Texas, TANF`s 2004 Lone St r State
Transcription
Texas, TANF`s 2004 Lone St r State
American Institute Features of Full Employment Institute Mission The Institute’s goal is full employment - universal access to jobs with career potential for all who can work, especially those who are receiving public assistance as a substitute for the opportunities and rewards of paid work. Consulting The Institute offers consulting to any state that wishes to implement a Full Employment Program. Consulting services include: program design, training workshops and establishment of performance criteria. Contact Us THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE F O R F U L L E M P LOY M E N T 2636 Biehn Street, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 800-562-7752 w w w. f u l l e m p l oy m e n t . o r g S T E P S T O E M P L O Y M E N T For Participants • Immediate placement in unsubsidized jobs, or temporarily subsidized, training-oriented jobs for those unable to get unsubsidized employment. Wage subsidies are paid from the pool of public assistance benefits. • A ladder of job opportunities, with rising spendable income at each step. • Guaranteed support services throughout the transition to self-sufficiency. For Employers • A larger workforce from which to recruit workers. • The chance to try out new workers in new jobs at little or no wage cost. • The opportunity to contribute to reducing the public assistance burden, and provide the unemployed with the many benefits that only employment provides. For the State • A stronger state economy. • Happier, more productive citizens. • Reduced costs of welfare and other related social costs of unemployment and dependency. P R O S P E R I T Y & S U C C E S S S T E P S T O A B L E O F 1-2 Texas, TANF’s PAID THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR FULL EMPLOYMENT P.O. Box 1329 Klamath Falls, OR 97601 P R O S P E R I T Y & S U C C E S S 3 Reduce Unemployment Through Auto Ownership Lessons for the United States N 6 Social Security T Questions & Answers S alone. It truly has lived up to its motto as the “Lone (shining) Star” in sufficiency and in assisting recipients find work and jobs. t Texas’ welfare reform performance has been quite mixed in the last 10 years. In January 1993, AFDC caseload stood at 278,146. At that time, one in every 22 Texans received a welfare check. Texas began instituting several welfare reform initiatives in the mid-90s and these, E T When it comes to TANF performance in the last year, Texas stands TANF. The state has made incredible strides recently in increasing self- 4-5 European Unemployment: N 2004 Texas, TANF’s 2004 Lone St★r State 2004 Lone Star State O KLAMATH FALLS, OR PERMIT NO.304 E M P L O Y M E N T Summer T C NONPROFIT U.S. POSTAGE for Full Employment combined with the implementation of TANF in 1997, resulted in significant caseload 7 Outdated Ideas Have Made Social Security Unfair to Working Couples reduction. By July 1999, TANF caseload had been reduced to 106,142, a decrease of over 62%. At that point, Texas was one of the top TANF performers in the country. However, as was typical of a number of states at the end of the 90s, caseload began trending upward. By the end of 2001, TANF caseload had increased to over 138,000—a What is Full Employment? 30% increase in a little over two years! One of the key problems with Texas’ reform efforts was the inability Full Employment is a welfare, unemployment, and food stamp benefit replacement concept that moves public assistance recipients into the active workforce by converting public assistance benefits to wage subsidies for transitional, training oriented jobs, predominantly in the private sector. 2 6 3 6 B i e h n of the state to move TANF recipients to work. Bureaucratic tension between the Department of Human Services (DHS) and the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) contributed to the problem. But this was all to change. Last year, Larry Temple took over the reigns as Executive Director of S t r e e t continued on page 2 K l a m a t h F a l l s , O R 9 7 6 0 1 8 0 0 - 5 6 2 - 7 7 5 2 Texas… continued... TWC. Larry, who as Deputy Executive Director of TWC, had begun to implement sweeping reforms of the employment programs of the commission, worked hard to strengthen performance accountability of local workforce boards and instituted innovative policies and procedures to attach unemployed Texans to work quickly. Working closely with Jim Hine, the new Outdated Ideas Have Made Social Security Unfair to Today’s Working Couples commissioner of DHS, Larry began to focus on TANF, implementing policies to insure full engagement and mandatory work after job search. In addition, UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE Texas has also made great first strides to improve its unemployment insurance program. In May, the US Department of Labor held a national conference on claimant reemployment and highlighted the work of Texas. Initiatives include: the state implemented full-check sanctions of non-participation in required same total monthly income of $3,000. However in the Smith house- work activities. Require work and true work activities, and clients become motivated to get jobs, become self-sufficient, and leave welfare behind. And the results? Incredible! Mandatory for work TANF caseload dropped ★ all staff working with unemployment claimants make at least one customer call each week (nearly 1,000 calls) from 55,000 to 40,000 between July 2003 and February 2004, a drop of over ★ minimum work search requires three activities per week with the option for local workforce boards to increase the requirement vated to get jobs, become self-sufficient, and leave welfare behind. 26% in less than eight months. Just as impressive, the number of TANF clients in work components increased by 8% simultaneously. Does this sound familiar? Require work and true work activities, and clients become moti- hold only Mr. Smith works while in the Green household both Mr. and Mrs. Green work with Mr. Green earning $2,000 per month and Mrs. Green $1,000. Since both couples have the same household income, and both pay the same amount in payroll taxes, wouldn’t you think that THE SMITHS at retirement they would receive the same Social Security benefits? No. At retirement, Mr. Smith would be eligible for a monthly benefit of around $1,300 and Mrs. Smith a spousal benefit of around $650, for a In addition, while sanction rates prior to the implementation of full-check sanction averaged 23,050 in fiscal year 2003, once TANF clients realized that total of $1,950. By contrast, Mr. Green would be eligible for a monthly Texas was serious about work, the sanction rate fell to 4,400 by February 2004. Contrary to the often-voiced but wrong-headed concerns of poverty ★ regional performance goals include market penetration of services to employers (job orders as a percent of total hires), repeat customers and job opening fill rate Consider two couples, the Smiths and the Greens. Both have the benefit of around $1,000 based on his earnings and Mrs. Green a bene- THE GREENS advocates and some gullible legislators that serious sanctions for non-performance will “leave families on the streets,” data shows that full-check sanctions actually reduce the numbers of those sanctioned, and usually does so dramati- fit of $650 based on her earnings, for a total of only $1,650 per month. Social Security’s outdated benefit structure means cally. A serious full-check sanction policy motivates clients to find work or participate in work activities that will lead to timely and beneficial employ- that two families can pay the exact same amount in ment. Look for Texas to be a model state for unemployment claims in years to come. While some states are beginning to re-invigorate their TANF programs, Texas’ is leading the way with some amazing results. The secret? To paraphrase Lyle Lovett’s ode to Texas: “You may not be from Texas, but Texas wants you (to work) anyway.” 2 taxes yet receive very different benefits. That’s not fair. ★ v i s i t u s o n l i n e a t : w w w. f u l l e m p l o y m e n t . o r g v i s i t u s o n l i n e a t : w w w. f u l l e m p l o y m e n t . o r g 7 Q&A Reduce Unemployment Through Auto Ownership Questions & Answers What is Social Security? Social Security provides retirement, disability, and survivors insurance to American workers, who pay for this out of a specific tax on their wages - the FICA tax. Employers also support social security by matching employee contributions. The tax is levied on the first $87,900 of a workers earnings for a combined worker/employer contribution of up to $10,900 per year. It is the largest government program in the world. Nearly a quarter of every dollar collected by the tax man goes to pay Social Security. How does Social Security work? It is a pay-as-you-go system. This means that taxes from today’s workers pay benefits for today’s retirees. Your payroll taxes aren’t invested in an account for the future. Each generation must support the generation that came before it. So what is the problem? Today there are fewer workers supporting more retirees. When Social Security was created, having more workers than retirees wasn’t a problem. For example, in 1950 we had 16 workers for every retired person. But, our senior citizen population has grown while the number of our workers has gotten smaller. So today there are around three workers for each person receiving Social Security, and when people born in the 1960s retire, there will be just two workers to support their retirement. So there are fewer workers to pay for current retirees. What does this mean for the system? Soon the amount of benefits promised to retirees is going to be more than workers’ payroll taxes can support. Today Social Security is collecting more money than it needs to pay benefits, but by 2018 it will begin running a deficit—collecting less in taxes than it pays out in benefits. 6 Won’t the trust fund help pay benefits and put off the need for tax increases or benefit cuts? Not really. The trust fund consists of nothing but IOUs that the government has written to itself. And when Uncle Sam goes to repay those IOUs, you know who pays the bill: we do. In order to repay those IOUs, the government will have to either raise taxes or cut programs. What’s more, even if the trust fund were real, it would only last until 2042. Is there more to the problem? Yes, Social Security is unfair to certain workers. It’s unfair to single workers and families where both spouses work; they receive little from Social Security’s spousal benefits. It’s also unfair to those with short life expectancies who don’t live long enough to collect the retirement benefits they’ve paid for. It’s unfair to younger workers, who will pay an eighth of their wages all their lives into a program that won’t be able to pay them back. Plus all workers are denied a true legal right to their benefits. The United States Supreme Court found that workers have no legal right to a benefit from Social Security. That’s not fair to anyone who has paid into the system for years. So what can we do to fix Social Security for the future? 1. We could raise taxes. But we’ve done that 30 times before and Social Security is still going broke. Social Security is already the biggest tax that most workers pay, but to keep the system afloat payroll taxes will have to rise even higher-to 20 percent of each worker’s wages. And that’s before income taxes, or Medicare taxes, or state and local taxes. Is this what we want for our kids and grandkids? 2. We could cut benefits. We’ve tried that, too. But Social Security already leaves millions of seniors in poverty. Do we want to make that even worse? 3. What about personal retirement accounts? Workers could invest a portion of payroll taxes in an account, similar to an IRA or 401(k). Their employer could continue to pay the matching portion in order to continue funding the transition between the old system and the new system. How would Personal Retirement Accounts work? As a worker, you could choose to deposit your Social Security taxes in a personal retirement account. These accounts would hold simple, broadly diversified investments: stocks and bonds. Personal accounts would build value over time. At retirement, the annual income from your investment would pay you a monthly benefit, instead of being reinvested each year. The investments themselves would be owned by each worker and could provide an additional source of funds and be given to the workers’ chosen beneficiary upon death. But how would Personal Retirement Accounts help Social Security? It’s simple: every dollar of retirement benefits paid from a personal account is a dollar the traditional system doesn’t have to pay. Accounts cost more in the short term since we have to build up account balances while still paying benefits to current retirees, but when workers with accounts begin to retire, the pressure on Social Security is reduced. How would reforms affect my grandparents? The first rule of Social Security reform: we cannot take away grandma or grandpa’s check. We must guarantee full benefits to those who are currently retired and to those who are near retirement. v i s i t u s o n l i n e a t : w w w. c h o o s e y o u r f u t u r e . c o m By John A. Charles i In December 2003, Oregon had an unemployment rate of 7 percent, third-highest in the country. What can be done to improve this dismal ranking? One new idea is to get transitdependent job-seekers into a set of private wheels. Automobiles have become critical for commuters because most jobs are not in downtown centers. As economists at Metro noted recently, “The trend in employment growth shows that more and more jobs are located in adjacent or neighboring counties as compared to the region’s central county. Between 1970 and 1997, Multnomah County’s share of regional jobs fell from 67% to 47%.” Job dispersal trends are not a problem for many households that can and do choose to move away from central cities. The vast majority of suburbanites own cars. For the poor, however, job dispersal poses a major employment barrier. Nationally, three-fourths of welfare recipients live in central cities or rural areas, while two-thirds of new jobs are located in the suburbs. Those jobs may not be far away in terms of geography (frequently 515 miles), but they are so inaccessible by public transit that they may as well be on the moon. “Car ownership improved the likelihood of being employed by 80 percent.” This problem has gained the interest of scholars and a number of studies now show a stunning relationship between car ownership and employment. Kerri Sullivan of Portland State University recently examined the effects of car ownership on employment and wages for adults without a high school diploma in Portland. Ms. Sullivan found that, “Car ownership improved the likelihood of being employed by 80 percent. The effect on average weekly wages was approximately $275, and the effect of weeks worked was approximately 8.5 weeks.” Her work showed that auto ownership was much more important than education. In fact, the study found that a high school diploma/GED played no significant role in explaining differences in employment rates. Steve Raphael of University of California-Berkeley looked at how car ownership might lower the unemployment rate gap between whites and minorities. He concluded that, “Raising minority carownership rates to the white car-ownership rate would eliminate 45 percent of the black-white employment rate differential and 17 percent of the comparable Latinowhite differential.” One would think that in light of these and other similar studies, Oregon policymakers would begin developing strategies to promote auto ownership. Yet public officials have spent the better part of the past decade waging a cultural war on cars. Portland officials in particular have attacked motorists with a vengeance. The city’s anti-mobility policies have included parking surcharges to pay for the Portland streetcar, parking restrictions at new highdensity projects, prohibitions on parking lots near light rail stations and downsizing of Portland roads in order to create bike lanes. At the same time, the region has squandered billions of dollars on fixed rail transit, which is irrelevant to the urban poor seeking work in the suburbs. Rail is primarily used by affluent commuters who already own a car. This creates something of a reverse Robin Hood effect, in which poor people are taxed to supply train rides for the rich. v i s i t u s o n l i n e a t : w w w. f u l l e m p l o y m e n t . o r g A better solution has been initiated by the Metropolitan Family Services (MFS) through a new program called Ways to Work. This program provides loans for low-income parents at risk of losing their jobs due to unexpected expenses related to transportation. Most of the applicants will be single, working mothers with dependent children. MFS is partnering with Albina Community Bank, which will provide in-kind services for loan processing. Initial grant funds have come from the US Department of Transportation, Meyer Memorial Trust ($120,000 three year grant) and The Oregon Community Foundation ($30,000). These are impressive numbers for a small non-profit but they are dwarfed by public expenditures for light rail. TriMet spent about $325 million to build the North Interstate light rail line, which will serve no purpose other than replacing existing heavily-used bus service. For less than the cost of one mile of train track ($58 million), we could have purchased serviceable used cars for 10,000 transitdependent residents and still had $8 million left over to help with insurance and operating costs. For poor families, this would probably have been the single most empowering thing anyone could have done for them. Oregon’s apparent transit goal is to provide expensive public transit to virtually everyone who needs it. That goal should be changed. We should try and get as many people as possible to become car owners and make transit an amenity, not a necessity. This would dramatically lower the cost of transit while improving the quality of life for Oregon’s poorest families. John Charles is senior policy analyst at Cascade Policy Institute. This article is reprinted with permission by Cascade Policy Institute, Portland, Oregon. 3 William B. Conerly, Ph.D. one country with shorter duration does not have to remain unemployed Unemployment averaged 8.8% in Europe last year, compared to to receive this benefit. labor market here in the states in the last few years, but put this into perspective: Over the last 12 years, America’s worst unemployment rate was better than Europe’s best unemployment rate. i In the recent economic downturn, Americans have been concerned with the length of time it has taken Country Average duration of unemployment (months) 10 ers are entitled to a lump sum from Europe is a great place to visit—but don’t try to find a job there. 8 6 4 A second factor in Europe’s high 2 unemployment rates is the long period 0 of time for which benefits are paid. Europe U.S. 12 than ours. In Mexico, dismissed worktheir former employer, but the worker 6.1% in the United States. We have been disappointed with a weak Unemployment replacement rates rise. Note also the percent European Unemployment: Lessons for the United States impetus to find another job falls as 1991 1996 2001 source: OECD Unemployment insurance benefits in the U.S. typically are exhausted after Europeans dislike layoffs, and they the unemployed to obtain work and six months. However, a number of make it very costly for companies to low levels of active intervention to One is the more generous unemploy- European countries pay over 40% of dismiss workers. The result is actually increase the ability and willingness of ment insurance benefits offered on the previous wage in the second and third harmful to the unemployed. Because it the unemployed to work.” Continent. The “replacement rate” is year of unemployment. A few coun- is so expensive for companies to termi- America can take some lessons unemployed people to find new work. Australia.............................7.1 the portion of previous income tries keep the benefits flowing even nate an employee, they are very hesi- from the European experience. Although our own performance is less Canada...............................4.3 replaced by unemployment insurance into the fourth and fifth years of tant to hire one. In contrast, American Unemployment insurance benefits benefits. A study by the Organization unemployment. companies will test the market by must be accompanied by a strong expanding their work forces. If the work-search expectation. Rapid reem- than we could—and should—strive for, it’s better than Europe by a country kilometer. The table to the right Switzerland ......................14.0 Czech Republic ................20.3 for Economic Cooperation and Also hurting European workers is Development (OECD) found that in wage inflexibility. In the U.S., wage expansion doesn’t work out, employees ployment is best for the unemployed shows how long people spent looking Spain................................19.0 1995, replacement rates in the U.S. growth is depressed in recessions. will be let go. It sounds cold and person, and best for the economy as a for work in different countries in Finland ............................10.5 averaged 25% to 29%. (Statutory Because wage inflation has slowed, the heartless, but it has resulted in stronger whole. The worst case scenario would 2002. (2003 data are not available for France ..............................12.8 formulas in the U.S. often provide for number of workers hired increases. employment growth in the U.S. than be for states to increase unemployment all countries; in the U.S., average dura- Hungary...........................15.8 about 50% replacement, but ceilings Wages tend to be more rigid in in Europe. benefits while reducing the expectation on benefits cause the replacement rate Europe, often set by union bargaining to be much lower for high-income with an entire industry. As a result, factor? Economist Stephen Nickell has workers.) In comparison, a number of wages are not lower when labor is in surveyed the research on European European countries offer much higher surplus, limiting the demand for labor. unemployment. His top concern: tion rose to 4.4 months.) What’s wrong with Europe? Why should unemployed people living in such civilized countries as France or Switzerland take so long to find work? There are a number of reasons for Europe’s disappointing performance. 4 Mexico ...............................1.9 Norway ..............................4.0 Poland..............................15.5 Which is quantitatively the greatest that recipients go out and find work. *William B. Conerly is a consulting economist in Portland, Oregon, whose clients include the Slovak Republic ...............16.5 benefits: 51% of former earnings in United States......................3.8 Belgium, 71% in Denmark, 58% in unemployment is complete without are allowed to run on indefinitely, He is also a senior fellow at the National Center France, 70% in Switzerland. The mention of employment protection. combined with little or no pressure on for Policy Analysis. Finally, no discussion of European “generous unemployment benefits that American Institute for Full Employment. 5 William B. Conerly, Ph.D. one country with shorter duration does not have to remain unemployed Unemployment averaged 8.8% in Europe last year, compared to to receive this benefit. labor market here in the states in the last few years, but put this into perspective: Over the last 12 years, America’s worst unemployment rate was better than Europe’s best unemployment rate. i In the recent economic downturn, Americans have been concerned with the length of time it has taken Country Average duration of unemployment (months) 10 ers are entitled to a lump sum from Europe is a great place to visit—but don’t try to find a job there. 8 6 4 A second factor in Europe’s high 2 unemployment rates is the long period 0 of time for which benefits are paid. Europe U.S. 12 than ours. In Mexico, dismissed worktheir former employer, but the worker 6.1% in the United States. We have been disappointed with a weak Unemployment replacement rates rise. Note also the percent European Unemployment: Lessons for the United States impetus to find another job falls as 1991 1996 2001 source: OECD Unemployment insurance benefits in the U.S. typically are exhausted after Europeans dislike layoffs, and they the unemployed to obtain work and six months. However, a number of make it very costly for companies to low levels of active intervention to One is the more generous unemploy- European countries pay over 40% of dismiss workers. The result is actually increase the ability and willingness of ment insurance benefits offered on the previous wage in the second and third harmful to the unemployed. Because it the unemployed to work.” Continent. The “replacement rate” is year of unemployment. A few coun- is so expensive for companies to termi- America can take some lessons unemployed people to find new work. Australia.............................7.1 the portion of previous income tries keep the benefits flowing even nate an employee, they are very hesi- from the European experience. Although our own performance is less Canada...............................4.3 replaced by unemployment insurance into the fourth and fifth years of tant to hire one. In contrast, American Unemployment insurance benefits benefits. A study by the Organization unemployment. companies will test the market by must be accompanied by a strong expanding their work forces. If the work-search expectation. Rapid reem- than we could—and should—strive for, it’s better than Europe by a country kilometer. The table to the right Switzerland ......................14.0 Czech Republic ................20.3 for Economic Cooperation and Also hurting European workers is Development (OECD) found that in wage inflexibility. In the U.S., wage expansion doesn’t work out, employees ployment is best for the unemployed shows how long people spent looking Spain................................19.0 1995, replacement rates in the U.S. growth is depressed in recessions. will be let go. It sounds cold and person, and best for the economy as a for work in different countries in Finland ............................10.5 averaged 25% to 29%. (Statutory Because wage inflation has slowed, the heartless, but it has resulted in stronger whole. The worst case scenario would 2002. (2003 data are not available for France ..............................12.8 formulas in the U.S. often provide for number of workers hired increases. employment growth in the U.S. than be for states to increase unemployment all countries; in the U.S., average dura- Hungary...........................15.8 about 50% replacement, but ceilings Wages tend to be more rigid in in Europe. benefits while reducing the expectation on benefits cause the replacement rate Europe, often set by union bargaining to be much lower for high-income with an entire industry. As a result, factor? Economist Stephen Nickell has workers.) In comparison, a number of wages are not lower when labor is in surveyed the research on European European countries offer much higher surplus, limiting the demand for labor. unemployment. His top concern: tion rose to 4.4 months.) What’s wrong with Europe? Why should unemployed people living in such civilized countries as France or Switzerland take so long to find work? There are a number of reasons for Europe’s disappointing performance. 4 Mexico ...............................1.9 Norway ..............................4.0 Poland..............................15.5 Which is quantitatively the greatest that recipients go out and find work. *William B. Conerly is a consulting economist in Portland, Oregon, whose clients include the Slovak Republic ...............16.5 benefits: 51% of former earnings in United States......................3.8 Belgium, 71% in Denmark, 58% in unemployment is complete without are allowed to run on indefinitely, He is also a senior fellow at the National Center France, 70% in Switzerland. The mention of employment protection. combined with little or no pressure on for Policy Analysis. Finally, no discussion of European “generous unemployment benefits that American Institute for Full Employment. 5 Q&A Reduce Unemployment Through Auto Ownership Questions & Answers What is Social Security? Social Security provides retirement, disability, and survivors insurance to American workers, who pay for this out of a specific tax on their wages - the FICA tax. Employers also support social security by matching employee contributions. The tax is levied on the first $87,900 of a workers earnings for a combined worker/employer contribution of up to $10,900 per year. It is the largest government program in the world. Nearly a quarter of every dollar collected by the tax man goes to pay Social Security. How does Social Security work? It is a pay-as-you-go system. This means that taxes from today’s workers pay benefits for today’s retirees. Your payroll taxes aren’t invested in an account for the future. Each generation must support the generation that came before it. So what is the problem? Today there are fewer workers supporting more retirees. When Social Security was created, having more workers than retirees wasn’t a problem. For example, in 1950 we had 16 workers for every retired person. But, our senior citizen population has grown while the number of our workers has gotten smaller. So today there are around three workers for each person receiving Social Security, and when people born in the 1960s retire, there will be just two workers to support their retirement. So there are fewer workers to pay for current retirees. What does this mean for the system? Soon the amount of benefits promised to retirees is going to be more than workers’ payroll taxes can support. Today Social Security is collecting more money than it needs to pay benefits, but by 2018 it will begin running a deficit—collecting less in taxes than it pays out in benefits. 6 Won’t the trust fund help pay benefits and put off the need for tax increases or benefit cuts? Not really. The trust fund consists of nothing but IOUs that the government has written to itself. And when Uncle Sam goes to repay those IOUs, you know who pays the bill: we do. In order to repay those IOUs, the government will have to either raise taxes or cut programs. What’s more, even if the trust fund were real, it would only last until 2042. Is there more to the problem? Yes, Social Security is unfair to certain workers. It’s unfair to single workers and families where both spouses work; they receive little from Social Security’s spousal benefits. It’s also unfair to those with short life expectancies who don’t live long enough to collect the retirement benefits they’ve paid for. It’s unfair to younger workers, who will pay an eighth of their wages all their lives into a program that won’t be able to pay them back. Plus all workers are denied a true legal right to their benefits. The United States Supreme Court found that workers have no legal right to a benefit from Social Security. That’s not fair to anyone who has paid into the system for years. So what can we do to fix Social Security for the future? 1. We could raise taxes. But we’ve done that 30 times before and Social Security is still going broke. Social Security is already the biggest tax that most workers pay, but to keep the system afloat payroll taxes will have to rise even higher-to 20 percent of each worker’s wages. And that’s before income taxes, or Medicare taxes, or state and local taxes. Is this what we want for our kids and grandkids? 2. We could cut benefits. We’ve tried that, too. But Social Security already leaves millions of seniors in poverty. Do we want to make that even worse? 3. What about personal retirement accounts? Workers could invest a portion of payroll taxes in an account, similar to an IRA or 401(k). Their employer could continue to pay the matching portion in order to continue funding the transition between the old system and the new system. How would Personal Retirement Accounts work? As a worker, you could choose to deposit your Social Security taxes in a personal retirement account. These accounts would hold simple, broadly diversified investments: stocks and bonds. Personal accounts would build value over time. At retirement, the annual income from your investment would pay you a monthly benefit, instead of being reinvested each year. The investments themselves would be owned by each worker and could provide an additional source of funds and be given to the workers’ chosen beneficiary upon death. But how would Personal Retirement Accounts help Social Security? It’s simple: every dollar of retirement benefits paid from a personal account is a dollar the traditional system doesn’t have to pay. Accounts cost more in the short term since we have to build up account balances while still paying benefits to current retirees, but when workers with accounts begin to retire, the pressure on Social Security is reduced. How would reforms affect my grandparents? The first rule of Social Security reform: we cannot take away grandma or grandpa’s check. We must guarantee full benefits to those who are currently retired and to those who are near retirement. v i s i t u s o n l i n e a t : w w w. c h o o s e y o u r f u t u r e . c o m By John A. Charles i In December 2003, Oregon had an unemployment rate of 7 percent, third-highest in the country. What can be done to improve this dismal ranking? One new idea is to get transitdependent job-seekers into a set of private wheels. Automobiles have become critical for commuters because most jobs are not in downtown centers. As economists at Metro noted recently, “The trend in employment growth shows that more and more jobs are located in adjacent or neighboring counties as compared to the region’s central county. Between 1970 and 1997, Multnomah County’s share of regional jobs fell from 67% to 47%.” Job dispersal trends are not a problem for many households that can and do choose to move away from central cities. The vast majority of suburbanites own cars. For the poor, however, job dispersal poses a major employment barrier. Nationally, three-fourths of welfare recipients live in central cities or rural areas, while two-thirds of new jobs are located in the suburbs. Those jobs may not be far away in terms of geography (frequently 515 miles), but they are so inaccessible by public transit that they may as well be on the moon. “Car ownership improved the likelihood of being employed by 80 percent.” This problem has gained the interest of scholars and a number of studies now show a stunning relationship between car ownership and employment. Kerri Sullivan of Portland State University recently examined the effects of car ownership on employment and wages for adults without a high school diploma in Portland. Ms. Sullivan found that, “Car ownership improved the likelihood of being employed by 80 percent. The effect on average weekly wages was approximately $275, and the effect of weeks worked was approximately 8.5 weeks.” Her work showed that auto ownership was much more important than education. In fact, the study found that a high school diploma/GED played no significant role in explaining differences in employment rates. Steve Raphael of University of California-Berkeley looked at how car ownership might lower the unemployment rate gap between whites and minorities. He concluded that, “Raising minority carownership rates to the white car-ownership rate would eliminate 45 percent of the black-white employment rate differential and 17 percent of the comparable Latinowhite differential.” One would think that in light of these and other similar studies, Oregon policymakers would begin developing strategies to promote auto ownership. Yet public officials have spent the better part of the past decade waging a cultural war on cars. Portland officials in particular have attacked motorists with a vengeance. The city’s anti-mobility policies have included parking surcharges to pay for the Portland streetcar, parking restrictions at new highdensity projects, prohibitions on parking lots near light rail stations and downsizing of Portland roads in order to create bike lanes. At the same time, the region has squandered billions of dollars on fixed rail transit, which is irrelevant to the urban poor seeking work in the suburbs. Rail is primarily used by affluent commuters who already own a car. This creates something of a reverse Robin Hood effect, in which poor people are taxed to supply train rides for the rich. v i s i t u s o n l i n e a t : w w w. f u l l e m p l o y m e n t . o r g A better solution has been initiated by the Metropolitan Family Services (MFS) through a new program called Ways to Work. This program provides loans for low-income parents at risk of losing their jobs due to unexpected expenses related to transportation. Most of the applicants will be single, working mothers with dependent children. MFS is partnering with Albina Community Bank, which will provide in-kind services for loan processing. Initial grant funds have come from the US Department of Transportation, Meyer Memorial Trust ($120,000 three year grant) and The Oregon Community Foundation ($30,000). These are impressive numbers for a small non-profit but they are dwarfed by public expenditures for light rail. TriMet spent about $325 million to build the North Interstate light rail line, which will serve no purpose other than replacing existing heavily-used bus service. For less than the cost of one mile of train track ($58 million), we could have purchased serviceable used cars for 10,000 transitdependent residents and still had $8 million left over to help with insurance and operating costs. For poor families, this would probably have been the single most empowering thing anyone could have done for them. Oregon’s apparent transit goal is to provide expensive public transit to virtually everyone who needs it. That goal should be changed. We should try and get as many people as possible to become car owners and make transit an amenity, not a necessity. This would dramatically lower the cost of transit while improving the quality of life for Oregon’s poorest families. John Charles is senior policy analyst at Cascade Policy Institute. This article is reprinted with permission by Cascade Policy Institute, Portland, Oregon. 3 Texas… continued... TWC. Larry, who as Deputy Executive Director of TWC, had begun to implement sweeping reforms of the employment programs of the commission, worked hard to strengthen performance accountability of local workforce boards and instituted innovative policies and procedures to attach unemployed Texans to work quickly. Working closely with Jim Hine, the new Outdated Ideas Have Made Social Security Unfair to Today’s Working Couples commissioner of DHS, Larry began to focus on TANF, implementing policies to insure full engagement and mandatory work after job search. In addition, UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE Texas has also made great first strides to improve its unemployment insurance program. In May, the US Department of Labor held a national conference on claimant reemployment and highlighted the work of Texas. Initiatives include: the state implemented full-check sanctions of non-participation in required same total monthly income of $3,000. However in the Smith house- work activities. Require work and true work activities, and clients become motivated to get jobs, become self-sufficient, and leave welfare behind. And the results? Incredible! Mandatory for work TANF caseload dropped ★ all staff working with unemployment claimants make at least one customer call each week (nearly 1,000 calls) from 55,000 to 40,000 between July 2003 and February 2004, a drop of over ★ minimum work search requires three activities per week with the option for local workforce boards to increase the requirement vated to get jobs, become self-sufficient, and leave welfare behind. 26% in less than eight months. Just as impressive, the number of TANF clients in work components increased by 8% simultaneously. Does this sound familiar? Require work and true work activities, and clients become moti- hold only Mr. Smith works while in the Green household both Mr. and Mrs. Green work with Mr. Green earning $2,000 per month and Mrs. Green $1,000. Since both couples have the same household income, and both pay the same amount in payroll taxes, wouldn’t you think that THE SMITHS at retirement they would receive the same Social Security benefits? No. At retirement, Mr. Smith would be eligible for a monthly benefit of around $1,300 and Mrs. Smith a spousal benefit of around $650, for a In addition, while sanction rates prior to the implementation of full-check sanction averaged 23,050 in fiscal year 2003, once TANF clients realized that total of $1,950. By contrast, Mr. Green would be eligible for a monthly Texas was serious about work, the sanction rate fell to 4,400 by February 2004. Contrary to the often-voiced but wrong-headed concerns of poverty ★ regional performance goals include market penetration of services to employers (job orders as a percent of total hires), repeat customers and job opening fill rate Consider two couples, the Smiths and the Greens. Both have the benefit of around $1,000 based on his earnings and Mrs. Green a bene- THE GREENS advocates and some gullible legislators that serious sanctions for non-performance will “leave families on the streets,” data shows that full-check sanctions actually reduce the numbers of those sanctioned, and usually does so dramati- fit of $650 based on her earnings, for a total of only $1,650 per month. Social Security’s outdated benefit structure means cally. A serious full-check sanction policy motivates clients to find work or participate in work activities that will lead to timely and beneficial employ- that two families can pay the exact same amount in ment. Look for Texas to be a model state for unemployment claims in years to come. While some states are beginning to re-invigorate their TANF programs, Texas’ is leading the way with some amazing results. The secret? To paraphrase Lyle Lovett’s ode to Texas: “You may not be from Texas, but Texas wants you (to work) anyway.” 2 taxes yet receive very different benefits. That’s not fair. ★ v i s i t u s o n l i n e a t : w w w. f u l l e m p l o y m e n t . o r g v i s i t u s o n l i n e a t : w w w. f u l l e m p l o y m e n t . o r g 7 American Institute Features of Full Employment Institute Mission The Institute’s goal is full employment - universal access to jobs with career potential for all who can work, especially those who are receiving public assistance as a substitute for the opportunities and rewards of paid work. Consulting The Institute offers consulting to any state that wishes to implement a Full Employment Program. Consulting services include: program design, training workshops and establishment of performance criteria. Contact Us THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE F O R F U L L E M P LOY M E N T 2636 Biehn Street, Klamath Falls, OR 97601 800-562-7752 w w w. f u l l e m p l oy m e n t . o r g S T E P S T O E M P L O Y M E N T For Participants • Immediate placement in unsubsidized jobs, or temporarily subsidized, training-oriented jobs for those unable to get unsubsidized employment. Wage subsidies are paid from the pool of public assistance benefits. • A ladder of job opportunities, with rising spendable income at each step. • Guaranteed support services throughout the transition to self-sufficiency. For Employers • A larger workforce from which to recruit workers. • The chance to try out new workers in new jobs at little or no wage cost. • The opportunity to contribute to reducing the public assistance burden, and provide the unemployed with the many benefits that only employment provides. For the State • A stronger state economy. • Happier, more productive citizens. • Reduced costs of welfare and other related social costs of unemployment and dependency. P R O S P E R I T Y & S U C C E S S S T E P S T O A B L E O F 1-2 Texas, TANF’s PAID THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR FULL EMPLOYMENT P.O. Box 1329 Klamath Falls, OR 97601 P R O S P E R I T Y & S U C C E S S 3 Reduce Unemployment Through Auto Ownership Lessons for the United States N 6 Social Security T Questions & Answers S alone. It truly has lived up to its motto as the “Lone (shining) Star” in sufficiency and in assisting recipients find work and jobs. t Texas’ welfare reform performance has been quite mixed in the last 10 years. In January 1993, AFDC caseload stood at 278,146. At that time, one in every 22 Texans received a welfare check. Texas began instituting several welfare reform initiatives in the mid-90s and these, E T When it comes to TANF performance in the last year, Texas stands TANF. The state has made incredible strides recently in increasing self- 4-5 European Unemployment: N 2004 Texas, TANF’s 2004 Lone St★r State 2004 Lone Star State O KLAMATH FALLS, OR PERMIT NO.304 E M P L O Y M E N T Summer T C NONPROFIT U.S. POSTAGE for Full Employment combined with the implementation of TANF in 1997, resulted in significant caseload 7 Outdated Ideas Have Made Social Security Unfair to Working Couples reduction. By July 1999, TANF caseload had been reduced to 106,142, a decrease of over 62%. At that point, Texas was one of the top TANF performers in the country. However, as was typical of a number of states at the end of the 90s, caseload began trending upward. By the end of 2001, TANF caseload had increased to over 138,000—a What is Full Employment? 30% increase in a little over two years! One of the key problems with Texas’ reform efforts was the inability Full Employment is a welfare, unemployment, and food stamp benefit replacement concept that moves public assistance recipients into the active workforce by converting public assistance benefits to wage subsidies for transitional, training oriented jobs, predominantly in the private sector. 2 6 3 6 B i e h n of the state to move TANF recipients to work. Bureaucratic tension between the Department of Human Services (DHS) and the Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) contributed to the problem. But this was all to change. Last year, Larry Temple took over the reigns as Executive Director of S t r e e t continued on page 2 K l a m a t h F a l l s , O R 9 7 6 0 1 8 0 0 - 5 6 2 - 7 7 5 2