What will the end of welfare reform mean for refugee resettlement?

A little-noticed part of the recently passed stimulus bill is the end of the historic welfare reform of the 1990s.  A major change in that reform was that states no longer received a financial incentive to increase their welfare rolls. The end of welfare reform was not debated, or even brought up as an issue. Yet these new incentives will have profound effects on the people who have for the last 13 years entered the work force rather than be lifelong dependents on the government.  Of course, they will affect the federal budget (but who’s counting?) and state budgets as well. Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation, who crafted a great deal of  the 1990s welfare reform, explains the changes in his report, Stimulus Bill Abolishes Welfare Reform and Adds New Welfare Spending:

The welfare reform of 1996 replaced the old Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) with a new program named Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF). The key to welfare reform’s reduction in dependency was the change in the funding structure of AFDC.

Under the old AFDC program, states were given more federal funds if their welfare caseloads were increased, and funds were cut whenever the state caseload fell. This structure created a strong incentive for states to swell the welfare rolls. Prior to reform, one child in seven was receiving AFDC benefits.

When welfare reform replaced the old AFDC system with TANF, this perverse financial incentive to increase dependence was eliminated. Each state was given a flat funding level that did not vary whether the state increased or decreased its caseload. In addition, states were given the goal of reducing welfare dependence (or at least of requiring welfare recipients to prepare for employment).

But the stimulus bill overturns the new structure and makes it even worse than it was before.

For the first time since 1996, the federal government would begin paying states bonuses to increase their welfare caseloads. Indeed, the new welfare system created by the stimulus bills is actually worse than the old AFDC program because it rewards the states more heavily to increase their caseloads. Under the stimulus bills, the federal government will pay 80 percent of cost for each new family that a state enrolls in welfare; this matching rate is far higher than it was under AFDC.

Rector has found a great deal more welfare spending in the bill:

…of the $816 billion in new spending and tax cuts in the House stimulus bill–32 percent or $264 billion–is new means-tested welfare spending, providing cash, food, housing, and medical care to poor and low income Americans.

But that’s not the end of it. (You didn’t think it was, did you?)

While $264 billion in new welfare spending may seem like a lot, it is only the tip of the iceberg. If the stimulus bill is enacted the real long-term increase will be far higher. This is because the stimulus bill pretends that most of its welfare benefit increases will lapse after two years. In fact, both Congress and President Obama intend for most of these increases to become permanent. The claim that Congress is temporarily increasing welfare spending for Keynesian purposes (to spark the economy by boosting consumer spending) is a red herring. The real goal is a permanent expansion of the welfare system.

He concludes by denouncing (the House and Senate versions of) the bill as

Trojan horses that deliberately exploit anxiety about the current recession to conceal their destruction of the foundation of welfare reform and a massive expansion of the welfare system….The fact that the stimulus proponents seek to conceal the bill’s massive permanent changes in welfare is a clear indication that they understand how unpopular these changes would be if the public became aware of them. Far from an exercise in “unprecedented transparency”–as President Obama claims–the stimulus bills are an example of unprecedented deception.

What will this mean for refugee resettlement? Perhaps only that the refugees living in dire poverty will be given more help. But it is more likely to have wider consequences. One is the disincentive to work that is inherent in the version of welfare now restored.  Of course, it was widely known that many welfare recipients did work while collecting welfare, and I’m sure new recipients will be able to continue this venerable tradition.

Perhaps of greater consequence, there is now an incentive for the states to increase their welfare rolls, and refugees constitute a ready-make group to be recruited. I’m not sure of the law with regard to welfare for refugees, but I would guess that under the Obama regime the broadest possible interpretation will be allowed. Will we now have another interest group — state governments — advocating greater numbers of refugees?  We’ll see.

Role-play a refugee in Davos

National Review’s Jay Nordlinger is at the World Economic Forum meeting at Davos and is in the midst of a series of informative and entertaining reports.  Here’s one of his items today:

Here is something different: a “refugee run.” The following has arrived in my inbox: 

Invitation to an event you will never forget: EXPERIENCE LIFE AS A REFUGEE IN DAVOS!

During this year’s Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum, we would like to invite you to an experience unlike any other on the agenda: an opportunity to step into the world of conflict and experience life as a refugee.

Just five minutes’ walk from the Congress Centre [the main building in town], you can enter a simulated environment that will thrust you into a war zone. You will meet a rebel attack, navigate a mine field and battle life in a refugee camp. (Spoiler alert: No harm will come to you!)

A debrief will follow in which you will discuss your experience. . . .

How bizarre. Maybe we should put on a couple of different role-playing opportunities. One could be as a refugee who comes to America thinking he is coming to the Promised Land, only to find himself abandoned by his resettlement agency, not understanding English, living in a bug-ridden, unfurnished apartment and forced to take a job far below his capacities.

Another could be role-playing the citizens of communities suddenly beset without warning by large numbers of strangers who have never lived in a civilized country, make disruptive religious demands in the workplace, wreck apartments, and crash into local drivers.

Or, to keep it to actual refugees before resettlement, what about making role-players stay in one place with nothing to do except listen to radical Muslims teach them about jihad?

There is just no limit to the frivolousness and condescension of elites, is there?

Are you feeling powerless? Maybe this is why.

Philip K. Howard has an article in the Wall Street Journal today that explains a great deal about the state of our society. It’s called “How Modern Law Makes Us Powerless.” He begins:

Calling for a “new era of responsibility” in his inaugural address, President Barack Obama reminded us that there are no limits to “what free men and women can achieve.” Indeed. America achieved greatness as the can-do society.  …

And then he comments:

But there’s a threshold problem for our new president. Americans don’t feel free to reach inside themselves and make a difference. The growth of litigation and regulation has injected a paralyzing uncertainty into everyday choices. All around us are warnings and legal risks. The modern credo is not “Yes We Can” but “No You Can’t.” Our sense of powerlessness is pervasive. Those who deal with the public are the most discouraged. Most doctors say they wouldn’t advise their children to go into medicine. Government service is seen as a bureaucratic morass, not a noble calling. Make a difference? You can’t even show basic human kindness for fear of legal action. Teachers across America are instructed never to put an arm around a crying child.

He points out that the rights that now count are the rights of those who disagree, instead of the focus on personal freedom we used to enjoy.  And here’s the nub of it, the reason I am posting the article:

Here we stand, facing the worst economy since the Great Depression, and Americans no longer feel free to do anything about it. We have lost the idea, at every level of social life, that people can grab hold of a problem and fix it. Defensiveness has swept across the country like a cold wave. We have become a culture of rule followers, trained to frame every solution in terms of existing law or possible legal risk. The person of responsibility is replaced by the person of caution. When in doubt, don’t.

If you read RRW regularly, you see how often Ann urges you to act on your beliefs. Start a blog, write something, tell somebody, organize.  But maybe you think it’s not worth it; that you are powerless.

Of course, it’s not just the explosion of litigation and regulation that makes us feel powerless. We are lied to by the media and have difficulty uncovering the truth in many matters. Our elected representatives often pay no attention to our wishes. Or they themselves have little power against the elites who control much of society. There are a thousand reasons to feel powerless. And maybe Ann can comment on how Alinsky’s rules are intended to make us feel (and be) even more powerless.

But diagnosing a problem puts you at least halfway to the cure. Read the whole article, and decide that you will not be controlled by outside forces. You can figure out in what spheres you can act, and what you want to accomplish — and then you can act.

Refugees are promoted to exalted company

The inauguration festivities included this prayer, as reported in the Christian Science Monitor:

“Bless this nation with anger: anger at discrimination at home and abroad, against refugees and immigrants, women, people of color, gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people,” said the Right Rev. Robinson at Sunday’s opening of inaugural ceremonies.

That would be V. Gene Robinson, the loudly homosexual Episcopalian bishop whose elevation to that office set off a worldwide rift in the Anglican church. He was chosen for Sunday’s event apparently to soothe the left’s anger at the choice of the Rev. Rick Warren to give the inaugural invocation. (The “V” stands for Vicki, by the way. Honest.)

If Robinson is an expert on anything, it’s on which groups are favored by the Great and Good as Official Victims. I think we knew about most of those he listed — people of color, GLBT people, women; yawn. But he put refugees first in his list, and immigrants right after. Is this an omen?  Are refugees and immigrants more worthy victims than the others? We’ll see.