, which has an extensive community surveillance system to track welfare benefits and the deservingness of those who receive them.

Admirers of these strong welfare states often fail to note their rather intrusive aspects, as they often assume that aid is usually given without conditions. Yet a study of welfare policy around the world found that job search assistance plus ā€œstrict monitoring and sanctionsā€ improved employment chances. Also, political support for welfare policies is often dependent on how much people (including welfare recipients themselves) trust that these programs arenā€™t abused. While unconditional aid would be simpler than conditional aid, a healthy social safety net requires some paternalism, much as we accept it in many other parts of our society.

A sense of reciprocity is key to making these programs work. In this sense, American Compassā€™s Oren Cass and Wells King are right to argue for policies that ā€œshould be understood not as a ā€˜child allowance,ā€™ but rather as a form of reciprocal social insuranceā€ for working people. This is crucial for maintaining political support for welfare programs.

Libertarian-leaning plans that replace social programs with unconditional cash payments suffer from this weakness. Sen. Mitt Romneyā€™s early 2021 plan, for instance, replaced programs like TANF and SNAP with cash payments. TANF includes case managers, and while SNAP does not, it has some restrictions on what kinds of products to buy (though it could be doing more to encourage healthier eating and help lower the devastating impact that COVID-19 and other diseases have on marginalized populations). A recent major study also shows that itā€™s not cash payments that make the big difference in peopleā€™s lives, but relationships, especially parental, that stimulate child learning, personality, and behaviors and provide guidance for important life decisions.

Democrats will soon try to make these temporary child tax credits permanent. As that debate heats up, we should consider whether their current design is the best way enable people to enter and succeed in the labor force and avoid the problems we saw in AFDC between the 1960s and 1990s.

In a society with more intense consumer choices and entertainment options, greater care needs to be taken to help people into the workforce and to live healthy lives. European models of social welfare are built with this in mind, and incorporate it into their systems in various ways, formal and informal. Once we lose this Scandinavian-like balance of rights and responsibilities and shift to an entitlement mentality, the welfare state becomes more precarious. Case management or mentoring programs administered by the successor to the AFDC program, TANF, or, more often, by nonprofit agencies that do relational work such as coaching and mentoring, can help get people who struggle back into the cycle of reciprocity on which all societies are built. National service programs, if done well, can help in this process. Without the sense of reciprocity and the programs that go with it, strong welfare systems are in danger of withering.

Michael Jindra
Michael Jindra is a cultural anthropologist at Boston University whose current writing centers on the relationship between lifestyle diversity and economic inequality, including on how nonprofits help the poor.
@mjindra1
Recommended Reading
Talkinā€™ (Policy) Shop: Support for Families

Oren and Chris weigh in on the ongoing fight over the Child Tax Credit and discuss more broadly the question of how conservatives should think about supporting familiesā€”without getting mired in 30-year-old fights about welfare.

Conservatives Should Embrace Child Tax Credit Expansion

Strengthening support for working families is not just a popular priority, but a conservative one.

The Successful Policy That Progressives Love To Hate

American Compass executive director Oren Cass discusses a recent report analyzing the effects of welfare reform on child poverty, and how progressives fail to understand the importance of work in designing social safety net programs.