Gene Falk
Specialist in Social Policy
The
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant provides grants to
states, Indian tribes, and territories for a wide range of benefits,
services, and activities that address economic and social disadvantage for
families with children. TANF is best known for funding state cash welfare
programs for needy families with children, and it was created in the 1996 welfare
reform law. However, TANF is not synonymous with cash welfare. In FY2011, only
29% of federal and state TANF dollars were for cash welfare. TANF also
funds child care; programs that address child abuse and neglect; various
early childhood initiatives, including prekindergarten programs; earnings
supplements for workers in low-income families; emergency and short-term
aid; pregnancy prevention programs; responsible fatherhood programs; and
initiatives to encourage healthy marriages.
The bulk of federal TANF funding is in a fixed block grant, which has been set
at $16.5 billion since FY1997. The basic block grant is not adjusted for
inflation, or for changes in the circumstances of a state such as its cash
welfare caseload, population, or number of children in poverty. States are
also required to spend a specified minimum of $10.4 billion in state funds on TANF-related
activities and populations. This amount also has not changed since FY1997.
TANF cash welfare programs today reflect a long history (going back to the
early 1900s) and much controversy. States set their own cash welfare
benefit levels. In 2010, cash benefits in all states represented a
fraction of poverty-level income. In New York, the state with the highest benefit
among the 48 contiguous states, the maximum monthly TANF cash benefit for a
family of three was $753, which translates to 49% of poverty-level income.
In contrast, Mississippi paid a monthly cash benefit for a family of three
of $170 (11% of poverty-level income). Families with adult recipients (and
certain nonrecipient parents) come under work participation rules. Federally funded
aid is also time-limited for such families.
The cash welfare caseload has declined dramatically from its pre-welfare-reform
high of 5.1 million families in 1994 to 1.7 million families in July 2008.
The cash welfare caseload increased during the recession, to a peak of 2.0
million families in December 2010. In December 2011, the cash welfare
caseload stood at 1.9 million families. The cash welfare caseload has
traditionally consisted of families headed by a nonworking parent, usually
a single mother. However, in FY2009, less than half of the TANF cash
caseload fit this description. The TANF cash caseload is very diverse,
with more than half the caseload having different characteristics than the
historical traditional cash welfare family.
TANF is not a program per se, but a flexible funding stream used to provide a
wide range of benefits and services that address the effects of, and the
root causes of, disadvantage among families with children. TANF is currently
funded through March 2013. Decisions on extending TANF funding further
will be made in the context of both the lingering effects of the 2007-2009 recession
and longer trends that were evident even before the recession that showed an
increasing percentage of children living in poverty and born into
circumstances associated with economic disadvantage.
Date of Report: November 19, 2012
Number of Pages: 19
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