Five Years After The Long-Term Effects of Welfare-to-Work Programs

Cover of Five Years After The Long-Term Effects of Welfare-to-Work Programs by Daniel Friedlander
Year: 1995
Language: en
Pages: 244
ISBN-13: 9780871542663
Dimensions:
Height: 9.5 Inches
Length: 6.5 Inches
Weight: 1.322773572 Pounds
Width: 1 Inches
Dewey Decimal: 362.5/8/0973
Editorial overview Touché

Five Years After The Long-Term Effects of Welfare-to-Work Programs by Daniel Friedlander, published by the Russell Sage Foundation on February 3, 1995, offers an in-depth analysis of welfare reform and its implications. This 244-page study examines the outcomes of welfare-to-work experiments conducted in various states during the mid-1980s, providing a critical perspective on the effectiveness of job training programs. The authors present a detailed review of evaluations from Arkansas, Baltimore, San Diego, and Virginia, focusing on the long-term impacts on employment and earnings for welfare recipients.

Readers will find a thorough exploration of the challenges associated with welfare reform, as the authors highlight the limitations of low-cost job placement programs in reducing poverty over time. The book emphasizes that only higher-cost educational initiatives have proven effective in helping welfare recipients maintain employment and avoid returning to welfare. By analyzing five years of follow-up data, Five Years After offers valuable insights into the complexities of welfare policy and the difficult choices that must be made in developing future programs. This edition serves as a foundational resource for understanding the long-term effects of welfare-to-work initiatives and the ongoing debate surrounding welfare reform.


Official synopsis Publisher

Friedlander and Burtless teach us why welfare reform will not be easy. Their sobering assessment of job training programs willenlighten a debate too often dominated by wishful thinking and political rhetoric. Look for their findings to be cited for many years to come. —Douglas Besharov, American Enterprise Institute A methodologically astute study that sheds considerable light on the potential for and limits to raising the employment and earnings of welfare recipients and provides benchmarks against which the impacts of later programs can be compared. —Journal of Economic Literature With welfare reforms tested in almost every state and plans for a comprehensive federal overall on the horizon, it is increasingly important for Americans to understand how policy changes are likely to affect the lives of welfare recipients. Five Years After tells the story of what happened to the welfare recipients who participated in the influential welfare-to-work experiments conducted by several states in the mid-1980s.The authors review the distinctive goals and procedures of evaluations performed in Arkansas, Baltimore, San Diego, and Virginia, and then examine five years of follow-up data to determine whether the initial positive impact on employment, earnings, and welfare costs held up over time. The results were surprisingly consistent. Low-cost programs that saved money by getting individuals into jobs quickly did little to reduce poverty in the long run. Only higher-cost educational programs enabled welfare recipients to hold down jobs successfully and stay off welfare. Five Years After ends speculation about the viability of the first generation of employment programs for welfare recipients, delineates the hard choices that must be made among competing approaches, and provides a well-documented foundation for building more comprehensive programs for the next generation. A sobering tale for welfare reformers of all political persuasions, this book poses a serious challenge to anyone who promises to end welfare dependency by cutting welfare budgets.

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This page includes the available description and bibliographic details for “Five Years After The Long-Term Effects of Welfare-to-Work Programs” by Daniel Friedlander. Synopsis preview: Friedlander and Burtless teach us why welfare reform will not be easy. Their sobering assessment of job training programs willenlighten a debate too often dominated by wishful thinking and political rhetoric. Look for th…
Who is the author of “Five Years After The Long-Term Effects of Welfare-to-Work Programs”?
“Five Years After The Long-Term Effects of Welfare-to-Work Programs” is credited to Daniel Friedlander.
When was “Five Years After The Long-Term Effects of Welfare-to-Work Programs” published?
Publisher: Russell Sage Foundation. Year: 1995.
What is the ISBN for “Five Years After The Long-Term Effects of Welfare-to-Work Programs”?
ISBN-13: 9780871542663.
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
Language: en. Pages: 244.

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