Blatherscythe said:
Con Carne said:
AjimboB said:
You have 1 child, you can get welfare.
You have another child your benefits get cut in half.
You have a 3rd child, you lose your benefits entirely.
I think it's brilliant.
Yes, it IS brilliant. The state should not allow people, who cannot afford their children, to breed.
That person will lose a good deal of support from people who have 2-3+ kids though, great idea though, I hope that person gets in and that bill is passed.
The only problem being that there's no evidence at all that family size is a product of potential welfare payment. That argument relies on stereotypes, hyperbole, and anti-welfare sentiment.
For instance <url=http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/L-welfaremothers.htm>note that:
Just one of these studies' findings is that states with higher benefits do not see higher birthrates among its welfare mothers. According to a 1992 study by Child Trends Inc., the five states with the highest birth rates among 18- and 19-year-old women - Arizona, Arkansas, Mississippi, Nevada and New Mexico - all have AFDC benefits below the national median. The four states with the lowest birth rates among 18- and 19-year-old women - Massachusetts, New Hampshire, North Dakota and Vermont - all have AFDC benefits above the national median.
In August 1993, New Jersey became the first state in the union to experiment with the "family cap," a policy of denying additional benefits to welfare mothers who have more children. Conservatives predicted the new policy would curb the rise of single motherhood and illegitimate births, even though other conservatives feared it would drive up the abortion rate.
A more serious, 5-year study is being conducted by Michael Camasso at Rutgers University. The Rutgers study is comparing two groups: mothers who would receive more benefits if they had additional children while on welfare, and those who would be denied increased payments under the family cap. In a letter published by the Washington Post, Camasso wrote: "From August 1993 through July 1994 there is not a statistically significant difference between the birth rates in the experimental and control groups."
A Harvard Law Review article <url=http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/jlg/vol291/smith.pdf>noted that:
Social science research, however, consistently concludes that women on welfare do not have additional children for the purpose of obtaining an increase in beneªts.33 Family caps, although based on the assumption that benefit levels impact the child-bearing decisions of welfare recipients, were supported by scant data in state AFDC waiver applications: ?Despite the political attractiveness of caps, there is little empirical support for expecting
them to do much beyond reducing costs. By far the dominant conclusion of the literature on welfare effects on fertility is that such influences, though present, are small and uncertain....Mothers who received AFDC for their first child were no more likely to have subsequent children than mothers who did not.
A 1996 literature review concluded that the results of twenty-three studies were mixed "but generally show[ed] no direct relationship between AFDC benefit levels (or differentials) and family size." A 1998 evaluation of the data reported ?there is considerable uncertainty" surrounding the results of the research "because a significant minority of the studies finds no effect at all, because the magnitudes of the estimated effects vary widely, and because there are puzzling and unexplained differences across the studies by race and methodological approach." A 2001 Urban Institute report, documenting attitudes toward welfare rules and
non-marital childbearing among both TANF recipients and non-recipients, discovered that women recently receiving welfare were much less likely to agree with the statement that welfare encourages young women to have children. Moreover, in reality, the median benefit increase for a new child?seventy-one dollars per month - is barely enough to cover the monthly
costs of diapers, formula, and clothing. As one welfare director stated: ""anyone who thinks that a woman goes through nine months of pregnancy, the pain of childbirth and 18 years of rearing a child for $45 more a month . . . has got to be a man.'"
Simply <url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0254/is_n4_v54/ai_17599588/pg_6/?tag=content;col1>put,
For those who believe that the linking of welfare support to the number of children promotes larger family sizes, these statistics provide substantial evidence that having children on welfare is a losing proposition.