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CHARLES BARRILLEAUX
Florida State University
ETHAN BERNICK
University of Illinois at Springfield
Deservingness,
Discretion, and the State Politics
of Welfare Spending, 1990-96
Are the politics
of welfare policy for the "deserving" and "undeserving"
poor the same? We use pooled cross-sectional time-series analyses of state
government discretionary welfare spending on general assistance (GA) and
Supplemental Security Income supplements (SSI-S) to address this question.
We find that efforts to assist the GA population decline as electoral
competition increases while efforts to assist the SSI-S population increase,
providing evidence that only the deserving poor are favored by heightened
political competition. We also find that SSI-S benefits rise with ideological
liberalism, electoral competition, and the percentage of African Americans
in a state. When considered in light of the negative effect of larger
African American populations on states' SSI-S efforts, this suggests targeting
of particular groups. Finally, we find that SSI-S enrollments are reduced,
but the per-recipient payments are increased under state administration,
suggesting that state administrators are more likely to provide more services
to existing clientele than to expand their client base.
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