Order Code RL32760
The Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families (TANF) Block Grant:
Responses to Frequently Asked Questions
Updated January 23August 1, 2007
Gene Falk
Specialist in Social Legislation
Domestic Social Policy Division
The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
Block Grant: Responses to Frequently Asked Questions
Summary
The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant funds a wide
range of benefits and services for low-income families with children. TANF was
created in the 1996 welfare reform law (P.L. 104-193). Its funding was recently
extended through FY2010 by the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171). This
report responds to some frequently asked questions about TANF; it does not describe
TANF rules (see, instead, CRS Report RL32748). It will be updated.
Funding and Expenditures. TANF provides fixed funding to states, the bulk
of which is provided in a $16.5 billion-per-year basic block grant. States are required
in total to contribute, from their own funds, at least $10.4 billion under a
maintenance-of-effort (MOE) requirement. The $16.5 billion basic block grant,
which will be provided to states through FY2010, represents the same basic block
grant as provided in the 1996 welfare reform law. The grant is not adjusted for
inflation or changes in the cash welfare caseload (see “Caseload,” below). It has lost
20% of its value (purchasing power) to inflation from FY1997 through FY2006.
Though TANF is best known for funding cash welfare payments for needy
families with children, the block grant and associated state MOE funds are used for
a wide variety of benefits and activities. In FY2005, expenditures on activities
associated with a “traditional” cash welfare program — cash benefits themselves
($11 billion), administrative costs, and spending on work activities — totaled only
half of total TANF and MOE funds. TANF also contributes funds for child care and
services for children who have been, or are at risk of, abuse and neglect.
Caseload. Though only about half of federal and state expenditures are
associated with cash welfare, the “TANF caseload” number commonly discussed is
the number of families and recipients receiving cash welfare. Information is not
available on families and individuals who receive TANF benefits and services other
than cash welfare. In JuneSeptember 2006, 1.9 million families, consisting of 4.6 million
recipients, received TANF- or MOE-funded cash welfare. The “typical” welfare
family is headed by a single mother with one or two children. However, the cash
welfare caseload is very heterogenous. In FY2004, about four out of 10 cash welfare
families were “child-only” cases — families in which the adult is ineligible for cash
in his or her own right.
Benefits. TANF cash benefits are set by states. In January 2005, the maximum
monthly benefit for a family of 3 ranged from $923 in Alaska to $170 in Mississippi.
Work Requirements. TANF requires states to engage 50% of all families and
90% of two-parent families in work activities. These participation standards are
reduced for caseload reduction from FY2005. In FY2004 (the last year for which
data are available), states achieved average work participation rates of 32% for all
families and 47% for two-parent families. Most states are likely to have to increase
work participation in order to achieve the FY2007 TANF work participation
standards.
Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Current Topics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Can TANF Recipients Be
in a Four-Year College Degree Program? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
May States Require Drug Testing of Welfare Recipients? . . . . . . . . . . 2
History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
When was the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
(TANF) Block Grant Created? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Has Legislation Modified TANF Since the 1996 Law? . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Funding and Expenditures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
What is TANF’s Current Funding Level? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
How Much Has the TANF Grant Declined in Value
Because Because
of Inflation? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
How Have States Used TANF Funds? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
How Much of the TANF Grant Has Gone Unspent? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
The Caseload . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
How Many Families Receive
TANF- or MOE-Funded Benefits
and Services? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
How Many Families and People Currently Receive
TANF- or TANFor MOE-Funded Cash Welfare? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
How Does the Current Cash Welfare Caseload Level
Compare Compare
With Historical Levels? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
What Are the Characteristics
of the “Typical” Cash Welfare Family? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
What Are the Characteristics of the “Typical” Cash Welfare Family? . 9
What is a TANF “Child-Only” Family? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
TANF Cash Benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
How Much Does a Family Receive
in TANF Cash Per Month? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
How Have TANF Cash Benefits Changed Over Time? . . . . . . . . . . . 1514
TANF Work Participation Standards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1816
What Is the TANF Work Participation Standard States
Must Meet? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Must Meet? . 16
What Actual Work Participation Rates
Have the States Achieved? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1817
Appendix A. Supplementary Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1918
Appendix B. State Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
22
List of Figures
Figure 1. Federal TANF and State MOE Funds Used in FY2005,
By Major Benefit or Service Category . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Figure 2. Number of Families Receiving Cash Welfare,
July 1959 to JuneSeptember 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Figure 3. Composition of Cash Welfare “Child-Only” Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
List of Tables
Table 1. TANF Federal Funding Provided
in the Deficit Reduction Act
of 2005, FY2006-FY2010 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Table 2. Basic TANF Block Grant in Constant 1997 Dollars. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Table 3. TANF- and MOE-Funded Cash Welfare Caseload,
June 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 4
Table 2. Basic TANF Block Grant in Constant 1997 Dollars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5
Table 3. TANF- and MOE-Funded Cash Welfare Caseload, September 2006 . . 8
Table 4. Cash Welfare “Child-Only Cases,” FY2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Table 5. TANF Maximum Cash Benefits for Single-Parent Families,
By Family Size, January 2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1413
Table 6. Cash Welfare Benefits for a Family of Three
(Single-Parent
Family), January 1996, 2000, 2002, and 2005 . . . . . . . . . . . 16. . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Table A1. Temporary Extensions of Welfare Reform Programs,
FY2003-FY2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1918
Table A2. Use of Federal TANF and MOE Funds in FY2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Table A3. Average Monthly Families, Recipients, and Children,
Calendar Years 1961-2006 (in thousands) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Table A4. 19
Table A3. Number of Cash Welfare Families, Adult Recipients,
and Child Recipients ,
By Selected Characteristics,
FY1994, FY2000, and FY2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Table A5. Composition of Cash Welfare Families
By Selected Characteristics, FY1994, FY2000, and FY2004 . . . . . . . . . . . 2420
Table A4. Composition of Cash Welfare Families By Selected
Characteristics, FY1994, FY2000, and FY2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Table B1. Use of FY2005 TANF and MOE Funds by Category . . . . . . . . . . . . 2622
Table B2. Use of FY2006FY2005 TANF and MOE Funds by Category,
as a Percent of Total Federal TANF and State MOE Funding . . . . . . . . . . 2824
Table B3. Unspent TANF Funds at the End of FY2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3026
Table B4. TANF and MOE Cash Welfare Caseload, JuneSeptember 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . 3228
Table B5. Number of Families Receiving Cash Assistance,
June 1994, June 2000, June 2005, and June September
1994, September 2000, September 2005, and September 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3430
Table B6. TANF Work Participation Rates for FY2004, by State . . . . . . . . . . . 3632
The Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families (TANF) Block Grant:
Responses to Frequently Asked Questions
Introduction
This report provides responses to frequently asked questions about the
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant. It is intended to
serve as a quick reference to provide easy access to information and data. This report
does not provide information on TANF program rules. For such information, see
CRS Report RL32748, The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Block
Grant: A Primer on Financing and Requirements for State Programs, by Gene Falk.
Current Topics
Can TANF Recipients Be in a Four-Year College Degree Program?
Yes. Federal law does not prohibit states from having their TANF recipients in a
four-year program, and supporting a college education is a legal use of TANF funds.
However, participation in a four-year college degree program often cannot be counted
— as the sole or primary work activity of a recipient — toward the TANF work
participation standards that states must meet.
States are penalized for failing to meet TANF work participation standards as
an incentive for them to engage recipients in activities that can be counted toward the
work standards. Whether participation in a four-year college program can be counted
toward meeting these work standards depends on whether it is “defined” as a
creditable work activity.
Prior to FY2007, states themselves “defined” which specific work activities
counted toward TANF work participation standards within the context of 12 listed
federal categories. However, the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171)
required the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to issue regulations
to establish uniform definitions for TANF work activities. These regulations were
issued (in interim final form) on June 29, 2006.1
1
See text of the regulations at [http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofa/tanfregs/tfinrule.pdf].
(continued...)
CRS-2
Before implementation of these HHS regulations, some states defined
participation in a four-year college program as either “vocational educational
Before implementation of these HHS regulations, some states defined
participation in a four-year college program as either “vocational educational
1
See text of the regulations at [http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofa/tanfregs/tfinrule.pdf].
See also CRS Report RS22490, TANF: A Guide to the New Definitions of What Counts as
Work Participation, by Gene Falk.
CRS-2
training” or “job skills training directly related to employment.” In defining the
“vocational educational training” activity, HHS specifically said that participation in
a four-year college program cannot count. However, the HHS regulations define “job
skills training directly related to employment” as either specific or general education
related to employment. The definition of this activity does not specifically address
whether college courses applied toward a four-year degree may be “job skills
training” that would be counted toward TANF participation standards. Further, “job
skills training directly related to employment” cannot be the sole or primary work
activity for many recipients (single parents with a child age 6 or older and those in
two-parent families).
May States Require Drug Testing of Welfare Recipients? Yes. The
1996 welfare reform law gave states the option of requiring drug tests for welfare
recipients and penalizing those who fail such tests. (See Section 902 of P.L. 104193.)
In addition to this option, the 1996 welfare reform law contained two other
provisions related to drug abuse and TANF applicants or recipients. The law
established a lifetime ban on eligibility for TANF and food stamps for those
convicted of a drug-related felony. However, states may either opt out entirely or
modify and limit this lifetime ban. (See Section 115 of P.L. 104-193.)
Further, TANF allows states to establish Individual Responsibility Plans (IRPs)
for their TANF families. The IRP may require participation in a substance abuse
treatment program. A family may be sanctioned for failure to comply with its IRP.
In 2005, the House passed a measure (S. 1932 as passed by the House) that
would have required states to conduct drug testing of welfare recipients and end
benefits for families with members who failed a certain number of drug tests. This
provision was a part of a broad welfare reauthorization that was included in the
House-passed Housepassed version of S. 1932. However, this provision was not included in the
final,
scaled-back welfare reauthorization that was ultimately included in the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (see “Has Legislation Modified TANF Since the 1996 Law?,”
below).
1
(...continued)
See, also, CRS Report RS22490, TANF: A Guide to the New Definitions of What Counts as
Work Participation, by Gene Falk.
CRS-3
History
When was the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
Block Grant Created? The TANF block grant was created by the 1996 welfare
reform law, the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act
of 1996 (P.L. 104-193). TANF replaced the program of Aid to Families with
Dependent Children (AFDC), which dated back to the Social Security Act of 1935,
and several other related programs.
Has Legislation Modified TANF Since the 1996 Law? The Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (P.L. 105-35) included provisions establishing “welfare-to-work”
grants for Fiscal Years (FYs) 1998 and 1999, and made several other policy and
CRS-3
technical changes to TANF. No new welfare-to-work grants were made after
FY1999.
The original funding authority for TANF ended on September 30, 2002. Over
the four-year period of 2002-2005, Congress considered, but did not pass, legislation
to modify and reauthorize TANF (see CRS Report RL33418, Welfare
Reauthorization in the 109th Congress: An Overview, by Gene Falk, Melinda Gish,
and Carmen Solomon-Fears). Over this four-year period, Congress passed 12
“temporary extensions” of TANF and related programs as stop-gap measures until
it could reach agreement on a longer-term reauthorization. (See Appendix A, Table
A1 for a listing of the temporary extensions.)
The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA, P.L. 109-171) includes a long-term
extension of funding for TANF through FY2010. It also requires most states to either
raise participation in work activities among families receiving cash welfare from
TANF, or further reduce the cash assistance rolls; it establishes $100 million per year
in TANF research and technical assistance funds for “healthy marriage promotion”
initiatives; and it provides $50 million per year for “responsible fatherhood
initiatives.” (For a discussion of TANF provisions in the DRA, see CRS Report
RS22369, TANF, Child Care, Marriage Promotion, and Responsible Fatherhood
Provisions in the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171), by Gene Falk.)
Funding and Expenditures
What is TANF’s Current Funding Level? The DRA provides funding for
TANF through FY2010. The basic block grant is funded at $16.5 billion per year
(for the 50 states and the District of Columbia) through FY2010. This was its
original level, as established in the 1996 welfare reform law. The DRA also funds
several grants and research in addition to the basic block grant, as shown on Table
1. Though most TANF funding currently runs though FY2010, the DRA extended
supplemental grants only through FY2008.
Readers should note that the DRA provides the funding authority (an
appropriation, not just authorization) in advance through FY2010. TANF funding
is not provided in annual appropriations.
CRS-4
Table 1. TANF Federal Funding Provided
in the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, FY2006-FY2010
($ in millions)
Basic block grant
Supplemental grants
Funding for the territories
Marriage Promotion/healthy
fatherhood
TANF research
Census Bureau research on
welfare reform
Total federal funds (without
contingency funds)
2006
2007
$16,478 $16,478
319
319
77
78
2008
16,478
319
78
2009
16,478
0
78
2010
16,478
0
78
150
15
150
15
150
15
150
15
150
15
10
10
10
10
10
17,049
17,050
17,050
16,731
16,731
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on data in a U.S. Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) Cost Estimate, S. 1932, The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, January 27, 2006.
In addition to federal TANF funds, states are required in total to contribute, from
their own funds, at least $10.4 billion per year for TANF-related activities for lowincome families with children. This level of state funding, known as maintenance-ofeffort (MOE) funding, was also established in the 1996 welfare law, and has not since
been changed.
How Much Has the TANF Grant Declined in Value Because of
Inflation? From FY1997 (the first full year of TANF funding) through FY2006
(ended September 30, 2006), the real value of the TANF block grant declined by a
measure of one-fifth (20%). Based on the current inflation projections of the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the block grant will decline in value by 27%
from FY1997 through FY2010.
CRS-5
Table 2. Basic TANF Block Grant in Constant 1997 Dollars
Fiscal Year
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
Value of the Block Grant
in Billions
of FY1997 Dollars
16.5
16.2
15.9
15.4
14.9
14.7
14.4
14.1
13.6
13.1
12.89
12.56
12.23
12.01
Cumulative Loss of
Value (in percent)
—
-2%
-3%
-6%
-9%
-11%
-13%
-15%
-17%
-20%
-2322%
-24%
-2625%
-27%
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). Constant dollars were
computed using the Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U). Actual inflation was
used to compute constant dollars for FY1997-FY2006 using data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics. Constant dollars for FY2007 through FY2010 are based on the inflation assumptions of the
U.S. Congressional Budget Office (CBO), published in August 2006January 2007.
How Have States Used TANF Funds? TANF is best known as a funding
source of cash welfare benefits for needy families with children. However, states
have considerable discretion in using TANF funds, and have used them for a wide
range of benefits and services.
Figure 1, below, shows the uses of federal TANF grants to states and state
MOE funds
in FY2005. In FY2005, a total of $28.4 billion of both federal TANF
and state MOE
expenditures were either expended or transferred to other block grant
programs. The
three expenditure categories commonly associated with “welfare”
for needy families
with children — cash benefits, administrative costs, and work
activities — accounted
for only a little more than half (53%) of all funds.
TANF is a major contributor of child care funding. In FY2005, 19% of all
TANF funds used were either expended on child care or transferred to the child care
block grant (the Child Care and Development Fund, or CCDF). FY2005 TANF and
MOE expenditures on child care totaled $3.2 billion and transfers to CCDF totaled
$1.9 billion, adding up to a $5.1 billion contribution to child care funding from
TANF.
TANF is also a major contributor to the child welfare system, which provides
foster care, adoption assistance, and services to families with children who either
have experienced or are at risk of child abuse or neglect. However, TANF’s
CRS-6
accounting system poorly captures expenditures associated with spending on the
child welfare system.2
Figure 1. Federal TANF and State MOE Funds Used in FY2005,
By Major Benefit or Service Category
Total Expenditures and Transfers = $28.4 Billion
Other
Expenditures, 16%
Transfers to
SSBG, 3%
Family Formation
Expenditures, 3%
Other Work
Supports, 6%
Basic (cash)
Assistance, 38%
Transfers to
CCDF, 7%
Child Care
Expenditures, 11%
Work Program
Expenditures, 8%
Administrative
Expenditures, 8%
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS).
See Appendix A, Table A2, for dollar amounts associated with each of these
categories. For state-specific information on the use of TANF funds, see Appendix
B, Table B1 and Table B2.
2
For a discussion of the short-comings of TANF financial data reporting, see the U.S.
Government Accountability Office, Better Information Needed to Understand Trends in
States’ Uses of the TANF Block Grant, GAO-06-414, March 2006. For an estimate of
TANF’s contribution to child welfare agencies’ funding, see Scarcella et al, The Cost of
Protecting Vulnerable Children V, Urban Institute, May 2006.
CRS-7
How Much Is Spent on Child Care from Both the TANF
and the Child Care and Development Fund?
Figure 1, above, shows that TANF is a major contributor to child care funding. In
addition, there is a separate block grant specifically dedicated to child care, known as the
Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF). A frequently asked question is: “How much
are we spending on child care from both TANF and the child care block grant?”
It is not possible to answer that question by simply adding together the information
from TANF and CCDF. This is because some of the money recorded for child care in
TANF is also considered an expenditure under CCDF. Thus, adding the amount of
TANF and MOE funds used for child care to CCDF expenditures would “double count”
some child care spending.
First, federal law allows up to 30% of the TANF block grant to be transferred to
CCDF. These transfers will result in CCDF expenditures when the transfers are actually
spent. Thus, TANF transfers should be subtracted from the TANF child care figure so
that this spending is not double-counted.
Second, some TANF MOE money can also be counted toward a separate CCDF
MOE. Adjustments have to be made to avoid double-counting some state child care
spending as both TANF and CCDF MOE spending.
Making these adjustments, CRS estimates that child care spending from both TANF
and CCDF totaled $11.7 billion in FY2005.
How Much of the TANF Grant Has Gone Unspent? At the end of
FY2005 (September 30, 2005), a total of $3.9 billion of federal TANF funding had
been neither transferred nor spent. However, some of that $3.9 billion represented
funds that states had already committed to spend later. At the end of FY2005, states
had made such commitments to spend — that is, obligations — totaling $1.8 billion.
Generally, obligations are binding commitments to spend, and they come in the form
of contracts and grants to provide benefits and services. However, the definition of
“obligation” varies from program to program, and since TANF essentially consists
of 54 different programs (one for each state, the District of Columbia, and the
territories), what constitutes an obligation may vary.
The remaining $2.1 billion in unspent funds is called the “unobligated balance.”
These funds are available to states to make new spending commitments. Table B3
in Appendix B shows unspent TANF funds by state.
CRS-8
The Caseload
How Many Families Receive TANF- or MOE-Funded Benefits and
Services? This number is not known. Federal TANF reporting requirements focus
on families receiving only ongoing assistance (generally cash welfare), with no
complete reporting on families receiving other TANF benefits and services. As
discussed in the previous section of this report, a little less than half of all TANF
funds are used on activities not considered part of a traditional “welfare” program.
Therefore, the federal reporting requirements that pertain to families receiving
“assistance” are very likely to undercount the number of families receiving any
TANF-funded benefit or service.
How Many Families and People Currently Receive TANF- or MOEFunded Cash Welfare? Table 3 provides cash welfare caseload information for
the most recent month for which data are available (June 2006).September 2006.3 A total of 1.9
million families composed of 4.6 million recipients
received TANF- or MOE-funded
cash in JuneSeptember 2006.34 The bulk of the
“recipients” were children — 3.54 million
children in that month. For state-by-state
cash assistance caseloads, see Table B3 in
Appendix B.
Table 3. TANF- and MOE-Funded Cash Welfare Caseload,
JuneSeptember 2006
Total families
1,920,632900,860
Total recipients
4,626,692576,134
Total children
3,481,370440,210
Total adults
1,134,539
125,141
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS).
Note: The number of total recipients is greater than the sum of total children and total adults because
HHS reported total recipient data but not total children or total adult data for Guam.
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS).
3
3
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has released caseload data for
October 2006 through December 2006. However, these data are not comparable to the
caseload data reported before October 2006 for some states. Therefore, at this time, this
report uses cash welfare caseload data through September 2006.
4
These numbers may differ from other reported cash welfare caseload figures, which often
reflect only the caseload within the TANF program while excluding the caseload in MOEfunded, separate state programs. In JuneSeptember 2006, within TANF alone, there were 1.8 million
million families composed of 4.1 million recipients. That month, in separate state programs
financed from MOE funds, there were 149144,000 families composed of 503480,000 recipients.
Note that if a family received assistance from both TANF and SSP programs in a month, the
family would be double-counted in the total cash welfare caseload. That “double count” is
likely to be small. Unduplicated caseload data from TANF and SSPs are not available on
a monthly basis.
CRS-9
How Does the Current Cash Welfare Caseload Level Compare With
Historical Levels? The number of families receiving cash welfare peaked in
March 1994 at 5.1 million families. The cash welfare caseload fell rapidly in the late
1990s (after the 1996 welfare reform law) before leveling off in 2001. Beginning
again in 2004 the caseload began another decline, albeit at a slower pace than
observed in the late 1990s.
Figure 2, below, provides a long-term historical perspective on the number of
families families
receiving cash welfare, from July 1959 to the present. The 1.9 million
families families
currently on the cash assistance rolls represent their lowest level since 1970.
Table Table
B3 shows recent trends in the number of cash welfare families by state.
Figure 2. Number of Families Receiving Cash Welfare,
July 1959 to JuneSeptember 2006
6,000,000
5,000,000
Historic Peak:
March 1994
5.1 Million
Families
5,000,000
4,000,000
3,000,000
2,000,000
JuneSeptember 2006:
1.9 Million Families
1,000,000
Ju
l-5
9
Ju
l -6
2
Ju
l-6
5
Ju
l-6
8
Ju
l-7
1
Ju
l-7
4
Ju
l-7
7
Ju
l-8
0
Ju
l -8
3
Ju
l-8
6
Ju
l -8
9
Ju
l-9
2
Ju
l -9
5
Ju
l-9
8
Ju
l -0
1
Ju
l-0
4
Ju 9
l-6
Ju 1
l-6
Ju 3
l-6
Ju 5
l-6
Ju 7
l-6
Ju 9
l-7
Ju 1
l-7
Ju 3
l-7
Ju 5
l-7
Ju 7
l-7
Ju 9
l-8
Ju 1
l-8
Ju 3
l-8
Ju 5
l-8
Ju 7
l-8
Ju 9
l-9
Ju 1
l-9
Ju 3
l-9
Ju 5
l-9
Ju 7
l-9
Ju 9
l-0
Ju 1
l-0
Ju 3
l-0
5
0
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS).
See Table A3 in Appendix A for calendar-year average monthly numbers of
families, recipients, and children receiving cash welfare.
What Are the Characteristics of the “Typical” Cash Welfare Family?
The most common cash welfare family comprises a single mother with one child.
The majority of both the adults and children on the cash welfare caseload are racial
or ethnic minorities. Many of the children on the cash welfare caseload are young:
in FY2004, 40% of the children in cash welfare families were under the age of 6.
CRS-10
However, the welfare caseload is heterogenous. Some basic facts about the
caseload for FY2004:
!
!
!
!
!
Single-parent families comprised an estimated 53% of all cash
assistance families. The second-most common cash assistance
family had no adult recipients — totaling 41% of all cash assistance
CRS-10
!
!
!
!
families (See Child-Only Cases, below). Only 6% of cash
assistance families had two adult recipients.
The average family size on the cash benefit rolls was about three
persons.
Most adult recipients (86%) were women.
The majority of the cash assistance caseload are racial or ethnic
minorities. Among adult recipients, 37% were African-American,
20% were Hispanic, and 37% were white non-Hispanic.
An estimated 23% of cash welfare adults were employed.
See Table A4A3 and Table A5A4 in Appendix A for a summary of selected
characteristics of families, adults and children receiving cash welfare in FY2004, and
how these characteristics compare with those of the caseload in FY1994 and FY2000.
What is a TANF “Child-Only” Family? A child-only family (or case) is
one in which there are no adult recipients. Of course, children in families receiving
cash welfare are in the care of an adult. However, benefits are paid to the family on
behalf of only the children — the adult is not considered a recipient, and often his or
her “needs” are not considered in determining how much is paid to the family.
“Child-only” families are exempt from the federal TANF time limit on benefit
receipt.45 Through FY2006, “child-only” families have also been excluded from
determinations of a state’s TANF work participation rate. Beginning in FY2007,
under provisions of new HHS regulations adopted to implement the Deficit
Reduction Act, some “child-only” families will be counted in determining the work
participation rate.
In FY2004, “child-only” cases comprised 41% of all cash assistance families
— up considerably from the FY1994 percentage of 17% of all cash assistance
families. Moreover, the number of child-only families (845,000) was greater in
FY2004 than it was in FY1994.
“Child-only” families are themselves a heterogeneous group. In some instances,
child recipients are living with their parents, but the parents are ineligible for
assistance because they are ineligible noncitizens, are recipients of Supplemental
Security Income (SSI), have been sanctioned for failure to meet a program
requirement, or have reached a state time limit on aid to an adult recipient. In other
cases, the children are not living with their parents, but rather with a caretaker
relative such as a grandparent, aunt, uncle, etc.
4
TANF prohibits states from using federal funds to provide assistance to families with an
adult for more than five years (60 months). However, up to 20% of the TANF assistance
caseload may be extended beyond five years for reason of hardship, and states may use
MOE funds to assist families that have been on the rolls for five years or more.
CRS-11
Figure 3, below, summarizes the characteristics of child-only cases, dividing
them into three groups: families headed by an ineligible caretaker parent (58% of all
“child-only” families), families headed by a caretaker relative (31% of “child only”
families), and families for which information was not available about who was
responsible for caring for the child. (Readers should note that these data are statereportedstate-
5
TANF prohibits states from using federal funds to provide assistance to families with an
adult for more than five years (60 months). However, up to 20% of the TANF assistance
caseload may be extended beyond five years for reason of hardship, and states may use
MOE funds to assist families that have been on the rolls for five years or more.
CRS-11
reported — some states did not report information on adults who are not recipients
themselves in cash welfare families.) Table 4, below, provides some limited detail
on child-only family heads. Data are limited because states were not required to
report certain characteristics of adult non-recipients (e.g., their citizenship or whether
they had reached a state time limit), and because of poor reporting by some states on
these persons.
Figure 3. Composition of Cash Welfare “Child-Only” Cases
Unknow n, 11%
Caretaker
Relative, 31%
Ineligible Parent,
58%
Total Number of Child-Only Cash Welfare Families = 845,000
Source: Figure prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on a CRS analysis of
the FY2004 TANF national data files.
Table 4. Cash Welfare “Child-Only Cases,” FY2004
Total child-only families
Ineligible parent
Number
(in thousands)
845
486
Percent of all
child-only cases
Total child-only families
845
100.0%
Ineligible parent
486
57.6
Receives SSI
206
24.4
Other
281
33.2
265
31.3
Grandparent
149
17.6
Other
116
13.7
Caretaker relative
100.0%
57.6
Receives SSI
206
24.4
Other
Caretaker relative
Grandparent
281
265
149
33.2
31.3
17.6
116
13.7
Other
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on a CRS analysis of
the FY2004 TANF national data files.
CRS-12
Child-Only Cases and the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
As mentioned above, certain welfare reform provisions such as time limits
and work requirements do not apply to “child-only” cases. TANF law and
regulations do not define who in a family must be counted as a recipient, leaving
states to decide whether to include or exclude family members (such as adults).
However, the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005 required the Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS) to promulgate regulations determining when
a parent of a recipient child must be included in TANF work participation standard
calculations. These regulations were released in interim, final form on June 29,
2006. They require states to include in the participation rate calculation families
who have non-recipient adult parents who have been removed from the family
because of a sanction (e.g., failure to participate in work) or because of a state time
limit on an adult receiving TANF. The regulations permit states, on a case-by-case
basis, to include in the participation calculations adult non-recipient parents who
receive SSI, but might meet participation standards because of their work through
programs such as “Ticket to Work.”
The HHS regulations promulgated under the Deficit Reduction Act do not
affect non-parent, non-recipient adults in TANF families (e.g., grandparents).
TANF Cash Benefits
How Much Does a Family Receive in TANF Cash Per Month? There
are no federal rules that help determine the amount of TANF cash benefits paid to a
family. (There are also no federal rules that require states to use TANF to pay cash
benefits, though all states do so.) Benefit amounts are determined solely by the
states.
Table 5, below, shows the maximum monthly TANF cash benefit by state and
family family
size as of January 2005.56 The benefit amounts shown are those for a single
parent parent
family with children. Some states vary their benefit amounts for other family
types types
such as two-parent families or “child-only” cases. States also vary their
benefits by
other factors such as housing costs and sub-state geography. In general,
the table
shows the highest benefit amounts paid in the state, though the Michigan
amount is
for Wayne County (Detroit) and the New York benefit is for New York
City.6
57
6
States are not required to report to the federal government their cash welfare benefit
amounts in either the TANF state plan (under section 402 of the Social Security Act) or in
annual program reports (under section 407 of the Social Security Act). The benefit amounts
in this report are from a Congressional Research Service (CRS) survey of state TANF
financial eligibility rules and benefit levels. CRS last conducted this survey for the month
of January 2005.
67
In Michigan, higher maximum benefits were paid in Washtenaw County ($489 per month
for a family of three) than in Wayne County. In New York, higher maximum benefits were
(continued...)
CRS-13
Most states base TANF cash benefit amounts on family size, paying bigger
families larger cash benefits on the presumption that larger families have greater
financial needs. In January 2005, for the average cash welfare family (a family of
three), the maximum monthly benefit in the median state was $389, with a range
from $923 in Alaska to $170 in Mississippi.
The maximum monthly cash benefit is usually paid to a family that receives no
other income (e.g., no earned or unearned income) who complies with program rules.
Families with income other than TANF often are paid a reduced benefit. Moreover,
some families are financially sanctioned for failure to meet a program requirement
(e.g., a work requirement), and are also paid a lower benefit.
6
(...continued)
for a family of three) than in Wayne County. In New York, higher maximum benefits were
paid in Suffolk County ($783 per month for a family of three) than in New York City.
CRS-14
Table 5. TANF Maximum Cash Benefits
for Single-Parent Families, By Family Size, January 2005
State
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
7
1
$165
0
204
81
359
214
402
201
239
180
155
335
309
223
139
183
267
186
122
230
216
418
276
250
110
136
251
222
231
489
162
231
414
181
282
223
180
310
215
2
$190
821
275
162
584
280
513
270
298
241
235
452
309
292
229
361
352
225
188
363
380
518
371
437
146
234
328
293
289
556
322
310
501
236
378
305
225
395
330
3
$215
923
347
204
723
356
636
338
379
303
280
570
309
396
288
426
429
262
240
485
482
618
459
532
170
292
405
364
348
625
424
389
691
272
477
373
292
460
421
4
$245
1,025
418
247
862
432
741
407
463
364
330
687
309
435
346
495
497
328
284
611
583
713
563
621
194
342
482
435
407
688
488
469
825
297
573
461
361
565
514
5
$275
1,127
489
286
980
512
835
475
533
426
378
805
309
509
405
548
558
383
327
733
675
812
659
697
218
388
560
506
466
748
552
548
964
324
670
539
422
660
607
6
$305
1,229
561
331
1,101
590
935
544
627
487
410
922
309
572
463
610
619
432
366
856
743
912
792
773
242
431
637
577
525
829
616
627
1,059
349
767
600
483
755
687
CRS-15
State
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
1
327
121
366
95
93
274
503
242
349
262
0
195
2
449
163
448
142
193
380
604
323
440
301
673
320
3
554
205
501
185
223
474
709
389
546
340
673
340
4
634
248
553
226
268
555
795
451
642
384
673
340
5
714
290
606
264
298
632
885
537
740
420
673
360
6
(...continued)
paid in Suffolk County ($783 per month for a family of three) than in New York City.
CRS-14
State
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
1
136
251
222
231
489
162
231
414
181
282
223
180
310
215
327
121
366
95
93
274
503
242
349
262
0
195
2
234
328
293
289
556
322
310
501
236
378
305
225
395
330
449
163
448
142
193
380
604
323
440
301
673
320
3
292
405
364
348
625
424
389
691
272
477
373
292
460
421
554
205
501
185
223
474
709
389
546
340
673
340
4
342
482
435
407
688
488
469
825
297
573
461
361
565
514
634
248
553
226
268
555
795
451
642
384
673
340
5
388
560
506
466
748
552
548
964
324
670
539
422
660
607
714
290
606
264
298
632
885
537
740
420
673
360
6
431
637
577
525
829
616
627
1,059
349
767
600
483
755
687
794
333
659
305
342
696
946
587
841
460
673
360
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on a CRS survey of state
TANF financial eligibility and benefit rules.
How Have TANF Cash Benefits Changed Over Time? The large
variation in TANF cash welfare benefits is not new. Even before the 1996 welfare
reform law, states determined benefit amounts.
Most states do not regularly adjust benefits for the effects of inflation. Some
states have not changed their benefit levels in many years. Table 6, below, compares
the compares the
January 2005 benefit for a family of three (single-parent family) with the benefits
paid in January 1996, 2000, and 2002. In inflation-adjusted terms, the benefits
declined in value by 19% in states that paid the same benefit in January 2005 as in
January 1996.
CRS-1615
Table 6. Cash Welfare Benefits for a Family of Three
(Single-Parent Family), January 1996, 2000, 2002, and 2005
State
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
1996
$164
923
347
204
596
356
636
338
415
303
280
712
317
377
288
426
429
262
190
418
373
565
459
532
120
292
438
364
348
550
424
389
577
272
431
341
2000
$164
923
347
204
626
356
636
338
379
303
280
570
293
377
288
426
429
262
190
461
417
565
459
532
170
292
469
364
348
575
424
439
577
272
457
373
2002
$164
923
347
204
679
356
636
338
379
303
280
570
293
377
288
426
429
262
240
485
472
618
459
532
170
292
494
364
348
600
424
389
577
272
477
373
Percent
change in real
real (inflationadjusted)
dollars:
2005
1996-2005
$215
6.1%
923
-19.0
347
-19.0
204
-19.0
723
-1.8
356
-19.0
636
-19.0
338
-19.0
379
-26.1
303
-19.0
280
-19.0
570
-35.2
309
-21.1
396
-15.0
288
-19.0
426
-19.0
429
-19.0
262
-19.0
240
2.3
485
-6.1
482
4.6
618
-11.4
459
-19.0
532
-19.0
170
14.7
292
-19.0
405
-25.1
364
-19.0
348
-19.0
625
-8.0
424
-19.0
389
-19.0
691
-3.0
272
-19.0
477
-10.4
373
-11.4
CRS-1716
State
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
1996
341
307
460
421
554
200
430
185
188
416
633
354
546
253
517
360
2000
373
292
460
421
554
204
430
185
201
451
708
354
546
328
673
340
2002
373
292
460
421
554
205
469
185
201
474
709
389
546
453
673
340
Percent
change in real
real (inflationadjusted)
dollars:
2005
1996-2005
373
-11.4
292
-23.0
460
-19.0
421
-19.0
554
-19.0
205
-17.0
501
-5.7
185
-19.0
223
-4.0
474
-7.7
709
-9.3
389
-11.0
546
-19.0
340
8.8
673
5.4
340
-23.5
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on a CRS survey of state
TANF financial eligibility and benefit rules.
CRS-18
TANF Work Participation Standards
What Is the TANF Work Participation Standard States Must Meet?
The TANF statute requires states to have 50% of their caseload meet standards of
participation in work or activities — that is, a family member must be in specified
activities for a minimum number of hours.78 There is a separate participation standard
that applies to the two-parent portion of a state’s caseload, requiring 90% of the
state’s two-parent caseload to meet participation standards. States that fail the TANF
work participation standards are penalized by a reduction in their block grant
amounts.
However, the statutory work participation standards are reduced by a “caseload
reduction credit.” The caseload reduction credit reduces the participation standard
one percentage point for each percent decline in the caseload. Beginning in FY2007,
states will be credited only with caseload declines that have occurred since FY2005.
The FY2007 effective (after-credit) standard will be based on caseload declines from
FY2005 to FY2006. The FY2008 effective standard will be based on caseload
declines from FY2005 to FY2007. States are not given credit for caseload declines
that result from new restrictions on eligibility enacted by states since FY2005.
8
Some families are excluded from the participation rate calculation.
CRS-17
The currently available caseload data do not tell what the effective (after-credit)
participation standards will be for FY2007. However, cash welfare caseloads have
declined over the past year. From the first nine months of FY2005 to the first nine
months of FY2006, the national average decline in the overall cash welfare caseload
was about 6% (see Table B3 in Appendix B). If this is sustained over the entire
fiscal year and is not a result of restrictive policy changes, the average state will see
its effective participation standards reduced by six percentage points — from 50%
to 44%.
What Actual Work Participation Rates Have the States Achieved?
In FY2004, the national average work participation rate for all families achieved by
states was 32%. The participation rate within TANF achieved nationwide for the
two-parent portion of the caseload was 47.4%. This implies that many states would
have to raise their participation rates from historical levels to comply with the
FY2007 TANF work participation standards.
In FY2004, all jurisdictions except Guam met TANF work participation
standards. A more generous caseload reduction credit, counting caseload declines
from FY1995, was in effect that year. In FY2004, Arkansas, the District of
Columbia, Guam, and Washington failed to meet the two-parent standard. See Table
B5 in Appendix B for FY2004 participation rates for all states.
7
Some families are excluded from the participation rate calculation.
CRS-19.
CRS-18
Appendix A. Supplementary Tables
Table A1. Temporary Extensions of Welfare Reform Programs,
FY2003-FY2006
Public lawLaw
P.L. 107-229
P.L. 107-294
P.L. 108-7
P.L. 108-40
P.L. 108-89
P.L. 108-210
Time periodPeriod
Oct. 1, 2002-Dec. 31,
2002
Jan. 1, 2003-Mar. 31,
2003
Apr. 1, 2003-June 30,
2003
July 1, 2003-Sept. 30,
2003
Oct. 1, 2003-Mar. 31,
2004
Apr. 1, 2004-June 30,
2004
P.L. 108-262
July 1, 2004-Sept. 30,
2004
P.L. 108-308
Oct. 1, 2004- Mar. 31,
2005
P.L. 109-4
Apr. 1, 2005-June 30,
2005
P.L. 109-19
July 1, 2005-Sept. 30,
2005
P.L. 109-68
Oct. 1, 2005-Dec. 31,
2005
P.L. 109-161
Jan. 1, 2006-Mar. 31,
2006
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS).
Notes
Extension as part of a continuing
resolution.
Extension as part of a continuing
resolution.
Extension as part of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act.
Free-standing bill that amended the Social
Security Act to extend TANF and related
programs.
Multipurpose bill that extended programs
through the first half of FY2004.
Free-standing bill that extended funding
authority for the program through June
30, 2004.
Free-standing bill that extended funding
authority for the program through Sept.
30, 2004.
Free-standing bill that extended funding
authority for the programs through Mar.
31, 2005.
Free-standing bill that extended funding
authority for the programs through June
30, 2005.
Free-standing bill that extended funding
authority for the programs through Sept.
30, 2005.
Bill to provide extra funding to help states
provide benefits to families affected by
Hurricane Katrina, suspend certain
requirements in states affected by the
hurricane, and extend the funding
authority for the programs through Dec.
31, 2005.
Free-standing bill that extended funding
authority for the programs through March
31, 2006. Reduced the bonus for reducing
out-of-wedlock births for FY2006FY2010 to offset the costs of the
temporary extension.
CRS-2019
Table A2. Use of Federal TANF and MOE Funds in FY2005
Category
Basic (cash) assistance
Administrative expenditures
Work program expenditures
Child care expenditures
Transfers to CCDF
Other work supports
Family formation expenditures
Other expenditures
Transfers to SSBG
Total Expenditures
Total Transfers
Total
Dollars
(in Billionsbillions)
$10.7
2.4
2.2
3.2
1.9
1.7
0.8
4.6
0.9
25.6
2.9
28.4
Percent of Total
Expenditures
(and Transfers)
37.8%
8.4
7.6
11.2
6.8
5.8
3.0
16.2
3.2
89.9
10.1
100.0
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
CRS-21
Table A3. Average Monthly Families, Recipients, and Children,
Calendar Years 1961-2006 (in thousands)
Year
Total Families
1961
873
1962
939
1963
963
1964
1,010
1965
1,060
1966
1,096
1967
1,220
1968
1,410
1969
1,696
1970
2,207
1971
2,763
1973
3,148
1974
3,219
1975
3,481
1976
3,565
1977
3,568
1978
3,517
1979
3,509
1980
3,712
1981
3,835
1982
3,542
1983
3,686
1984
3,714
1985
3,701
1986
3,763
1987
3,776
1988
3,749
1989
3,798
1990
4,057
1991
4,497
1992
4,829
1993
5,012
1994
5,033
1995
4,791
1996
4,484
1999
2,455
2000
2,303
2001
2,192
2002
2,187
2003
2,180
2004
2,155
2005
2,069
2006 (six-month
1,959
average, through June)
Total
Recipients Total Children Total Adults
3,363
2,598
765
3,704
2,844
860
3,945
2,957
988
4,195
3,145
1,050
4,422
3,321
1,101
4,546
3,434
1,112
5,014
3,771
1,243
5,702
4,274
1,429
6,689
4,973
1,716
8,462
6,212
10,148
10,242
7,435
12,323
10,949
7,903
13,504
10,847
7,805
13,469
11,319
8,071
14,047
11,284
7,982
13,941
11,015
7,743
13,648
10,551
7,363
13,188
10,312
7,181
12,935
10,774
7,419
13,442
11,079
7,527
13,720
10,358
6,903
12,803
10,761
7,098
13,238
10,831
7,144
13,321
10,855
7,198
13,392
11,038
7,334
13,648
11,027
7,366
13,680
10,915
7,329
13,590
10,992
7,419
13,717
11,695
7,911
14,542
12,930
8,715
15,919
13,773
9,303
16,869
14,205
9,574
17,327
14,161
9,568
17,264
13,418
9,135
16,356
13,654
8,560
15,140
6,637
4,807
2,557
6,143
4,479
2,406
5,717
4,195
2,283
5,609
4,119
2,267
5,490
4,062
2,234
5,341
3,970
2,193
5,036
3,762
2,103
4,727
3,549
1,989
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
CRS-22
Table A4. Number of Cash Welfare Families, Adult Recipients, and Child Recipients By Selected Characteristics,
FY1994, FY2000, and FY2004
Number of families (in thousands)
Average family size
1994
5,046
2.8
2000
2,297
3.0
2004
2,129
2.9
Percent
change,
1994-2004
-57.8
1.9
Characteristics of families (numbers of families in thousands)
Number of adult recipients
With one adult recipient
With two adult recipients
Subtotal: with adult recipients
With no adult recipients
3,757
411
4,169
869
1,370
163
1,532
761
1,133
125
1,258
871
-69.8
-69.7
-69.8
0.3
-17.3
-23.2
-17.9
14.5
Number of children in family
One child
Two children
Three or more children
2,148
1,514
1,272
996
655
598
1,012
598
477
-52.9
-60.5
-62.5
1.6
-8.6
-20.3
Number of adult recipients
4,610
1,751
1,398
-69.7
-20.1
Characteristics of adult recipients (numbers in thousands)
Gender
Women
Men
4,022
587
1,516
234
1,209
190
-69.9
-67.7
-20.3
-19.2
Employment status
Employed
Not employed
384
4,182
485
848
316
699
-17.9
-83.3
-35.0
-17.5
Percent change,
2000-2004
-7.3
-4.5
CRS-23
Percent
change,
1994-2004
Percent change,
2000-2004
1994
2000
2004
Race/ethnicity
White (Non-Hispanic)
African-American
Hispanic
Other*
1,870
1,559
862
319
573
604
407
132
511
513
281
75
-72.7
-67.1
-67.4
-76.5
-10.8
-15.1
-31.0
-43.4
Number of child recipients (numbers in thousands)
9,753
4,619
3,980
-59.2
-13.8
559
1,765
1,507
651
3,520
1,732
293
583
589
297
1,906
948
279
553
517
231
1,501
896
-50.1
-68.7
-65.7
-64.5
-57.4
-48.3
-4.9
-5.1
-12.2
-22.1
-21.3
-5.5
3,220
3,701
2,064
488
1,233
1,754
1,210
309
1,109
1,509
1,067
234
-65.6
-59.2
-48.3
-52.0
-10.1
-14.0
-11.7
-24.3
Age
Infants
1 or 2
3 or 4
5
6 to 12
13 or older
Race/ethnicity
White (Non-Hispanic)
African-American
Hispanic
Other
* Includes persons who reported multiple racial affiliations.
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on a CRS analysis of the FY1994 Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) Quality Control
data file and the FY2000 and FY2004 TANF National data files.
CRS-24
Table A5. Composition of Cash Welfare Families By Selected Characteristics, FY1994, FY2000, and FY2004
1994
Percent of Total Families
2000
Percentage
point change,
2004 1994-2004
Percentage point
change, 2000-2004
Number of Adult Recipients
One
Two or more
Subtotal: with adult recipients
None
74.5
8.2
82.6
17.2
59.6
7.1
66.7
33.1
53.2
5.9
59.1
40.9
-21.2
-2.3
-23.5
23.7
-6.4
-1.2
-7.6
7.8
Number of Children
One
Two
Three or more
20
Table A3. Number of Cash Welfare Families, Adult and Child
Recipients, By Selected Characteristics, FY1994, FY2000, and FY2004
1994
2000
Number of families (in thousands)
5,046
2,297
Average family size
2.8
3.0
Characteristics of families (numbers of families in thousands)
Number of adult recipients
With one adult recipient
3,757
1,370
With two adult recipients
411
163
Subtotal: with adult recipients
4,169
1,532
With no adult recipients
869
761
Number of children in family
One child
2,148
996
Two children
1,514
655
Three or more children
1,272
598
Number of adult recipients
4,610
1,751
Characteristics of adult recipients (numbers in thousands)
Gender
Women
4,022
1,516
Men
587
234
Employment status
Employed
384
485
Not employed
4,182
848
Race/ethnicity
White (Non-Hispanic)
1,870
573
African-American
1,559
604
Hispanic
862
407
a
Other
319
132
Number of child recipients
9,753
4,619
(numbers in thousands)
Age
Infants
559
293
1 or 2
1,765
583
3 or 4
1,507
589
5
651
297
6 to 12
3,520
1,906
13 or older
1,732
948
Race/ethnicity
White (Non-Hispanic)
3,220
1,233
African-American
3,701
1,754
Hispanic
2,064
1,210
Other
488
309
Percent
Percent
2004 Change,
Change,
1994-2004 2000-2004
2,129
-57.8
-7.3
2.9
1.9
-4.5
1,133
125
1,258
871
-69.8
-69.7
-69.8
0.3
-17.3
-23.2
-17.9
14.5
1,012
598
477
1,398
-52.9
-60.5
-62.5
-69.7
1.6
-8.6
-20.3
-20.1
1,209
190
-69.9
-67.7
-20.3
-19.2
316
699
-17.9
-83.3
-35.0
-17.5
511
513
281
75
-72.7
-67.1
-67.4
-76.5
-10.8
-15.1
-31.0
-43.4
3,980
-59.2
-13.8
279
553
517
231
1,501
896
-50.1
-68.7
-65.7
-64.5
-57.4
-48.3
-4.9
-5.1
-12.2
-22.1
-21.3
-5.5
1,109
1,509
1,067
234
-65.6
-59.2
-48.3
-52.0
-10.1
-14.0
-11.7
-24.3
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on a CRS analysis of the FY1994
Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) Quality Control data file and the FY2000 and FY2004 TANF
National data files.
a. Includes persons who reported multiple racial affiliations.
CRS-21
Table A4. Composition of Cash Welfare Families By Selected
Characteristics, FY1994, FY2000, and FY2004
Percent of Total Families
Number of Adult Recipients
One
Two or more
Subtotal: with adult recipients
None
Number of Children
One
Two
Three or more
Percent of Total Adult Recipients
Gender
Women
Men
Employment Status
Employed
Race/Ethnicity
White (Non-Hispanic)
African-American
Hispanic
Othera
Percent of Child Recipients
Age
Infants
1 or 2
3 or 4
5
6 to 12
13 or older
Race/Ethnicity
White (Non-Hispanic)
African-American
Hispanic
Other
1994
2000
Percentage
Percentage
2004 point change, point change,
1994-2004
2000-2004
74.5
8.2
82.6
17.2
59.6
7.1
66.7
33.1
53.2
5.9
59.1
40.9
-21.2
-2.3
-23.5
23.7
-6.4
-1.2
-7.6
7.8
42.6
30.0
25.2
43.4
28.5
26.1
47.6
28.1
22.4
5.0
-1.9
-2.8
4.2
-0.4
-3.7
87.2
12.7
86.6
13.4
86.4
13.6
-0.8
0.8
-0.2
0.2
8.3
27.7
22.6
14.2
-5.1
40.6
33.8
18.7
6.9
32.8
34.5
23.3
7.5
36.6
36.7
20.1
5.4
-4.0
2.9
1.4
-1.6
3.8
2.2
-3.2
-2.2
Percent of Total Adult Recipients
Gender
Women
Men
Employment Status
Employed
Race/Ethnicity
White (Non-Hispanic)
African-American
Hispanic
Other*
CRS-25
1994
Percent of Child Recipients
2000
Percentage
point change,
2004 1994-2004
Percentage point
change, 2000-2004
Age
Infants
1 or 2
3 or 4
5
6 to 12
13 or older
5.7
18.1
15.4
6.7
36.1
17.8
6.3
12.6
12.8
6.4
41.3
20.5
7.0
13.9
13.0
5.8
37.7
22.5
1.3
-4.2
-2.5
-0.9
1.6
4.8
0.7
1.3
0.2
-0.6
-3.6
2.0
Race/Ethnicity
White (Non-Hispanic)
African-American
Hispanic
Other
33.0
37.9
21.2
5.0
26.7
38.0
26.2
6.7
27.9
37.9
26.8
5.9
-5.2
0.0
5.7
0.9
1.2
-0.1
0.6
-0.8
* Includes persons who reported multiple racial affiliations.
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on a CRS analysis of the FY1994
Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) Quality Control
data file and the FY2000 and FY2004 TANF
National data files.
a. Includes persons who reported multiple racial affiliations.
CRS-22.
CRS-26
Appendix B. State Tables
Table B1. Use of FY2005 TANF and MOE Funds by Category
($ in millions)
Basic (cash)
State
assistance
Alabama
$47.4
Alaska
41.1
Arizona
160.1
Arkansas
18.5
California
3,503.7
Colorado
75.1
Connecticut
125.7
Delaware
19.3
District of Columbia
66.3
Florida
184.2
Georgia
117.3
Hawaii
81.7
Idaho
7.3
Illinois
122.2
Indiana
113.2
Iowa
75.7
Kansas
65.4
Kentucky
104.9
Louisiana
51.3
Maine
90.0
Maryland
124.3
Massachusetts
331.6
Michigan
412.0
Minnesota
137.3
Mississippi
26.9
Missouri
124.9
Administrative
expenditures
$12.4
5.8
38.5
7.7
557.3
21.1
29.3
5.8
14.9
93.0
19.0
14.3
2.2
23.7
40.5
13.4
8.4
16.6
26.1
5.9
36.0
28.4
94.5
45.2
5.3
20.3
Work
program
expenditures
$15.8
11.8
18.5
12.2
436.7
1.2
23.9
0.0
19.9
81.8
86.8
20.6
7.7
85.6
7.3
18.3
1.7
27.6
12.5
2.1
28.1
19.1
83.7
70.8
15.1
32.3
Family
formation
Child care
expenexpenTransfersFamily
Work
formation
program
Child care
expenexpenexpenTransfers to Other work
ditures
ditures
ditures
CCDF
supports
$15.8
$6.2
$4.1
$3.7
$1.9
11.8
12.8
15.2
0.7
0.6
18.5
9.9
0.0
3.5
0.0
12.2
14.8
7.5
5.1
2.5
436.7
669.4
412.6
151.1
22.1
1.2
1.9
2.7
8.4
0.1
23.9
12.3
0.0
18.2
74.1
0.0
23.7
-4.3
12.5
0.0
19.9
39.4
18.5
0.0
2.8
81.8
242.3
122.5
7.3
11.3
86.8
22.2
0.0
13.6
31.5
20.6
10.6
10.3
1.2
0.0
7.7
0.8
8.7
0.3
2.5
85.6
415.3
0.0
20.2
1.2
7.3
15.3
5.0
39.4
1.6
18.3
5.1
25.3
4.7
8.3
1.7
7.9
21.4
36.0
0.0
27.6
20.9
54.4
5.8
0.0
12.5
5.2
19.6
8.0
51.2
2.1
13.7
8.9
12.8
0.0
28.1
29.8
0.0
100.5
21.6
19.1
183.6
91.9
70.7
0.6
83.7
226.9
130.9
1.5
102.1
70.8
40.0
22.6
57.7
0.0
15.1
4.9
19.5
13.2
7.3
32.3
61.3
27.4
0.0
7.4
Other
expenditures
$36.0
1.3
68.1
5.6
542.3
106.0
175.3
0.0
12.7
248.5
229.6
0.0
19.1
330.3
89.4
36.1
34.9
40.5
32.0
2.3
8.6
54.6
254.6
41.3
6.1
52.8
Transfers to
SSBG
$10.4
3.1
23.0
2.4
128.2
15.0
26.7
2.4
3.9
62.3
14.1
10.0
1.4
17.5
2.0
12.8
4.3
0.0
16.4
4.9
22.9
45.9
43.9
0.0
9expenTransfers to
ditures
SSBG
$36.0
$10.4
1.3
3.1
68.1
23.0
5.6
2.4
542.3
128.2
106.0
15.0
175.3
26.7
0.0
2.4
12.7
3.9
248.5
62.3
229.6
14.1
0.0
10.0
19.1
1.4
330.3
17.5
89.4
2.0
36.1
12.8
34.9
4.3
40.5
0.0
32.0
16.4
2.3
4.9
8.6
22.9
54.6
45.9
254.6
43.9
41.3
0.0
6.1
9.8
52.8
21.7
Total
$137.9
92.5
321.6
76.6
6,423.2
231.5
485.5
59.4
178.4
1,053.2
534.2
148.7
50.0
1,015.9
313.7
199.7
180.1
270.7
222.4
140.7
371.8
826.3
1,350.1
415.0
108.2
348.0
CRS-2723
State
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Total
Basic (cash)
assistance
19.8
54.0
33.1
35.3
440.9
74.8
1,761.8
108.4
11.2
316.4
33.2
105.1
407.1
72.1
73.4
11.6
120.8
181.1
45.2
36.1
143.1
261.9
43.0
115.5
6.6
10,739.0
Administrative
expenditures
5.3
5.8
16.6
7.1
82.9
7.2
380.8
39.1
3.4
132.3
15.8
26.9
99.5
14.5
21.1
2.9
28.8
121.3
19.7
6.7
46.5
45.4
25.0
35.6
1.0
Work
program
expenditures
11.2
11.8
1.3
8.8
45.4
12.2
200.2
62.4
2.6
77.7
0.0
22.3
179.8
7.1
55.5
3.4
25.4
86.1
30.9
0.6
51.0
93.7
2.6
33.3
0.4
2,376.6
2,166.9
Family10,739.0
2,376.6
Work
Family
program
Child care
formation
expenTransfersexpenexpenTransfers to Other work
expenditures
ditures
CCDF
supports
ditures
11.2
1.3
1.9
0.0
0.4
11.8
6.5
9.0
0.0
0.0
1.3
4.0
0.0
5.6
0.3
8.8
4.6
5.5
1.1
1.2
45.4
26.4
0.0
52.1
350.7
12.2
2.9
29.6
1.9
1.2
200.2
102.0
381.8
753.6
39.5
62.4
117.4
86.0
6.5
0.1
2.6
2.4
0.0
1.5
2.2
77.7
220.7
0.0
25.3
10.2
0.0
62.1
30.8
26.3
3.8
22.3
9.5
0.0
15.5
0.0
179.8
129.8
116.8
45.9
31.9
7.1
51.3
8.8
0.3
0.0
55.5
4.1
1.5
7.3
6.9
3.4
0.8
0.0
0.1
0.6
25.4
31.3
57.7
5.9
0.0
86.1
22.6
0.0
2.7
7.6
30.9
9.5
0.0
1.3
0.5
0.6
8.3
9.2
14.9
0.0
51.0
22.0
3.0
7.4
0.6
93.7
69.1
103.0
3.8
0.0
2.6
20.5
0.0
10.0
15.2
33.3
168.7
64.2
62.4
16.5
0.4
3.0
3.7
2.4
0.0
2,166.9
3,197.1
1,937.4
1,650.0
840.2
Other
expenditures
5.9
0.0
8.9
4.8
-4.6
27.1
732.0
114.0
10.3
207.5
33.1
89.5
296.3
22.7
61.3
10.9
21.0
429.2
0.9
0.9
19.0
51.1
7.7
14.0
18.8
Transfers to
SSBG
1.8
0.0
1.2
3.9
15.4
2.0
119.8
5.6
0.0
74.3
15.4
0.0
29.4
1.1
20.0
2.2
9.1
61.1
3.0
4.7
15.3
7.9
11.0
13.4
0.0
expenTransfers to
ditures
SSBG
5.9
1.8
0.0
0.0
8.9
1.2
4.8
3.9
-4.6
15.4
27.1
2.0
732.0
119.8
114.0
5.6
10.3
0.0
207.5
74.3
33.1
15.4
89.5
0.0
296.3
29.4
22.7
1.1
61.3
20.0
10.9
2.2
21.0
9.1
429.2
61.1
0.9
3.0
0.9
4.7
19.0
15.3
51.1
7.9
7.7
11.0
14.0
13.4
18.8
0.0
4,610.3
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
922.4
Total
47.6
87.1
71.2
72.1
1,009.2
159.0
4,471.5
539.5
33.6
1,064.3
220.5
268.8
1,336.5
177.9
251.0
32.6
300.0
911.7
110.8
81.5
308.0
635.9
135.0
523.5
36.0
28,439.9
CRS-2824
Table B2. Use of FY2006FY2005 TANF and MOE Funds by Category,
as a Percent of Total Federal TANF and State MOE Funding
State
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Basic (cash)
assistanceCash)
Assistance
34.4
44.4
49.8
24.2
54.5
32.5
25.9
32.5
37.2
17.5
22.0
55.0
14.6
12.0
36.1
37.9
36.3
38.7
23.1
64.0
33.4
40.1
30.5
33.1
24.8
35.9
41.6
62.0
Administrative
expenditures
9.0
6.3
12.0
10.1
8.7
9.1
6.0
9.7
8.4
8.8
3.6
9.6
4.4
2.3
12.9
6.7
4.7
6.1
11.8
4.2
9.7
3.4
7.0
10.9
4.9
5.8
11.2
6.6
Family
Work
formation
program
expenexpenChild care Transfers to Other work
ditures
ditures expenditures CCDF
supports
11.4
4.5
3.0
2.7
1.4
12.7
13.9
16.4
0.8
0.7
5.7
3.1
0.0
1.1
0.0
16.0
19.4
9.8
6.7
3.3
6.8
10.4
6.4
2.4
0.3
0.5
0.8
1.2
3.6
0.0
4.9
2.5
0.0
3.8
15.3
0.0
39.9
-7.2
21.0
0.0
11.2
22.1
10.4
0.0
1.6
7.8
23.0
11.6
0.7
1.1
16.2
4.2
0.0
2.5
5.9
13.9
7.1
6.9
0.8
0.0
15.3
1.6
17.5
0.5
5.0
8.4
40.9
0.0
2.0
0.1
2.3
4.9
1.6
12.6
0.5
9.2
2.5
12.7
2.3
4.2
1.0
4.4
11.9
20.0
0.0
10.2
7.7
20.1
2.1
0.0
5.6
2.3
8.8
3.6
23.0
1.5
9.8
6.3
9.1
0.0
7.6
8.0
0.0
27.0
5.8
2.3
22.2
11.1
8.6
0.1
6.2
16.8
9.7
0.1
7.6
17.1
9.6
5.5
13.9
0.0
14.0
4.6
18.1
12.2
6.7
9.3
17.6
7.9
0.0
2.1
23.5
2.8
3.9
0.0
0.8
13.6
7.5
10.3
0.0
0.0
Other
expenditures
26.1
1.5
21.2
7.4
8.4
45.8
36.1
0.0
7.1
23.6
43.0
0.0
38.1
32.5
28.5
18.1
19.4
15.0
14.4
1.6
2.3
6.6
18.9
10.0
5.6
15.2
12.4
0.0
Transfers to
SSBG
7.5
3.4
7.2
3.2
2.0
6.5
5.5
4.0
2.2
5.9
2.6
6.7
2.9
1.7
0.6
6.4
2.4
0.0
7.4
3.5
6.2
5.6
3.3
0.0
9.0
6.2
3.7
0.0Family
Work
AdminisFormation
Program
Child
trative
ExpenCare
Transfers Other Work ExpenExpenditures
ditures Expenditures to CCDF
Supports
ditures
9.0
11.4
4.5
3.0
2.7
1.4
6.3
12.7
13.9
16.4
0.8
0.7
12.0
5.7
3.1
0.0
1.1
0.0
10.1
16.0
19.4
9.8
6.7
3.3
8.7
6.8
10.4
6.4
2.4
0.3
9.1
0.5
0.8
1.2
3.6
0.0
6.0
4.9
2.5
0.0
3.8
15.3
9.7
0.0
39.9
-7.2
21.0
0.0
8.4
11.2
22.1
10.4
0.0
1.6
8.8
7.8
23.0
11.6
0.7
1.1
3.6
16.2
4.2
0.0
2.5
5.9
9.6
13.9
7.1
6.9
0.8
0.0
4.4
15.3
1.6
17.5
0.5
5.0
2.3
8.4
40.9
0.0
2.0
0.1
12.9
2.3
4.9
1.6
12.6
0.5
6.7
9.2
2.5
12.7
2.3
4.2
4.7
1.0
4.4
11.9
20.0
0.0
6.1
10.2
7.7
20.1
2.1
0.0
11.8
5.6
2.3
8.8
3.6
23.0
4.2
1.5
9.8
6.3
9.1
0.0
9.7
7.6
8.0
0.0
27.0
5.8
3.4
2.3
22.2
11.1
8.6
0.1
7.0
6.2
16.8
9.7
0.1
7.6
10.9
17.1
9.6
5.5
13.9
0.0
4.9
14.0
4.6
18.1
12.2
6.7
5.8
9.3
17.6
7.9
0.0
2.1
11.2
23.5
2.8
3.9
0.0
0.8
6.6
13.6
7.5
10.3
0.0
0.0
Other
ExpenTransfers
ditures
to SSBG
26.1
7.5
1.5
3.4
21.2
7.2
7.4
3.2
8.4
2.0
45.8
6.5
36.1
5.5
0.0
4.0
7.1
2.2
23.6
5.9
43.0
2.6
0.0
6.7
38.1
2.9
32.5
1.7
28.5
0.6
18.1
6.4
19.4
2.4
15.0
0.0
14.4
7.4
1.6
3.5
2.3
6.2
6.6
5.6
18.9
3.3
10.0
0.0
5.6
9.0
15.2
6.2
12.4
3.7
0.0
0.0
Total
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
CRS-2925
State
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Total
Basic (cash)
assistanceCash)
Assistance
46.6
48.9
43.7
47.0
39.4
20.1
33.2
29.7
15.1
39.1
30.5
40.5
29.2
35.8
40.3
19.9
40.8
44.3
46.5
41.2
31.9
22.1
18.5
37.8
Administrative
expenditures
23.3
9.9
8.2
4.5
8.5
7.2
10.2
12.4
7.2
10.0
7.4
8.2
8.4
8.9
9.6
13.3
17.8
8.2
15.1
7.1
18.5
6.8
2.9
8.4
Work
Family
program
formation
expenChild care Transfers to Other work
expenditures expenditures CCDF
supports
ditures
1.8
5.6
0.0
7.9
0.5
12.2
6.4
7.6
1.5
1.6
4.5
2.6
0.0
5.2
34.8
7.7
1.8
18.6
1.2
0.8
4.5
2.3
8.5
16.9
0.9
11.6
21.8
15.9
1.2
0.0
7.8
7.2
0.0
4.4
6.5
7.3
20.7
0.0
2.4
1.0
0.0
28.2
13.9
11.9
1.7
8.3
3.5
0.0
5.8
0.0
13.5
9.7
8.7
3.4
2.4
4.0
28.9
4.9
0.2
0.0
22.1
1.6
0.6
2.9
2.7
10.5
2.5
0.0
0.4
1.7
8.5
10.4
19.2
2.0
0.0
9.4
2.5
0.0
0.3
0.8
27.9
8.5
0.0
1.1
0.4
0.8
10.2
11.3
18.3
0.0
16.6
7.2
1.0
2.4
0.2
14.7
10.9
16.2
0.6
0.0
1.9
15.2
0.0
7.4
11.2
6.4
32.2
12.3
11.9
3.2
1.1
8.3
10.3
6.6
0.0
7.6
11.2
6.8
5.8
3.0
Other
expenditures
12.5
6.6
-0.5
17.1
16.4
21.1
30.6
19.5
15.0
33.3
22.2
12.8
24.4
33.6
7.0
47.1
0.8
1.2
6.2
8.0
5.7
2.7
52.3
Transfers to
SSBG
1.8
5.3
1.5
1.3
2.7
1.0
0.0
7.0
7.0
0.0
2.2
0.6
8.0
6.7
3.0
6.7
2.7
5.8
5.0
1.2
8.2
2.6
0.0
AdminisWork
Family
trative
Program
Child
Formation
ExpenExpenCare
Transfers Other Work Expenditures
ditures Expenditures to CCDF
Supports
ditures
23.3
1.8
5.6
0.0
7.9
0.5
9.9
12.2
6.4
7.6
1.5
1.6
8.2
4.5
2.6
0.0
5.2
34.8
4.5
7.7
1.8
18.6
1.2
0.8
8.5
4.5
2.3
8.5
16.9
0.9
7.2
11.6
21.8
15.9
1.2
0.0
10.2
7.8
7.2
0.0
4.4
6.5
12.4
7.3
20.7
0.0
2.4
1.0
7.2
0.0
28.2
13.9
11.9
1.7
10.0
8.3
3.5
0.0
5.8
0.0
7.4
13.5
9.7
8.7
3.4
2.4
8.2
4.0
28.9
4.9
0.2
0.0
8.4
22.1
1.6
0.6
2.9
2.7
8.9
10.5
2.5
0.0
0.4
1.7
9.6
8.5
10.4
19.2
2.0
0.0
13.3
9.4
2.5
0.0
0.3
0.8
17.8
27.9
8.5
0.0
1.1
0.4
8.2
0.8
10.2
11.3
18.3
0.0
15.1
16.6
7.2
1.0
2.4
0.2
7.1
14.7
10.9
16.2
0.6
0.0
18.5
1.9
15.2
0.0
7.4
11.2
6.8
6.4
32.2
12.3
11.9
3.2
2.9
1.1
8.3
10.3
6.6
0.0
8.4
7.6
11.2
6.8
5.8
3.0
Other
ExpenTransfers
ditures
to SSBG
12.5
1.8
6.6
5.3
-0.5
1.5
17.1
1.3
16.4
2.7
21.1
1.0
30.6
0.0
19.5
7.0
15.0
7.0
33.3
0.0
22.2
2.2
12.8
0.6
24.4
8.0
33.6
6.7
7.0
3.0
47.1
6.7
0.8
2.7
1.2
5.8
6.2
5.0
8.0
1.2
5.7
8.2
2.7
2.6
52.3
0.0
16.2
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
3.2
Total
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
CRS-3026
Table B3. Unspent TANF Funds at the End of FY2005
($ in millions)
State
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
Obligated but
unexpended
funds
$6.1
8.4
28.1
0.2
387.3
0.0
0.0
1.5
9.6
33.7
44.4
67.2
6.8
0.0
44.4
6.4
0.0
0.0
29.0
0.0
7.8
0.0
0.1
77.2
3.7
38.7
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
187.6
1.0
184.8
57.9
0.0
420.3
0.0
0.0
0.9
0.0
Unobligated and
unexpended
funds
$31.6
22.4
0.0
97.8
0.0
77.5
0.0
6.2
53.6
0.0
146.8
79.6
0.0
0.0
21.4
19.9
0.8
48.7
6.3
5.5
101.5
7.7
45.7
34.1
15.8
0.0
33.4
8.7
19.8
48.4
0.0
20.7
221.3
0.0
15.6
473.3
86.9
36.8
0.0
6.1
Total unspent
funds
South Carolina
Obligated but Unobligated and
Unexpended
Unexpended
Funds
Funds
$6.1
$31.6
8.4
22.4
28.1
0.0
0.2
97.8
387.3
0.0
0.0
77.5
0.0
0.0
1.5
6.2
9.6
53.6
33.7
0.0
44.4
146.8
67.2
79.6
6.8
0.0
0.0
0.0
44.4
21.4
6.4
19.9
0.0
0.8
0.0
48.7
29.0
6.3
0.0
5.5
7.8
101.5
0.0
7.7
0.1
45.7
77.2
34.1
3.7
15.8
38.7
0.0
0.0
33.4
0.0
8.7
0.0
19.8
0.0
48.4
187.6
0.0
1.0
20.7
184.8
221.3
57.9
0.0
0.0
15.6
420.3
473.3
0.0
86.9
0.0
36.8
0.9
0.0
0.0
6.1
0.0
40.0
Total
Unspent
Funds
$37.7
30.8
28.1
98.0
387.3
77.5
0.0
7.7
63.3
33.7
191.2
146.7
6.8
0.0
65.7
26.3
0.8
48.7
35.4
5.5
109.3
7.7
45.8
111.3
19.5
38.7
33.4
8.7
19.8
48.4
187.6
21.8
406.0
57.9
15.6
893.6
86.9
36.8
0.9
6.1
40.0
CRS-3127
State
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Totals
Obligated but
unexpended
funds
0.0
0.7
2.1
181.7
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
5.7
1,843.1
Unobligated and
unexpended
funds
40.0
19.9
117.9
0.0
44.6
0.0
14.7
18.4
13.6
0.0
41.3
2,104.3
Total unspent
funds
40.0 Unobligated and
Unexpended
Unexpended
Funds
Funds
0.7
19.9
2.1
117.9
181.7
0.0
0.0
44.6
0.0
0.0
0.0
14.7
0.0
18.4
0.0
13.6
0.0
0.0
5.7
41.3
1,843.1
2,104.3
Total
Unspent
Funds
20.6
119.9
181.7
44.6
0.0
14.7
18.4
13.6
0.0
47.0
3,947.3
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the
U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
CRS-3228
Table B4. TANF and MOE Cash Welfare Caseload, June
September 2006
State
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Families
18,540
3,635
37,827
7,893
486,943
14,071
21,758
5,411
15,279
50,801
29,237
3,072
9,203
1,787
36,084
43,515
21,212
16,963
32,622
10,582
11,360
19,256
47,064
83,196
30,895
12,597
43,103
3,774
12,501
6,903
6,212
41,793
16,308
174,323
29,209
2,711
78,301
9,857
18,542
92,827
14,089
12,172
17,617
Total
recipients
43,319
9,876
82,861
16,981
1,191,948
36,276
47,031
12,124
38,809
83,958
55,711
10,783
25,818
2,954
88,366
126,464
48,714
44,077
68,438
23,471
32,788
43,707
95,454
219,946
81,518
25,824
109,520
9,783
32,536
16,843
14,153
106,339
41,009
445,386
56,406
6,934
166,678
21,502
41,568
238,608
37,928
31,058
41,095
Child
recipients
33,694
6,791
62,595
13,039
957,806
26,353
32,424
9,130
30,047
71,013
49,787
NR
17,596
2,583
70,676
96,269
31,119
30,203
52,193
20,376
21,944
33,045
65,712
159,605
57,672
19,972
74,539
6,757
22,555
12,828
9,748
74,576
29,660
316,304
45,750
4,940
127,713
17,793
31,066
169,520
26,827
22,192
30,388
Adult
recipients
9,625
3,085
20,266
3,942
234,142
9,923
14,607
2,994
8,762
12,945
5,924
NR
8,222
371
17,690
30,195
17,595
13,874
16,245
3,095
10,844
10,662
29,742
60,341
23,846
5,852
34,981
3,026
9,981
4,015
4,405
31,763
11,349
129,082
10,656
1,994
38,965
3,709
10,502
69,088
11,101
8,866
10,707
CRS-33
State
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virgin Islands
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Total
Families
2,849
68,151
67,892
7,115
4,677
440
34,323
54,710
10,855
18,273
302
Total
recipients
6,178
181,702
155,966
17,200
11,632
1,246
80,520
132,130
24,522
40,493
541
Child
recipients
5,165
130,145
129,081
12,865
7,532
934
56,488
92,519
17,911
33,459
471
Adult
recipients
1,013
51,557
26,885
4,335
4,100
312
24,032
39,611
6,611
7,034
70
1,920,632
4,626,692
3,481,370
1,134,539
Note: “NR” denotes not reported.
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
CRS-34
Table B5. Number of Families Receiving Cash Assistance,
June 1994, June 2000, June 2005, and June 2006
State
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of
Families
19,385
3,348
38,086
8,596
477,441
12,972
21,543
5,462
15,871
50,289
27,553
3,072
9,336
1,767
34,376
42,835
20,450
16,974
32,436
11,183
11,000
19,049
49,034
89,806
30,176
12,594
43,520
3,487
12,653
6,548
6,251
41,363
16,175
169,727
28,514
2,409
77,746
9,534
18,045
89,967
13,917
11,813
Total
Recipients
45,722
8,921
83,434
17,847
1,169,137
33,201
46,651
12,295
38,803
82,511
51,653
10,783
26,240
2,881
84,244
124,627
47,279
44,290
67,790
25,200
31,628
43,068
100,047
238,766
78,884
25,966
110,618
8,978
33,026
15,814
14,219
105,527
41,073
431,995
55,096
6,056
165,068
20,738
40,582
230,646
37,372
30,028
Child
Recipients
35,440
6,220
62,893
13,562
936,895
24,372
32,049
9,285
29,613
69,897
46,816
NR
17,831
2,526
67,216
95,049
30,474
30,097
51,855
21,621
21,323
32,697
68,468
170,656
55,965
20,055
75,073
6,320
22,914
12,148
9,788
73,886
29,765
307,877
44,833
4,341
126,673
17,246
30,272
165,152
26,364
21,545
Adult
Recipients
10,282
2,701
20,541
4,285
232,242
8,829
14,602
3,010
9,190
12,614
4,837
NR
8,409
355
17,028
29,578
16,805
14,193
15,935
3,579
10,305
10,371
31,579
68,110
22,919
5,911
35,545
2,658
10,112
3,666
4,431
31,641
11,308
124,118
10,263
1,715
38,395
3,492
10,310
65,494
11,008
8,483
CRS-29
State
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virgin Islands
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Totals
Families
17,889
2,840
67,487
68,408
6,247
4,792
453
33,908
53,267
11,051
17,910
305
1,900,860
Total
Recipients
41,900
6,099
179,319
159,256
14,910
11,882
1,305
79,550
128,595
24,696
39,353
565
4,576,134
Child
Recipients
31,010
5,115
128,483
131,653
11,368
7,722
975
55,760
89,743
18,038
32,786
485
3,440,210
Adult
Recipients
10,890
984
50,836
27,603
3,542
4,160
330
23,790
38,852
6,658
6,567
80
1,125,141
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Note: “NR” denotes not reported.
CRS-30
Table B5. Number of Families Receiving Cash Assistance,
September 1994, September 2000, September 2005,
and September 2006
State
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
June-94
49,482
12,977
71,530
25,892
919,535
41,378
59,701
11,239
27,443
June-00
18,839
7,542
32,769
12,046
552,221
10,772
28,840
5,920
17,071
June-05
20,123
4,565
41,952
8,191
505,534
15,430
23,721
5,627
16,786
June-06
18,540
3,635
37,827
7,893
486,943
14,071
21,758
5,411
15,279
239,232
139,566
1,973
20,844
8,739
242,740
72,881
39,813
30,020
79,225
85,741
22,641
79,706
110,108
222,472
63,043
55,183
92,265
12,004
15,649
14,207
11,591
122,536
33,732
460,590
131,065
5,725
247,886
46,864
41,982
64,446
50,891
2,760
20,689
1,308
79,913
36,043
20,860
12,469
37,471
25,520
12,277
30,522
41,761
70,285
39,295
14,979
48,812
4,467
10,088
6,146
5,791
51,847
22,701
248,148
44,420
2,886
95,835
13,591
17,264
59,673
38,669
3,072
10,451
1,855
39,165
50,233
21,264
17,404
34,014
15,565
11,682
25,464
48,430
79,800
31,839
15,389
46,041
4,731
12,679
7,780
6,354
47,613
17,224
189,001
32,057
2,885
80,473
11,241
19,477
50,801
29,237
3,072
9,203
1,787
36,084
43,515
21,212
16,963
32,622
10,582
11,360
19,256
47,064
83,196
30,895
12,597
43,103
3,774
12,501
6,903
6,212
41,793
16,308
174,323
29,209
2,711
78,301
9,857
18,542
Percentage change
June 05- June 94June 06 June 06
-7.9%
-62.5%
-20.4
-72.0
-9.8
-47.1
-3.6
-69.5
-3.7
-47.0
-8.8
-66.0
-8.3
-63.6
-3.8
-51.9
-9.0
-44.3
-14.9
-24.4
0.0
-11.9
-3.7
-7.9
-13.4
-0.2
-2.5
-4.1
-32.0
-2.8
-24.4
-2.8
4.3
-3.0
-18.1
-6.4
-20.2
-1.4
-11.3
-2.2
-12.2
-5.3
-7.8
-8.9
-6.0
-2.7
-12.3
-4.8
-78.8
-79.1
55.7
-55.8
-79.6
-85.1
-40.3
-46.7
-43.5
-58.8
-87.7
-49.8
-75.8
-57.3
-62.6
-51.0
-77.2
-53.3
-68.6
-20.1
-51.4
-46.4
-65.9
-51.7
-62.2
-77.7
-52.6
-68.4
-79.0
-55.8
CRS-35
State
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virgin Islands
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Total
June-94
211,431
58,484
22,737
51,590
6,868
109,339
282,902
17,536
10,006
1,106
75,020
104,243
40,379
76,458
5,751
June-00
87,972
31,273
17,242
17,017
2,789
55,940
128,289
8,191
5,858
884
30,910
58,217
12,000
17,534
565
June-05
96,807
14,887
12,904
17,922
2,723
70,692
82,950
9,041
4,897
457
36,233
58,668
12,081
20,059
290
June-06
92,827
14,089
12,172
17,617
2,849
68,151
67,892
7,115
4,677
440
34,323
54,710
10,855
18,273
302
5,043,050 2,294,186 2,064,065 1,920,632
Percentage change
June 05- June 94June 06 June 06
-4.1
-56.1
-5.4
-75.9
-5.7
-46.5
-1.7
-65.9
4.6
-58.5
-3.6
-37.7
-18.2
-76.0
-21.3
-59.4
-4.5
-53.3
-3.7
-60.2
-5.3
-54.2
-6.7
-47.5
-10.1
-73.1
-8.9
-76.1
4.1
-94.7
-6.9
-61.9
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
CRS-36
Table B6. TANF Work Participation Rates for FY2004, by State
State
United States
All Families
32.2
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Dist. Of Col.
Pennsylvania
Sept.
1994
48,752
12,450
72,728
25,298
916,795
40,544
60,336
11,408
27,320
239,702
141,596
2,089
21,312
8,635
241,290
72,654
39,137
29,524
78,720
84,162
22,322
80,266
108,985
215,873
59,987
55,232
91,875
11,416
15,435
14,620
11,398
122,376
34,535
461,751
129,258
5,410
244,099
46,572
40,504
212,457
Sept.
2000
18,763
6,720
34,940
12,150
527,597
10,547
28,353
5,856
16,868
64,525
51,262
2,760
19,887
1,278
74,054
38,912
19,386
12,832
37,249
26,422
11,614
30,732
43,215
69,216
39,005
15,492
49,879
4,406
10,180
6,473
5,738
49,323
22,461
242,486
44,287
2,928
91,654
13,564
15,907
86,962
Sept.
2005
20,727
3,526
42,539
8,487
499,074
15,214
23,196
5,819
16,907
57,648
38,053
3,072
9,926
1,815
38,822
50,784
22,148
18,126
34,082
15,353
11,064
24,840
48,970
80,529
30,781
14,828
45,075
3,842
13,118
7,352
6,342
47,961
17,691
185,335
31,724
2,892
81,161
11,238
19,060
98,448
Percentage Change
Sept. Sept. 2005- Sept. 19942006 Sept. 2006 Sept. 2006
19,385
-6.5
-60.2
3,348
-5.0
-73.1
38,086
-10.5
-47.6
8,596
1.3
-66.0
477,441
-4.3
-47.9
12,972
-14.7
-68.0
21,543
-7.1
-64.3
5,462
-6.1
-52.1
15,871
-6.1
-41.9
50,289
-12.8
-79.0
27,553
-27.6
-80.5
3,072
0.0
47.1
9,336
-5.9
-56.2
1,767
-2.6
-79.5
34,376
-11.5
-85.8
42,835
-15.7
-41.0
20,450
-7.7
-47.7
16,974
-6.4
-42.5
32,436
-4.8
-58.8
11,183
-27.2
-86.7
11,000
-0.6
-50.7
19,049
-23.3
-76.3
49,034
0.1
-55.0
89,806
11.5
-58.4
30,176
-2.0
-49.7
12,594
-15.1
-77.2
43,520
-3.4
-52.6
3,487
-9.2
-69.5
12,653
-3.5
-18.0
6,548
-10.9
-55.2
6,251
-1.4
-45.2
41,363
-13.8
-66.2
16,175
-8.6
-53.2
169,727
-8.4
-63.2
28,514
-10.1
-77.9
2,409
-16.7
-55.5
77,746
-4.2
-68.1
9,534
-15.2
-79.5
18,045
-5.3
-55.4
89,967
-8.6
-57.7
CRS-31
State
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virgin Islands
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Totals
Percentage Change
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept. Sept. 2005- Sept. 19941994
2000
2005
2006 Sept. 2006 Sept. 2006
57,337
28,555
14,450
13,917
-3.7
-75.7
22,776
17,115
12,845
11,813
-8.0
-48.1
50,430
17,740
18,880
17,889
-5.2
-64.5
6,601
2,757
2,853
2,840
-0.5
-57.0
109,678
58,015
71,036
67,487
-5.0
-38.5
284,973 133,294
82,251
68,408
-16.8
-76.0
17,505
8,530
8,630
6,247
-27.6
-64.3
9,761
5,818
4,959
4,792
-3.4
-50.9
1,146
831
439
453
3.2
-60.5
74,257
30,596
36,584
33,908
-7.3
-54.3
101,542
56,961
57,617
53,267
-7.5
-47.5
40,279
12,781
12,316
11,051
-10.3
-72.6
75,086
17,927
18,869
17,910
-5.1
-76.1
5,351
528
330
305
-7.6
-94.3
5,015,545 2,257,331 2,049,628 1,900,860
-7.3
-62.1
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based on data from the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
CRS-32
Table B6. TANF Work Participation Rates
for FY2004, by State
State
United States
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Dist. of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
All
Families
32.2
37.9
43.6
25.5
27.3
23.1
34.7
24.3
22.1
18.2
40.4
24.8
0.0
70.5
41.0
46.1
36.3
50.0
88.0
38.1
35.4
32.1
16.0
60.0
24.5
26.8
21.0
19.5
92.7
34.5
34.5
30.2
34.6
46.2
37.8
31.4
25.3
65.2
33.2
32.1
7.1
Two-parent
families
47.4
*
7.5
Two-Parent
Families
47.4
a
52.8
65.6
34.4
*
37.5
*
*
20.1
*
*
0
*
37.1
*
*
*
93.7
51.2
38
*
*
65.4
35.7
*
*
*
95.7
*
*
*
*
55.3
48.3
47.2
*
68.4
*
35.5
15
CRS-37
State
Puerto Rico
a
37.5
a
a
20.1
a
a
0
a
37.1
a
a
a
93.7
51.2
38
a
a
65.4
35.7
a
a
a
95.7
a
a
a
a
55.3
48.3
47.2
a
68.4
a
35.5
15
a
CRS-33
State
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virgin Islands
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
All
Families
7.5
23.7
53.7
54.8
50.6
34.2
26.2
24.9
10.6
50.1
35.4
11.7
61.3
77.8
Two-parent
families
*
94.9
55.9
*
*
*
*
38.2
*
*
31.1
*
33.1
87.5
* State did not serve two-parent families within its TANF program in FY2004.
Parent
Families
94.9
55.9
a
a
a
a
38.2
a
a
31.1
a
33.1
87.5
Source: Table prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) based
on data from the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
a. State did not serve two-parent families within its TANF program in
FY2004.