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The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant provides states, territories, and Indian tribes with federal grants for benefits and services intended to ameliorate the effects, and address the root causes, of child poverty. It was created in the 1996 welfare reform law, and is most associated with policies such as time limits and work requirements that sought to address concerns about "welfare dependency" of single mothers who received cash assistance. This report examines the characteristics of the TANF cash assistance caseload in FY2013, and compares it with selected post-welfare reform years (FY2001 and FY2006) and pre-welfare reform years (FY1988 and FY1994). The size of the caseload first increased, from 3.7 million families per month in FY1988 to 5.0 million families per month in FY1994, and then declined to 2.2 million families in FY2001 and 1.7 million families in FY2013. Over this period, some of the characteristics of the TANF cash assistance caseload have remained fairly stable, and other characteristics have changed.
Most cash assistance families are small; 51.0% of all TANF cash assistance families in FY2013 had one child. Cash assistance families also frequently have young children; 56.6% in FY2013 had a pre-school-aged child. The majority of the cash assistance caseload has also been composed of racial and ethnic minorities. By FY2013, the largest racial/ethnic group of TANF cash assistance children was Hispanic. In that year, of all TANF assistance child recipients, 36.3% were Hispanic, 29.9% were African American, and 25.8% were non-Hispanic white. The growth in Hispanic children as a percent of all TANF assistance children is due entirely to their population growth—not an increase in the rate at which Hispanic children receive TANF.
Additionally, the majority of adult recipients today, as in the past, are women—specifically, single mothers. However, the share of the caseload comprised of families with an adult recipient has declined substantially in the post-welfare reform period. In FY2013, 38.1% of all families receiving TANF cash assistance represented "child-only" families, in which benefits are paid on behalf of the child in the family but the adult caretaker is ineligible for TANF. The three main components of the "child-only" caseload are (1) families with a disabled parent receiving federal Supplemental Security Income (SSI); (2) families with an ineligible, immigrant parent but with eligible citizen children; and (3) families with children being cared for by a nonparent relative, such as a grandparent, aunt, or uncle. Each of the three categories of families differs in their characteristics from TANF cash assistance families with an adult recipient; there are also differences in characteristics among families in the three major "child-only" categories.
TANF policies generally date back to the 1996 welfare law and the welfare reform debates of the 1980s and 1990s, and do not necessarily address the current composition of the cash assistance caseload. The major performance measure used to evaluate TANF is the work participation rate, a measure not relevant to TANF "child-only" families. Many of TANF's child-only families are affected by social policies other than TANF (i.e., federal disability, immigration, and child protection policies). However, these families are also affected by TANF, and there are currently no federal rules for assessing how TANF funds are used to improve their well-being. Options that have been raised include requiring states to provide more information to the federal government and public on benefits and services afforded to "child-only" families. Congress could also either establish performance goals and measures, or, alternatively, require states to establish such goals and measures for "child-only" families.
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF): Size and Characteristics of the Cash Assistance CaseloadThe Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant provides states, territories, and Indian tribes with federal grants for benefits and services intended to ameliorate the effects, and address the root causes, of child poverty. TANF funds can be used in any manner a state can reasonably calculate helps it achieve the goals of (1) providing assistance to needy families so that children may be cared for in their own homes or in the homes of relatives; (2) ending the dependence of needy parents on government benefits through work, job preparation, and marriage; (3) preventing and reducing the incidence of out-of-wedlock births; and (4) encouraging the formation and maintenance of two-parent families. Thus, TANF truly is a broad-based block grant with broad discretion for the states to spend funds to meet federal goals.
TANF was created in the 1996 welfare reform law and is typically thought of as the federal program that helps states fund their cash assistance programs for needy families with children. Moreover, TANF is also most associated with the 1996 welfare reform policies imposing work requirements and time limits on families receiving assistance. Most of TANF's federal rules and requirements relate to families receiving assistance.1 TANF's performance is measured on state welfare-to-work efforts, with states assessed based on numerical work participation standards.
However, basic assistance—what many call "cash welfare"—accounted for only 27.6% of all TANF funding in FY2013.2 Additionally, many of the families that received TANF cash assistance in FY2013 represented family types that were not the focus of debate in 1996, and are not subject to TANF work requirements and time limits. These are families with children cared for by adults who are not themselves recipients of TANF: disabled parents receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI); immigrant parents who are ineligible for TANF assistance but have citizen children who are eligible; and nonparent relative caregivers, such as grandparents, aunts, and uncles. In FY2013, 38.1% of families receiving TANF were composed of children in families cared for by adults who themselves were not recipients of TANF or did not come under TANF work rules.
This report examines the TANF cash assistance caseload,3 focusing on how the composition and characteristics of families receiving assistance have changed over time. It first provides a brief history of cash assistance for needy families with children, discussing how policy became focused on moving the predominately single parents who headed these families from welfare to work. It then traces the changes in the caseload composition since the 1996 welfare reform law, from a caseload dominated by unemployed single parents to a diverse caseload that had different routes to the benefit rolls as well as different circumstances on the rolls. It provides detail on caseload characteristics in FY2013, using data that states are required to report to the federal government. The report is intended to complement tabulations of these data already released by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).4
This report does not describe TANF rules or provide current statistics on the TANF caseload or expenditures. For an overview of TANF, see CRS In Focus IF10036, The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Block Grant, by [author name scrubbed]. It also does not describe individuals and families who receive TANF benefits and services other than cash assistance. Federal law does not require states to report on their numbers or characteristics.
Brief History of Cash AssistanceThe modern form of assistance for needy families with children has its origins in the early-1900s "mothers' pension programs," established by state and local governments. These programs provided economic aid to needy families headed by a mother so that children could be cared for in homes rather than in institutions. Federal involvement in funding these programs dates back to the Great Depression, and the creation of the Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) program as part of the Social Security Act of 1935. ADC provided grants to states to help them aid families with "dependent children," who were deprived of the economic support of one parent because of his death, absence, or incapacitation. The legislative history of the 1935 act explicitly stated that the purpose of ADC payments was to permit mothers to stay at home, rather than work:
The very phrases "mothers' aid" and "mothers' pensions" place an emphasis equivalent to misconstruction of the intention of these laws. These are not primarily aids to mothers but defense measures for children. They are designed to release from the wage-earning role the person whose natural function is to give her children the physical and affectionate guardianship necessary not alone to keep them from falling into social misfortune, but more affirmatively to rear them into citizens capable of contributing to society.5
Over time, a combination of changes in social policy and changes in economic and social circumstances made cash assistance to needy families (often called "welfare") among the most controversial of federal programs. The Social Security Act was amended to provide social insurance protection for families headed by widows (survivors' benefits, added in 1939) and those with disabled members (disability benefits, added in 1956). This left families headed by a single mother with the father alive, but absent, as the primary group aided by ADC, later renamed Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC). The cash assistance caseload also became increasingly nonwhite. States were first given the option to aid two-parent families beginning in 1961, but were not required to extend such aid until the enactment of the Family Support Act in 1988. Even with the extension of aid to two-parent families, this group never became a large part of the caseload, and most adult TANF cash assistance recipients continue to be single mothers.
The issue of whether lone mothers should work was also much debated. The intent of ADC to allow single mothers to stay home and raise their children was often met with resistance at the state and local level. It was also contrary to the reality that low-income women, particularly women of color, were sometimes expected to, and often did, work.6 Further, the increase in women's labor force participation in the second half of the 20th century—particularly among married white women—eroded support for payments that permitted mothers to remain at home and out of the workforce. Beginning in 1967, federal policy changes were made to encourage, and then require, work among AFDC mothers.
In 1974, children surpassed the elderly as the age group with the highest poverty rate.7 Poverty rates for children in families headed by a single mother were particularly high—and over time an increasing share of children were being raised in such families. In the 1980s, there was increasing attention to "welfare dependency." Research at that time showed that while many mothers were on cash assistance for a short period of time, a substantial minority of mothers remained on the rolls for long periods of time.8 Additionally, experimentation on "welfare-to-work" initiatives found that requiring participation in work or job preparation activities could effectively move single mothers off the benefit rolls and into jobs.9
"Welfare reform," aiming to replace AFDC with new programs and policies for needy families with children, was debated over a period of four decades (the 1960s through the 1990s). These debates culminated in a number of changes in providing aid to low-income families with children in the mid-1990s, creating a system of expanded aid to working families (e.g., increases in the Earned Income Tax Credit and funding for child care subsidies) and the creation of TANF, which established time limits and revamped work requirements for the cash assistance programs for needy families with children.
1988
1994
2001
2006
2013
Number of Families (in millions)
3.748
5.046
2.202
1.957
1.749
Average Number of Recipient in Family (Adults and Children)
2.9
2.8
2.6
2.4
2.5
Average Number of Child Recipients
1.8
1.9
1.9
1.8
1.8
Sex of Adult Recipients
Male
11.2%
12.7%
13.2%
13.8%
14.3%
Female
88.8
87.3
86.8
86.2
85.7
Number of Adult Recipients
None
9.8
17.2
35.8
44.6
38.1
One
81.1
74.5
57.6
49.8
56.1
Two or More
9.1
8.3
6.6
5.6
5.9
Number of Child Recipients
One
43.2
43.5
45.1
50.1
51.0
Two
30.7
30.7
29.2
28.0
28.2
Three
16.1
16.0
15.2
13.7
13.1
Four or More
10.1
9.8
10.5
8.1
7.7
Age of Youngest Child
Infant
NA
11.2
12.7
13.2
12.0
One through Five
NA
51.5
40.5
40.2
44.6
Six through Twelve
NA
26.4
32.1
29.1
28.2
Thirteen and Older
NA
10.9
14.7
17.5
15.2
Race/Ethnicity of Adult Recipients
White Non-Hispanic
41.7
40.6
32.6
37.5
33.2
African-American Non-Hispanic
37.0
33.8
35.6
35.6
31.3
Hispanic
15.2
18.7
23.3
20.7
28.5
Other and Multi-racial
4.3
5.0
7.6
5.3
5.9
Unknown
1.8
1.9
0.9
0.9
1.1
Race Ethnicity of Child Recipients
White Non-Hispanic
33.8
33.0
25.7
28.7
25.8
African-American Non-Hispanic
41.3
37.9
38.8
36.1
29.9
Hispanic
17.4
21.2
27.4
28.6
36.3
Other and Multi-racial
4.3
5.0
6.9
5.6
5.9
Unknown
3.2
2.9
1.1
1.0
2.0
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) tabulations of the FY1988 and FY1994 AFDC Quality Control (QC) data files and the FY2001, FY2006, and FY2013 TANF National Data Files.
Notes: FY2001 through FY2013 data include families receiving assistance from separate state programs (SSPs) with expenditures countable toward the TANF maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement. NA denotes not available.
a. For FY2013, includes non-recipient parents who are "work-eligible." These include non-recipient parents who have been time-limited or sanctioned, with their families continuing to receive a reduced benefit. TANF Families by CategoryThe increase in the share of TANF families with no adult recipient over the FY1988 to FY2013 period represents a major change in the character of the caseload. This section focuses on that change, classifying TANF families by the circumstances of the adults in the household.
The classification in this report divides the TANF assistance caseload into six categories. There are two main categories of families where there is an adult recipient or an adult who is considered "work-eligible" and hence represent the traditional concerns of cash assistance policies:
Figure 2. Families Receiving AFDC/TANF Cash Assistance, by Category, Selected
One
Two
Three
Four or More
Totals
Family with Adult(s)/Not Employed
50.1%
28.4%
13.3%
8.1%
100.0%
Family with Adult(s)/Employed
45.7
30.0
15.3
9.0
100.0
Child-Only, SSI Parent(s)
56.5
26.3
10.4
6.8
100.0
Child-Only, Noncitizen Parents
31.9
35.9
20.3
11.9
100.0
Child-Only, Caretaker Relatives
67.7
22.5
6.8
3.0
100.0
Totals
51.0
28.2
13.1
7.7
100.0
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) tabulations of the FY2013 TANF National Data Files.
Notes: Data include families receiving assistance from separate state programs (SSPs) with expenditures countable toward the TANF maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement. TANF families with an adult recipient include those families with "work-eligible" non-recipient parents. These include non-recipient parents who have been time-limited or sanctioned off the rolls, but the family continues to receive a reduced benefit.
The majority of TANF families have young children. However, the age of the youngest child in the family also varies by family category.
Table 3 shows TANF families by family category and age of the youngest child. Families with an adult who is not employed are the focus of TANF welfare-to-work policies. These families often have pre-school children. In FY2013, two-thirds of TANF families with an adult who was not employed had a pre-school child (under the age of 6). Some of these families can be exempted from TANF work requirements. For example, TANF law allows single parents with a child under the age of 1 to be exempted from work and disregarded from the TANF work participation standards. In FY2013, close to one-fifth (18.2%) of TANF families with an adult who was not employed had an infant (under the age of 1).In contrast, "child-only" families headed by an SSI parent or a nonparent relative tended to have older children. In FY2013, 30.5% of TANF child-only families headed by an SSI parent had a teenager as their youngest child. In FY2013, 28.9% of families with children cared for by a nonparent relative had a teen as their youngest child.
Table 3. Families Receiving TANF Cash Assistance by Family Category and Age of Youngest Child, FY2013(As a percent of all families in the category)
Infant
Age 1
Ages 2 through 5
Ages 6 through 12
Age 13 and Older
Total
Family with Adult(s)/Not Employed
18.2%
13.9%
35.0%
22.7%
10.3%
100.0%
Family with Adult(s)/Employed
12.0
14.1
41.6
23.8
8.5
100.0
Child-Only, SSI Parent(s)
5.7
6.7
23.9
33.3
30.5
100.0
Child-Only, Noncitizen Parents
8.2
10.4
38.4
32.5
10.5
100.0
Child-Only, Caretaker Relatives
2.3
3.8
23.3
41.7
28.9
100.0
Totals
12.0
11.2
33.4
28.2
15.2
100.0
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) tabulations of the FY2013 TANF National Data Files.
Notes: Data include families receiving assistance from separate state programs (SSPs) with expenditures countable toward the TANF maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement. TANF families with an adult recipient include those families with "work-eligible" non-recipient parents. These include non-recipient parents who have been time-limited or sanctioned off the rolls, but the family continues to receive a reduced benefit.
The majority of the TANF cash assistance caseload is composed of racial and ethnic minorities. Among child recipients, the largest group is Hispanic children—36.3% of all child recipients in FY2013. There are differences in the racial/ethnic make-up of child recipients by family category.
Table 4 shows children receiving TANF cash assistance, by the category of their family and their race/ethnicity. African American children represent the largest group of children in two family categories that include TANF adults, as well as in child-only families with SSI parents.Hispanic children make up most of children with ineligible noncitizen parents. The table also shows that the largest group of children in child-only families cared for by nonparent relatives is non-Hispanic white. Historically, children in families receiving cash assistance that are cared for by nonparent relatives have been more likely to be African American than other racial/ethnic groups. As late as FY2001, African American children accounted for a majority (52.6%) of all children in TANF child-only families cared for by a nonparent relative. However, throughout the 2000s, the share of TANF children in such families who were African American declined. This reflected a decline in the number of African American children who were cared for by nonparent relatives in the overall population.12
Table 4. TANF Child Recipients, by Family Category and Race/Ethnicity, FY2013(As a percent of all children in the family category)
White/Non-Hispanic
African-American/ Non-Hispanic
Hispanic
Other or Multi-racial
Unknown
Totals
Family with Adult(s)/Not Employed
24.9%
34.2%
32.2%
6.3%
2.4%
100.0%
Family with Adult(s)/Employed
30.7
29.7
29.5
7.5
2.6
100.0
Child-Only, SSI Parent(s)
30.1
44.1
17.6
6.1
2.1
100.0
Child-Only, Noncitizen Parents
2.1
3.0
91.5
2.4
1.0
100.0
Child-Only, Caretaker Relatives
42.2
33.3
17.4
5.7
1.4
100.0
Totals
25.8
29.9
36.3
5.9
2.0
100.0
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) tabulations of the FY2013 TANF National Data Files.
Notes: Data include families receiving assistance from separate state programs (SSPs) with expenditures countable toward the TANF maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement. TANF families with an adult recipient include those families with "work-eligible" non-recipient parents. These include non-recipient parents who have been time-limited or sanctioned off the rolls, but the family continues to receive a reduced benefit.
The welfare reform experiments discussed above were conducted in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Since then, there have been expansions of earnings supplements and aid to working families through refundable tax credits (the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Additional Child Tax Credit), subsidized child care, and expanded health insurance coverage. However, little attention has been paid to how cash assistance to working families fits together with other earnings supplements, such as the EITC, to achieve TANF goals.
TANF Policies for "Nontraditional" Cash Assistance Families?Many of the "child-only" TANF assistance families are affected not only by TANF policy, but other social policies as well.
Congress has focused on relative caregiving through child welfare legislation, specifically creating a program to help states reimburse kin who take legal guardianship of children who would otherwise be eligible for federal foster care assistance under Title IV-E of the Social Security Act.13
Congress has shown interest in promoting coordination between TANF and other federal and state programs serving TANF families, including the "non-traditional" families. This has especially been true in terms of coordinating information between TANF and child welfare programs.14 P.L. 112-96 requires the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to develop standards of data reporting to facilitate the sharing of information between TANF and other programs. Earlier legislation (P.L. 112-34) added similar language to facilitate data sharing between child welfare and other programs. In addition, a May 2013 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report said Congress could opt to require states to include in TANF state plans how they will coordinate services between TANF and child welfare programs.15
Questions remain about whether and what policies within TANF should apply to "child-only" families. A 2012 report on "child-only" families from Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago, funded by HHS, raised concerns about each major group: whether TANF assistance to relative caregivers might be an inadequate replacement for foster care, and whether low rates of TANF receipt among potentially eligible families headed by SSI parents or ineligible immigrant parents might not be assuring a minimal standard of living for children in these families. The report did recommend that "explicit attention" be given to each component of the TANF caseload, including separate attention to each of the three major groups of "child-only" families.16
The May 2013 GAO report said a potential option to better understand TANF's role in helping its "child-only" families would be to require states to provide additional information to the federal government about the status and needs of "child-only" families.17 This information could be provided, for example, in TANF state plans.
Congress could also establish—or require states to establish—goals and performance measures related to the well-being of children in "child-only" families. Congress could also require that annual reporting by states to HHS include a statement about how the goals related to "child-only" families are being met, and report on such performance measures that relate to these goals.18
Table A-1. Families Receiving AFDC/TANF Cash Assistance by Family Category, Selected Years FY1988 to FY20131988
1994
2001
2006
2013
Monthly Average Number of Families
Total Families
3,747,952
5,046,263
2,202,356
1,957,402
1,749,424
Family with Adult(s)/Not Employed
3,136,566
3,798,997
992,445
825,490
781,473
Family with Adult(s)/Employed
243,573
378,620
420,794
259,001
302,079
Child-Only/SSI Parents(s)
59,988
171,391
171,951
176,670
156,215
Child-Only/Noncitizen Parent(s)
47,566
184,397
125,900
153,445
196,103
Child-Only/Caretaker Relative
188,598
328,290
255,984
261,944
234,499
Child-Only/Other
71,661
184,567
235,282
280,851
79,054
Percentage of Total Cash Assistance Families
Total Families
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
Family with Adult(s)/Not Employed
83.7
75.3
45.1
42.2
44.7
Family with Adult(s)/Employed
6.5
7.5
19.1
13.2
17.3
Child-Only/SSI Parents(s)
1.6
3.4
7.8
9.0
8.9
Child-Only/Noncitizen Parent(s)
1.3
3.7
5.7
7.8
11.2
Child-Only/Caretaker Relative
5.0
6.5
11.6
13.4
13.4
Child-Only/Other
1.9
3.7
10.7
14.3
4.5
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) tabulations of the FY1988 and FY1994 AFDC Quality Control (QC) data files and the FY2001, FY2006, and FY2013 TANF National Data Files.
Notes: FY2001 through FY2013 data include families receiving assistance from separate state programs (SSPs) with expenditures countable toward the TANF maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement. For FY2013, TANF families with an adult recipient include those families with "work-eligible" non-recipient parents. These include non-recipient parents who have been time-limited or sanctioned off the rolls, but the family continues to receive a reduced benefit. For FY2001 and FY2006, such families cannot be identified and are classified as "child-only" families.
State |
Family with Adult(s), Not Employed |
Family with Adult(s), Employed |
Child-Only, SSI Parent(s) |
Child-Only, Noncitizen Parent(s) |
Child-Only, Non-parent Caretaker(s) |
Other Child Only |
Totals |
Alabama |
39.8% |
22.8% |
14.1% |
1.3% |
22.0% |
0.0% |
100.0% |
Alaska |
50.3 |
24.7 |
0.0 |
1.0 |
24.0 |
0.1 |
100.0 |
Arizona |
51.2 |
10.5 |
0.0 |
6.9 |
0.1 |
31.4 |
100.0 |
Arkansas |
43.6 |
18.8 |
14.9 |
3.5 |
19.2 |
0.0 |
100.0 |
California |
51.9 |
14.8 |
4.3 |
21.9 |
6.0 |
1.1 |
100.0 |
Colorado |
41.0 |
29.7 |
0.0 |
1.9 |
22.8 |
4.7 |
100.0 |
Connecticut |
43.7 |
16.6 |
11.0 |
2.1 |
24.9 |
1.7 |
100.0 |
Delaware |
28.7 |
10.6 |
6.2 |
6.4 |
47.4 |
0.7 |
100.0 |
District of Columbia |
52.4 |
13.0 |
15.2 |
7.6 |
11.8 |
0.0 |
100.0 |
Florida |
26.8 |
3.8 |
10.3 |
6.0 |
52.5 |
0.6 |
100.0 |
Georgia |
21.9 |
3.1 |
14.0 |
2.6 |
56.2 |
2.2 |
100.0 |
Hawaii |
39.2 |
37.0 |
7.2 |
0.3 |
1.5 |
14.9 |
100.0 |
Idaho |
9.2 |
0.5 |
0.0 |
1.5 |
88.6 |
0.2 |
100.0 |
Illinois |
20.5 |
18.7 |
23.7 |
5.1 |
29.5 |
2.5 |
100.0 |
Indiana |
25.0 |
11.6 |
15.7 |
10.8 |
29.4 |
7.5 |
100.0 |
Iowa |
44.7 |
25.1 |
8.6 |
3.9 |
17.3 |
0.4 |
100.0 |
Kansas |
37.6 |
23.8 |
11.2 |
5.7 |
21.4 |
0.4 |
100.0 |
Kentucky |
27.7 |
11.7 |
14.5 |
1.3 |
44.7 |
0.1 |
100.0 |
Louisiana |
24.6 |
6.4 |
19.8 |
0.4 |
40.0 |
8.8 |
100.0 |
Maine |
17.6 |
73.9 |
5.0 |
0.1 |
2.6 |
0.8 |
100.0 |
Maryland |
48.2 |
9.9 |
9.0 |
0.0 |
0.9 |
32.0 |
100.0 |
Massachussets |
44.0 |
33.0 |
10.6 |
5.3 |
7.1 |
0.1 |
100.0 |
Michigan |
37.1 |
20.4 |
23.7 |
3.1 |
15.3 |
0.5 |
100.0 |
Minnesota |
32.6 |
22.2 |
18.0 |
8.5 |
18.6 |
0.2 |
100.0 |
Mississippi |
46.9 |
9.9 |
20.7 |
0.5 |
21.5 |
0.5 |
100.0 |
Missouri |
63.7 |
15.2 |
9.1 |
2.1 |
9.3 |
0.7 |
100.0 |
Montana |
44.9 |
14.7 |
5.1 |
0.1 |
31.7 |
3.4 |
100.0 |
Nebraska |
25.1 |
21.2 |
12.4 |
17.4 |
20.1 |
3.8 |
100.0 |
Nevada |
33.7 |
23.7 |
8.8 |
18.6 |
14.9 |
0.3 |
100.0 |
New Hampshire |
31.0 |
48.2 |
0.8 |
0.9 |
18.9 |
0.1 |
100.0 |
New Jersey |
67.5 |
8.8 |
7.2 |
7.3 |
9.2 |
0.0 |
100.0 |
New Mexico |
45.3 |
14.6 |
8.4 |
18.4 |
12.9 |
0.5 |
100.0 |
New York |
43.0 |
23.0 |
11.0 |
11.4 |
8.1 |
3.4 |
100.0 |
North Carolina |
25.5 |
4.4 |
13.1 |
10.3 |
46.7 |
0.0 |
100.0 |
North Dakota |
38.2 |
26.0 |
8.8 |
0.3 |
26.5 |
0.2 |
100.0 |
Ohio |
27.0 |
7.2 |
17.9 |
4.6 |
1.2 |
42.0 |
100.0 |
Oklahoma |
34.2 |
2.2 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0.0 |
63.6 |
100.0 |
Oregon |
49.1 |
39.1 |
4.1 |
4.4 |
3.2 |
0.1 |
100.0 |
Pennslyvania |
57.4 |
15.5 |
15.5 |
1.1 |
10.0 |
0.5 |
100.0 |
Rhode Island |
57.9 |
11.2 |
16.1 |
0.0 |
6.5 |
8.2 |
100.0 |
South Carolina |
35.5 |
11.2 |
14.6 |
2.6 |
35.9 |
0.3 |
100.0 |
South Dakota |
24.2 |
5.1 |
8.1 |
0.4 |
62.1 |
0.2 |
100.0 |
Tennessee |
45.8 |
18.8 |
0.1 |
1.2 |
34.2 |
0.0 |
100.0 |
Texas |
24.3 |
8.1 |
8.5 |
32.0 |
17.0 |
10.2 |
100.0 |
Utah |
29.2 |
13.9 |
10.2 |
8.7 |
37.2 |
0.9 |
100.0 |
Vermont |
38.5 |
23.5 |
18.5 |
0.2 |
19.3 |
0.0 |
100.0 |
Virginia |
42.4 |
21.6 |
9.4 |
3.7 |
0.5 |
22.4 |
100.0 |
Washington |
55.1 |
9.8 |
7.3 |
8.7 |
16.5 |
2.7 |
100.0 |
West Virginia |
37.2 |
9.3 |
14.6 |
0.0 |
20.4 |
18.5 |
100.0 |
Wisonsin |
43.1 |
15.0 |
24.2 |
0.0 |
17.7 |
0.0 |
100.0 |
Wyoming |
34.7 |
3.7 |
1.0 |
0.0 |
60.2 |
0.5 |
100.0 |
Guam |
41.7 |
1.9 |
0.0 |
54.6 |
1.5 |
0.4 |
100.0 |
Puerto Rico |
90.3 |
1.5 |
0.0 |
0.7 |
7.4 |
0.2 |
100.0 |
Virgin Islands |
86.6 |
2.8 |
2.7 |
0.0 |
6.9 |
1.2 |
100.0 |
Total |
44.7 |
17.3 |
8.9 |
11.2 |
13.4 |
4.5 |
100.0 |
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) tabulations of the FY2013 TANF National Data Files.
Notes: Data include families receiving assistance from separate state programs (SSPs) with expenditures countable toward the TANF maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement. TANF families with an adult recipient include those families with "work-eligible" non-recipient parents. These include non-recipient parents who have been time-limited or sanctioned off the rolls, but the family continues to receive a reduced benefit.
1988
1994
2001
2006
2013
Percentage of All Children
White/Non-Hispanic
5.6%
6.9%
2.5%
2.4%
2.1%
African American/Non-Hispanic
31.1
33.5
14.9
11.7
9.2
Hispanic
18.2
21.0
9.2
6.7
6.3
Percentage of Poor Children
White/Non-Hispanic
50.7
55.3
26.2
24.1
19.6
African American/Non-Hispanic
71.4
76.7
49.9
35.2
23.7
Hispanic
48.4
50.6
32.7
24.8
20.8
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on tabulations from the Annual Social and Economic (ASEC) Supplements to the Current Population Survey of March 1989, 1995, 2002, 2006, and 2014; the FY1988 and FY1994 Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) Quality Control Data Files; and the FY2001, FY2006, and FY2013 TANF National Data Files.
Author Contact Information
Acknowledgments
[author name scrubbed] of the Domestic Social Policy Division contributed to this report, helping with the discussion of the history of cash assistance, as well as the discussion of the relationship between TANF cash assistance and child welfare programs.
CRS Graphics Specialist Amber Wilhelm created the figures in this report.
1. |
CRS Report RL32748, The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Block Grant: A Primer on TANF Financing and Federal Requirements, by [author name scrubbed]. |
2. |
For a discussion of the implications of a large share of TANF funding for "noncash benefits and services," see U.S. Government Accountability Office, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families. Potential Options to Improve Performance and Oversight, 13-431, May 2013, pp. 25-26, http://www.gao.gov/assets/660/654614.pdf. |
3. |
See http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofa/resource/tanf-financial-data-fy-2013. |
4. |
For HHS tabulations of the TANF national data files for FY2013 and earlier years, see http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofa/resource-library/search?area[2377]=2377&topic[2353]=2353. |
5. |
See the Report of the Committee on Economic Security to the President, transmitted to the President on January 15, 1935. |
6. |
Historically, nonwhite women had a higher labor force participation rate than did white women. This especially held true for married women. For documentation of the increase in women's labor force participation by marital status and race, see Claudia Golden, "The Evolution of the Female Labor Force," in Understanding the Gender Gap, An Economic History of American Women (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), pp. 10-57. For a discussion of nonfinancial restrictions to cash assistance, including those related to work, in the earlier years of ADC, see Winifred Bell, Aid to Dependent Children (New York: Columbia University Press, 1965). |
7. |
This is based on the Census Bureau's categorization of people by age: under 18, age 18 to 64, and age 65 and older. See Carmen DeNavas-Walt and Bernadette D. Proctor, Income and Poverty in the United States: 2014, U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports, P60-252, September, 2015. |
8. |
See Mary Jo Bane and David T. Ellwood, Transitions from Welfare to Work, Urban Systems and Engineering Inc., Cambridge, MA, 1983; and David T. Ellwood, Targeting "Would-Be" Long-Term Recipients of AFDC, Mathematica Policy Research, Princeton, NJ, 1986. |
9. |
For a discussion of this research, see CRS Report R42767, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF): Welfare-to-Work Revisited, by [author name scrubbed]. |
10. |
Caseload characteristic data in this report are based on information states are required to report to HHS under their AFDC and TANF programs. Efforts were made to make the data comparable across the years, but some changes in reporting as well as other program requirements affect the comparability of the data. The major difference is that for FY2013, TANF families "with an adult recipient" include those families where the adult has been time-limited or sanctioned but the family continues to receive a reduced benefit. These are technically "child-only" cases, because the adult does not receive a benefit. However, since FY2007 such families have been subject to TANF work participation standards and thus the policy affecting them is more comparable to that of a family with an adult recipient than a "child-only" family. For years before FY2007, these families were not subject to work participation standards and are classified together with other "child-only" families. The data to identify them separately prior to FY2007 are not comparable to data for FY2007 and subsequent years. |
11. |
For a more detailed look at the relationship between TANF families headed by a relative caregiver and the child welfare system, see U.S. Government Accountability Office, TANF and Child Welfare Programs: Increased Data Sharing Could Improve Access to Benefits and Services, GAO-12-2, October 2011, http://www.gao.gov/assets/590/585649.pdf. |
12. |
See information on living arrangements of children at http://www.census.gov/hhes/families/data/children.html. |
13. |
CRS Report R42792, Child Welfare: A Detailed Overview of Program Eligibility and Funding for Foster Care, Adoption Assistance and Kinship Guardianship Assistance under Title IV-E of the Social Security Act, by [author name scrubbed]. |
14. |
For example, see U.S. Government Accountability Office, TANF and Child Welfare Programs. Increased Data Sharing Could Improve Access to Benefits and Services, GAO-12-2, October 2011. |
15. |
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, Potential Options to Improve Performance and Oversight, GAO-13-431, May 2013, p. 15, http://www.gao.gov/assets/660/654614.pdf. Note that child welfare services state plans require coordination between services and assistance provided under the plan and those provided under TANF. However, there is no reciprocal requirement in the TANF plan requiring coordination with child welfare agencies. |
16. |
Jane Mauldon, Richard Speiglman, and Christina Sogar, et al., TANF Child-Only Cases: Who Are They? What Policies Affect Them? What is Being Done?, Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago, December 11, 2012. This project was funded by HHS, but the opinions expressed in the report do not necessarily reflect the views of the department. |
17. |
U.S. Government Accountability Office, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, Potential Options to Improve Performance and Oversight, GAO-13-431, May 2013, p. 15, http://www.gao.gov/assets/660/654614.pdf. |
18. |
Performance measurement would require data to assess the effectiveness of state strategies. For example, if Congress sought to assess state programs for "child-only" families on the basis of their economic circumstances (e.g., poverty), information would be needed on the income of members of their households. However, an examination of the financial well-being of TANF households was omitted from this report because of concerns about data quality. The financial circumstances of TANF "child-only" families were not estimated because of concerns that the information on income of some adults in households with such families was not accurately reported. Congress could require additional reporting by states that would help it better understand the financial circumstances of each component of the TANF caseload, including detailed reporting on all adults in households where a TANF benefit is paid on behalf of a child. |