Домой United States USA — Political Current Government Shutdown Is Proof the Poor Can’t Rely on Federal Assistance

Current Government Shutdown Is Proof the Poor Can’t Rely on Federal Assistance

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(THE CONVERSATION) I conduct a lot of in-depth interviews with people like a woman I’ll call Angie as part of my work as…
(THE CONVERSATION) I conduct a lot of in-depth interviews with people like a woman I’ll call Angie as part of my work as a political scientist who studies poverty and public policy. When I asked the low-income mother of two, who works multiple jobs but still struggles to care for her family, about her experience with government assistance programs, she expressed dismay over benefit cuts due to the current government shutdown.
“The people who make these rules … they don’t have any poor people in their family,” she told me. “That is why they are willing to chop so many services for the poor.”
People living in poverty are now bracing for that kind of chopping as a result of the partial government shutdown that began in December. By the three-week mark, most safety-net benefits were still being funded. But should the impasse drag on, that could change.
In my view, the added economic hardship brought on would highlight an enduring aspect of American public policy: Government benefits can be unreliable. They can be cut or eliminated arbitrarily.
As I’ve explained in a book published in 2018, the nation’s systems for aiding Americans who have trouble making ends meet are fragmented. Different programs housed in multiple agencies serve distinct populations, with all of this happening in different ways across states and localities.
That means government shutdowns do not sever all assistance at once. In this instance, Congress has already passed the appropriations bills funding agencies like Health and Human Services, so Medicaid, Medicare and many other programs that agency runs are relatively safe.
Other federal agencies are more likely to see their funds dry up during this particular shutdown, especially the departments of agriculture and housing.
USDA and HUD are responsible for many programs that directly and indirectly keep low-income Americans fed and housed.

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