MYTH Vs.
FACT
±
Myth:
Families stay on welfare for a
long time and don’t make any effort to get off.
±
Fact:
Less than half of the families
that receive AFDC receive it for more than 36 months overall and most families
receive aid for no more than two years at a time.
±
Myth:
Welfare benefits for families provide them with enough to meet all their
basic needs.
±
Fact:
AFDC and Food Stamp benefits
combined provide less than a poverty level income in all states and their value
has been going steadily downward for many years.
±
Myth:
Women receiving AFDC have lots
of kids and go on having kids after they begin receiving aid.
±
Fact:
The most typical family size is
a mother and one child and the birthrate among women receiving AFDC is lower
than that in the rest of the population.
±
Myth:
Families wouldn’t need assistance if they would just go to work.
±
Fact:
Many families who are in the
work-place cannot make it on their earnings alone and need assistance in order
to have any decent standard of living.
±
Myth:
Spending on Welfare programs to
aid needy families is a major part of the federal budget.
±
Fact:
Spending for poor families with
children under all public assistance programs that provide for basic needs
including medical care amounts to about 6% of the budget.
Information
taken from Welfare Myths: Fact
or Fiction? Exploring the Truth
About Welfare, a publication of the Center on Social Welfare Policy and Law:
275 Seventh Avenue, 12th floor, New York, N.Y. 10001-6708.
(212) 633-6967.