THE DEVELOPMENT OF U.S. SOCIAL POLICIES
Lecture for USW 31
Theda Skocpol
• Overview of major phases in the development of U.S. social provision; and U.S. in comparative perspective.
• Next two lectures: Family/Work; Generational Issues (including health care).
What images and ideas do these phrases bring to mind?
“Welfare”
“Welfare state”
“Welfare state” actually has an ambiguous meaning in the United States. Scholars use this term to refer to the entire pattern of social expenditures in a nation -- and Christopher Howard and Jacob Hacker include indirect “tax expenditures” and “tax credits” in their portrayals of the overall U.S. welfare state.
But in American popular discourse, “welfare” refers to programs targeted on the poor alone. Such programs have not been very well supported in U.S. democracy, and the term “welfare” often has a negative connotation -- in contrast to “social security” which has a positive ring for most Americans.
MAJOR DIRECT SOCIAL EXPENDITURES IN U.S. DEMOCRACY
Public schooling: primary and secondary schools spread across localities and states from the in the early 19th century.
Programs for mothers and children: mothers pensions, workplace regulations spread across states in 1910s, and the federal government created the Children’s Bureau and the 1921 Sheppard-Towner Act.
“Social Security” old-age insurance: launched in 1935 as part of the Act with that name. Expanded in steps 1939 to 1956 to cover survivors, virtually all employees, and include disability benefits. Medicare added in 1965.
GI Bill of 1944: offered WWII veterans generous education, family, and employment benefits, and loans for homes, farms and businesses.
THE POLITICAL FORMULA FOR GENEROUS AND SUSTAINED SOCIAL SPENDING IN THE UNITED STATES
Benefits for service: successful programs reward or prepare individuals for service to the nation/community.
Broad constituencies: successful programs include the middle class along with the poor.
Partnerships between government and citizens’ associations: grow up to support and expand inclusive programs.
Reliable public revenues: the most successful programs have access to dedicated taxes or growing national taxes.
U.S. Social Programs in the Late 20th Century
The formula for sustainable social provision fell apart after the 1960s
• racialized conflicts over affirmative action and welfare for the poor
• generational gaps and the missing middle
• advocacy groups targeted children or the elderly, and broad citizens’ associations declined
• resistance to taxation grew, and indirect tax subsidies became the major route for expanded social provision
Irv Garfinkel, Lee Rainwater, & Timothy Smeeding
Inequality at Harvard 2/14/11
• Widely Believed Half Truths/Nonsense – The welfare state is a drag on productivity.– The US has an unusually small welfare state.– The US always has been a welfare state
laggard.• The Truth
– The socialized programs of welfare states complement capitalism and enrich nations.
– The US welfare state is quite large.– For most of the 19th & 20th Century, US was a
leader in education, the most productive part of the welfare state. We no longer lead.
Gross Size of Welfare States in 1900 (with and without education)
Source: Lindert, P. (2005) Growing public: Social spending and economic growth since the eighteenth century.
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
Australia^ Canada^ U.K. U.S.A. Belgium* France Germany* Italy Netherlands Spain^ Finland* Norway Sweden
% o
f G
DP
social w elfare ex penditures
education ex penditures
Social Welfare Transfers as a Percent of GDP
(with and without employer-provided benefits)
Source: OECD, FY2001
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
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Australia Canada Ireland U.K. U.S.A. Belgium France Italy Germany Netherlands Spain Finland Norw ay Sw eden
% o
f G
DP
other in-kind
other cash
education
health
pension
Source: OECD, FY2001
Social Welfare Transfers in US $ Per Person
(with and without employer-provided benefits)
0
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
14000
16000
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AustraliaCanada Ireland U.K. U.S.A. Belgium France Italy GermanyNetherlands Spain Finland NorwaySweden
soci
al w
elfa
re tr
ansf
ers
(US
$) p
er p
erso
n
Many direct social expenditures in the USA were originally authorized by the the SOCIAL SECURITY ACT of 1935, which had three major parts:
• National system of Old Age Insurance (“Social Security”) funded by payroll tax on employers and employees.
• Federally required, yet state-administered unemployment insurance programs, funded by taxes on employers. States determined taxes and benefit rules and levels.
• Federally subsidized, state-determined and administered public assistance (“welfare”) programs for the needy elderly, for the blind, and for very poor children. States could set benefit levels and many rules for eligibility.
SINCE 1975, "HIDDEN" U.S. TAX EXPENDITURES HAVE GROWN MORE RAPIDLY THAN VISIBLE, DIRECT SOCIAL EXPENDITURES
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
1967-1975 1980-1990 1975-1995Ave
rag
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nu
al g
row
th r
ate,
ad
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or
infl
atio
n
Hidden Tax Expenditures Visible Direct Expenditures
High social expenditures flowing from the "Great Society" and Nixon years
Reagan/Bush cutbacks
CONTEMPORARY U.S. WELFARE STATE
Source: Christopher Howard, The Hidden Welfare State (1997).
Source: Christopher Howard, THE HIDDENWELFARE STATE (1997).
Despite the recent expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), which primarily benefits the less-well-off, most “hidden welfare state” tax expenditures go to the privileged.
Tax credits and refunds are also harder for the poor to understand and use -- and difficult to use for popular political mobilization.
Largest U.S. Tax Expenditures, 2013
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Exclusion for Employer-sponsored Health Insurance
Mortgage Interest Deduction
401(k) Plans
Lower Rate on Capital Gains
Pensions (defined benefit)
Exclusion of Net Imputed Rental Income
Deduction for State and Local Taxes
Tax Deferral for Multinationals
Charitable Deduction
Tax-Exempt Bonds
Billions of dollars
Source: L. Burman and M. Phaup, from U.S. Budget Analytical Perspectives, FY 2013.
Tax Expenditures as a Percentage of After-Tax Income for Different Groups of U.S. Income Earners, 2007
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Refundable Credits
Nonrefundable Credits
Above-LineDeductions
Itemized Deductions
Exclusions
Capital Gains,Dividends
ALL PROVISIONSTop 1% Earners
Top Fifth Earners
Middle Fifth Earners
Bottom Fifth Earners
Source: Burman, Geissler, and Toder, Amer. Econ .Review 2008.
SSN Briefs on Tax ExpendituresAvailable at http://www.scholarsstrategynetwork.org
• Christopher Howard, “Tax Expenditures: What They Are and Who Benefits.”
• Leonard E. Burman and Marvin M. Phaup, “Could Reducing Tax Expenditures Tame the Federal Debt?”
• Suzanne Mettler, “Why Americans Can’t See Government – And Why It Matters.”