Suppr超能文献

临时援助家庭计划/补充保障收入计划的关联

The TANF/SSI connection.

作者信息

Wamhoff Steve, Wiseman Michael

机构信息

Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, USA.

出版信息

Soc Secur Bull. 2005;66(4):21-36.

Abstract

Interactions and overlap of social assistance programs across clients interest policymakers because such interactions affect both the clients' well-being and the programs' efficiency. This article investigates the connections between Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and TANF's predecessor, the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program. Connections between receipt of TANF and SSI are widely discussed in both disability policy and poverty research literatures because many families receiving TANF report disabilities. For both states and the individuals involved, it is generally financially advantageous for adults and children with disabilities to transfer from TANF to SSI. States gain because the federal government pays for the SSI benefit, and states can then use the TANF savings for other purposes. The families gain because the SSI benefits they acquire are greater than the TANF benefits they lose. The payoff to states from transferring welfare recipients to SSI was substantially increased when Congress replaced AFDC with TANF in 1996. States retained less than half of any savings achieved through such transfers under AFDC, but they retain all of the savings under TANF. Also, the work participation requirements under TANF have obligated states to address the work support needs of adults with disabilities who remain in TANF, and states can avoid these costs if adults have disabilities that satisfy SSI eligibility requirements. The incentive for TANF recipients to apply for SSI has increased over time as inflation has caused real TANF benefits to fall relative to payments received by SSI recipients. Trends in the financial incentives for transfer to SSI have not been studied in detail, and reliable general data on the extent of the interaction between TANF and SSI are scarce. In addition, some estimates of the prevalence of TANF receipt among SSI awardees are flawed because they fail to include adults receiving benefits in TANF-related Separate State Programs (SSPs). SSPs are assistance programs that are administered by TANF agencies but are paid for wholly from state funds. When the programs are conducted in a manner consistent with federal regulations, the money states spend on SSPs counts toward federal maintenance-of-effort (MOE) requirements, under which states must sustain a certain level of contribution to the costs of TANF and approved related activities. SSPs are used for a variety of purposes, including support of families who are in the process of applying for SSI. Until very recently, families receiving cash benefits through SSPs were not subject to TANF's work participation requirements. This article contributes to analysis of the interaction between TANF and SSI by evaluating the financial consequences of TANF-to-SSI transfer and developing new estimates of both the prevalence of receipt of SSI benefits among families receiving cash assistance from TANF and the proportion of new SSI awards that go to adults and children residing in families receiving TANF or TANF-related benefits in SSPs. Using data from the Urban Institute's Welfare Rules Database, we find that by 2003 an SSI award for a child in a three-person family dependent on TANF increased family income by 103.5 percent on average across states; an award to the adult in such a family increased income by 115.4 percent. The gain from both child and adult transfers increased by about 6 percent between 1996 (the eve of the welfare reform that produced TANF) and 2003. Using data from the Department of Health and Human Services' TANF/SSP Recipient Family Characteristics Survey, we estimate that 16 percent of families receiving TANF/SSP support in federal fiscal year 2003 included an adult or child SSI recipient. This proportion has increased slightly since fiscal year 2000. The Social Security Administration's current procedures for tabulating characteristics of new SSI awardees do not recognize SSP receipt as TANF We use differences in reported TANF-to-SSI flows between states with and without Separate State Programs to estimate the understatement of the prevalence of TANF-related SSI awards in states with SSPs. The results indicate that the absolute number of awards to AFDC (and subsequently) TANF/SSP recipients has declined by 42 percent for children and 25 percent for adults since the early 1990s. This result is a product of the decline in welfare caseloads. However, the monthly incidence of such awards has gone up-from less than 1 per 1,000 child recipients in calendar years 1991-1993 to 1.3 per 1,000 in 2001-2003 and, for adult recipients, from 1.6 per 1,000 in 1991-1993 to 4 per 1,000 in 2001-2003. From these results we conclude that a significant proportion of each year's SSI awards to disabled nonelderly people go to TANF/SSP recipients, and many families that receive TANF/SSP support include adults, children, or both who receive SSI. Given the Social Security Administration's efforts to improve eligibility assessment for applicants, to ensure timely access to SSI benefits for those who qualify, and to improve prospects for eventual employment of the disabled, there is definitely a basis for working with TANF authorities both nationally and locally on service coordination and on smoothing the process of SSI eligibility assessment. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 reauthorized TANF through fiscal year 2010, but with some rules changes that are important in light of the analysis presented in this article. The new law substantially increases effective federal requirements for work participation by adult TANF recipients and mandates that adults in Separate State Programs be included in participation requirements beginning in fiscal year 2007. Thus SSPs will no longer provide a means for exempting from work requirements families that are in the process of applying for SSI, and the increased emphasis on work participation could result in more SSI applications from adult TANF recipients.

摘要

社会救助项目在客户群体间的相互作用与重叠引起了政策制定者的关注,因为这种相互作用既影响客户的福祉,也影响项目的效率。本文研究了补充保障收入(SSI)与贫困家庭临时援助(TANF)以及TANF的前身——抚养儿童家庭援助(AFDC)项目之间的联系。在残疾政策和贫困研究文献中,TANF领取与SSI之间的联系被广泛讨论,因为许多领取TANF的家庭报告有残疾情况。对于州政府和相关个人而言,残疾成年人和儿童从TANF转向SSI通常在经济上更有利。州政府从中受益,因为联邦政府支付SSI福利,然后州政府可以将TANF节省的资金用于其他目的。家庭也受益,因为他们获得的SSI福利大于失去的TANF福利。1996年国会用TANF取代AFDC后,将福利领取者从TANF转移到SSI给州政府带来的收益大幅增加。在AFDC项目下,通过这种转移实现的节省,州政府保留不到一半,但在TANF项目下,州政府保留了所有节省资金。此外,TANF的工作参与要求使州政府有义务满足仍留在TANF项目中的残疾成年人的工作支持需求,如果成年人的残疾符合SSI资格要求,州政府就可以避免这些成本。随着通货膨胀导致实际TANF福利相对于SSI领取者获得的支付下降,TANF领取者申请SSI的动机随时间增加。向SSI转移的财务激励趋势尚未得到详细研究,关于TANF和SSI之间相互作用程度的可靠综合数据也很稀少。此外,一些对SSI受助者中TANF领取率的估计存在缺陷,因为它们没有将在与TANF相关的单独州项目(SSP)中领取福利的成年人包括在内。SSP是由TANF机构管理但完全由州资金支付的援助项目。当这些项目以符合联邦法规的方式实施时,州政府在SSP上支出的资金计入联邦维持努力(MOE)要求,根据该要求,州政府必须对TANF和批准的相关活动的成本维持一定水平的贡献。SSP用于多种目的,包括支持正在申请SSI的家庭。直到最近,通过SSP领取现金福利的家庭不受TANF的工作参与要求约束。本文通过评估从TANF转移到SSI的财务后果,并对从TANF领取现金援助的家庭中领取SSI福利的比例以及新的SSI奖励中流向居住在领取TANF或TANF相关福利的SSP家庭中的成年人和儿童的比例进行新的估计,为分析TANF和SSI之间的相互作用做出了贡献。利用城市研究所福利规则数据库的数据,我们发现,到2003年,一个依赖TANF的三人家庭中的儿童获得SSI奖励,平均使家庭收入在各州增加了103.5%;该家庭中的成年人获得奖励使收入增加了115.4%。从儿童和成年人转移中获得的收益在1996年(产生TANF的福利改革前夕)到2003年间增加了约6%。利用卫生与公众服务部TANF/SSP受助家庭特征调查的数据,我们估计,在2003财年,接受TANF/SSP支持的家庭中有16%包括成年或儿童SSI领取者。自2000财年以来,这一比例略有上升。社会保障管理局目前统计新SSI受助者特征的程序不将领取SSP视为TANF。我们利用有和没有单独州项目的州之间报告的TANF到SSI流动差异,来估计有SSP的州中与TANF相关的SSI奖励发生率的低估情况。结果表明,自20世纪90年代初以来,AFDC(以及随后的)TANF/SSP受助者的奖励绝对数量,儿童减少了42%,成年人减少了25%。这一结果是福利案件数量下降的产物。然而,此类奖励的月度发生率有所上升——从1991 - 1993历年每1000名儿童受助者中不到1例,上升到2001 - 2003年的每1000名中有1.3例,对于成年受助者,从1991 - 1993年的每1000名中有1.6例,上升到2001 - 2003年的每1000名中有4例。从这些结果我们得出结论,每年向残疾非老年人发放的SSI奖励中有很大一部分流向TANF/SSP受助者,许多接受TANF/SSP支持的家庭包括领取SSI的成年人、儿童或两者都有。鉴于社会保障管理局努力改进对申请人的资格评估,确保符合条件者及时获得SSI福利,并改善残疾人最终就业的前景,在国家和地方层面与TANF当局就服务协调和简化SSI资格评估程序开展合作肯定有依据。2005年的《减赤法案》将TANF重新授权至2010财年,但有一些规则变化,鉴于本文所呈现的分析,这些变化很重要。新法律大幅提高了对成年TANF受助者工作参与的有效联邦要求,并规定从2007财年开始,单独州项目中的成年人要纳入参与要求。因此,SSP将不再为正在申请SSI的家庭提供免除工作要求的途径,对工作参与的更多强调可能导致成年TANF受助者提出更多SSI申请。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验