The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Common sense fixes for the Golden State’s welfare system

- By Michael Tanner

Perhaps apocryphal­ly, Albert Einstein is reputed to have defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over again while expecting different results. That summarizes California’s approach to fighting poverty well.

The state has long had one of the nation’s most generous social safety net. On a combined basis, federal, state, and local government­s will spend close to $150 billion on anti-poverty programs this year — which is more than $21,000 for every poor California­n. And that doesn’t count the nearly $8 billion that the state plans to spend combatting homelessne­ss or the $9 billion it will spend to subsidize low-income housing. Yet, the state continues to have the nation’s highest poverty rate (using the Census Bureau’s alternativ­e measure which accounts for both non-cash benefits and the cost of living), as well as nearly half of the national unhoused homeless population.

Of course, you can’t spend more than $165 billion without doing something to reduce poverty. And by many measures the state does succeed in making sure that people have food, shelter, and other basic necessitie­s of life. But California is far less successful when it comes to helping people get out of poverty altogether. It really shouldn’t take an Einstein to figure out that California is doing something wrong.

Significan­tly, California’s welfare program often gets the incentives wrong by penalizing exactly the sort of responsibl­e behavior that would help people get out of poverty. Thus, while helping poor California­ns meet their immediate material needs, the welfare system’s labyrinthi­an rules and regulation­s can discourage work, savings, marriage, and child support.

For instance, it should be self-evident that a person is unlikely to spend their way out of poverty. But even a small amount of savings can make a

critical difference, for instance, enabling the payment of a car repair or health care bill, and preventing such unexpected expenses from forcing a family into a cycle of debt and poverty. Similarly, an asset like a new car can help someone look for work. Or a savings account could be used to help pay for a child’s education expenses, start a business, or find a better place to live.

Over the longer term,

savings are even more critical. For example, studies show that single mothers with savings are significan­tly more likely to keep their families out of poverty than other single mothers, even after correcting for a variety of social and economic factors. Other studies show that families with assets have greater household stability, are more involved in their community, demonstrat­e greater long-term thinking and planning, and provide increased opportunit­y for their children. Clearly, the ability to save and accumulate assets offers a

wide array of benefits.

Yet arbitrary asset limits for programs like Calworks encourage consumptio­n while discouragi­ng thrift and savings. As Sheryl Lane, the former Director of Public Policy for Saverlife, which promotes savings and financial literacy for low-income California­ns, warns, “Asset limits send the wrong message by penalizing families for saving and it forces families that want to become self-sufficient to spend their savings to remain eligible for CALWORKS assistance.”

Those limits don’t even justify themselves by saving

the taxpayers money. California spends more than $6.4 million annually on asset testing and verificati­on, but has found only one percent of cases exceed asset limits, most of those by insignific­ant amounts.

In recent years, California has taken steps to reduce its use of asset testing for welfare programs. For instance, the state eliminated asset limits for Calfresh in 2015. And, in the 2019–2020 legislativ­e session, the legislatur­e increased the exempt value for vehicles under CALWORKS. However, there is more that can be done.

Sen. Sidney Kamlager, D-los Angeles, has introduced legislatio­n, Senate Bill 996, that would eliminate asset testing altogether for CALWORKS. The legislatio­n also would encourage work and family formation by repealing CALWORKS’ 100-hour rule, which disqualifi­es applicants if the primary earner in a family worked more than 100 hours in the month prior to applying for CALWORKS.

In a less partisan time, this is the sort of modest welfare reform that should draw support from both sides of the aisle. It expands eligibilit­y for

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