Transcript A Few Facts

A Few Facts
1.
Federal spending in FY 2000 and 2001 as a percent of GDP is the lowest since
1966.
2.
Federal government spending (not including social security, Medicare, and
Medicaid) is the lowest since 1962 (first year in CBO historical tables).
3.
From CBO’s “Effective Federal Tax Rates, 1979-1997”, the total effective federal
tax rate on households in the middle quintile is lower today than in any year from
1979 to the present (1979 is the first year covered by this study).
4.
The CBO study shows that in 2000 the top 1% have the highest share of pre-tax
and after-tax income since 1979 (the first year of the study).
1979
1989
1997
2000, IRS
Share of pre-tax
income
9.3
12.5
15.8
20.8
Share of aftertax income
7.5
11.4
13.6
17.8
Choices Made By Bush in 2001 and 2002
• Tax Cuts (Huge share to wealthy) was highest priority
• Partially refundable Child Tax Credit
• Some improvements in EITC
• Farm Bill (some significant improvements in Food Stamp bill)
• No increase for health coverage for working parents
• Prescription drug benefits that covered less than 25% of elderly
prescription drug costs
• Little to improve employment of non-resident fathers- more limited
child support pass through
• Not nearly as generous UI bill as in 1990s despite a more serious
recession
• Return of deficits with implications for promises made to elderly
• Truly this was the Congress of missed opportunities
Choices Made By Bush Thus Far in 2003
• An economic stimulus package of $674 ($925 billion if
interest is included) where 60 percent of direct benefit
flows to 10 percent of the population with the highest
income
• A welfare package with real cuts in child care and TANF
• No additional assistance to the 1 million unemployed
individuals who have exhausted all benefits and are still
out of work
• Cuts in housing and job training
• No fiscal relief to states despite their budgetary problems
• The return of large deficits with implications for interest
rates
Has TANF Been a Success?
•
Yes:
–
–
Employment gains
Rising income and falling poverty
•
•
Of course, poverty should go down with a strong economy
No:
–
–
–
Some families are worse off
Income gains should have been larger
Serving fewer families
•
A recent Urban Institute study shows that poverty would decline
by almost 4 million individuals if all eligibles participated in food
stamps, SSI, TANF, and EITC
AND: Many families still have not reached time limits.
PLUS: Change in families and a reduction in the teen birth rate.
What Produced Employment
Gains?
•
Strong Economy
–
–
•
Work Supports
–
–
•
$7 billion more in child care funding per year
EITC increases
TANF
–
–
•
Lower unemployment
Increase in real wages at bottom of wage distribution
Flexibility
Funding for services
Does the Administration’s TANF proposal build on this
success? No.
–
–
Funding cuts
Less flexibility
Average Income of Female-Headed Families Living with No Other Adults
by quintile, in 2001 dollars
1993 to 1995
Total Disposable Income
Quintile 1
Decile 1
Decile 2
Quintile 2
Quintile 3
Quintile 4
Quintile 5
1995 to 2000
Percent Change
2000 to 2001
13.3%
16.5%
11.7%
-3.9%
-12.3%
0.5%
-10.0%
-20.9%
-5.0%
11.2%
14.9%
12.8%
10.1%
9.9%
12.2%
14.0%
15.9%
-3.5%
0.8%
-0.6%
7.8%
Dollar Change
Quintile 1
Earnings
Means-Tested Income
Disposable Income
200
426
966
565
-1,567
-319
-216
-351
-790
Quintile 2
Earnings
Means-Tested Income
Disposable Income
420
577
1,431
4,454
-4,197
1,414
-550
-272
-545
TANF Has Not Performed Well as a Safety
Net in this Recession
• Caseload growth has been anemic
1979-1983
1989-1993
2000-2002
Average Annual Growth in Caseloads
AFDC/TANF
Food Stamps
1.1%*
5.2%
6.6%
9.4%
-5.0%
4.5%
*Affected by Reagan welfare cuts
• Need for assistance has grown
Percent of families with:
Head earnings
AFDC/TANF
Food Stamps
No earnings or TANF
Single Mothers with no other adults
1990
1993
1999
40%
35%
55%
57%
62%
34%
66%
71%
57%
18%
18%
27%
2000
45%
33%
59%
32%
2001
43%
24%
56%
39%
Looking Ahead
•
Local, state and federal governments will be starved for resources- little chance for
significant social investments
•
Provide additional monies to states to prevent cuts
•
Do not cut safety net programs; instead increase funding for TANF and child care
program
•
Improve funding for Head Start and ensure that all children have access to quality
pre-school programs
•
Ensure that all children have access to health insurance. Improve coverage for
working parents
•
Most Important Ways to Help Low-Income Families:
–
–
Implement new Food Stamp provisions in the Farm Bill
Increase participation by simplifying process and reducing hassle
•
Enact additional weeks of temporary federal UI benefits and extend these programs
until employment growth has reduced unemployment significantly
•
Provide work supports and earnings subsidies to non-custodial parents
•
Make sure that more child support actually benefits children