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15 January 2015
Marco Rubio in new book: People on welfare 'lose more in benefits than they would earn in salary' 13JAN15
sen marco rubio r tb FL is going to run for president in 2016. He has started his campaign of deception, manipulation, fear and hate, showing just what kind of presidency his would be. A Christian, yet he can't seem to run on the principles of his faith, I wounder why? Here he is attacking the poor and the social safety net they so desperately need, while saying nothing about federal corporate welfare that allows executives to keep their obscene pay packages while their companies receive tax breaks and government subsidies paid for by the 99%. This from +PolitiFact .....
"If people work and make more money, they lose more in benefits than they would earn in salary."
— Marco Rubio on Tuesday, January 13th, 2015 in his book, "American Dreams"
Marco Rubio in new book: People on welfare 'lose more in benefits than they would earn in salary'
By Steve Contorno on Wednesday, January 14th, 2015 at 11:56 a.m.
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., released a new book, "American Dreams," on Tuesday, Jan. 13.
At the center of Sen. Marco Rubio’s new book, American Dreams, is the conservative idea that government stands in the way of lower- and middle-class Americans getting ahead.
Why don’t more Americans start small businesses? Government
regulation, Rubio says. Why do Americans pay so much for higher
education? Government subsidies for students drive up prices. Why don’t
low-income workers try to work more hours or strive for a promotion?
Government assistance disincentivizes it.
"If (low-income) people work and make more money, they lose more in
benefits than they would earn in salary," Rubio wrote in the book,
released Jan. 13.
This idea is at the heart of Rubio’s plan to tackle poverty, so it’s one we wanted to look at in depth. Welfare vs. work
Government benefits for low-income individuals and families come in
many forms: housing assistance, health care and money to purchase food,
among others. Additionally, some states provide further assistance with
local programs.
These programs, reserved for poor people, tend toramp down as income goes up, meaning the more money you make, the fewer benefits you receive. Makes sense.
That phasedown, though, creates cliffs that sometime lessen the value
of the increase in earnings. A similar effect occurs when people move
into a higher tax bracket as their income goes up.
Economists look at these changes in benefits and tax rates in terms
of their impact on every additional dollar earned. When the impact is
high, and a large chunk of the amount of every additional dollar earned
goes to taxes or to offset a decrease in benefits, it can affect
people’s desire to work more, said the Congressional Budget Office, the
chief fiscal scorekeeper for lawmakers. This situation becomes an
incentive for people "already in the workforce to put in fewer hours or
be less productive," the CBO said.
Is it possible that the benefits lost could be so great, that a
person would lose more in benefits than they would gain by an increase
in wages?
Sure. The Cato Institute, a libertarian policy shop, released a study
in 2013 that made this exact point. By analyzing the total benefits an
individual can receive in each state and from the federal government,
they determined that in nine states assistance payouts exceeded $35,000 a
year. Welfare paid better than a minimum wage job in 34 states, plus
the District of Columbia, they reported. We asked Rubio’s office for
more evidence, and we didn’t hear back.
Under such a scenario, an individual could lose more by working than staying in their current situation. ‘Typical’ low-income family
But what is that situation? To reach its headline-grabbing
conclusions, Cato claims it focused on a typical welfare family. But the
study focused on what a single mother with two children might qualify
for.
That’s an important distinction, and one that significantly alters
the playing field. Single mothers with multiple children are eligible
for considerably more benefits than poor individuals or married couples
with no children.
The report goes on to assume that the "typical" family receives seven
different forms of public assistance, but that assumption is a pretty
big leap. Here’s why:
There are four main federal programs: Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (food stamps); Medicaid or Child Health Insurance
Program (health care); Section 8 (housing assistance); and Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families (welfare). According to the Congressional
Budget Office in 2012, most families do not receive assistance from more
than one of these programs.
In fact, just a quarter of single parents with children earning up to
250 percent of the federal poverty line are enrolled in two of those
programs. About 11 percent are enrolled in three or four.
If we look at all low-income households of every size and makeup,
then 17 percent of low-income households are enrolled in multiple
federal programs and only 1 percent receive benefits from all four of
them.
So choosing to look at a single mother receiving benefits from seven programs, as Cato does, is an extreme example.
Also, there are two widely used programs, the Earned Income Tax
Credit and the Child Tax Credit, that actually increase benefits for
very low-income individuals the more money that they make for their
first $10,000 in wages. The benefits then ramp down after someone earns
about $17,000 annually. This incentivizes and rewards poor parents who
work more, and therefore it actually decreases the marginal tax rate for
many low-income workers.
In part because of these two tax credits, it is quite uncommon that
someone would go from not working to working and lose more in benefits
than they would gain in income. ‘Possible but rare’
Let’s go back to looking at this issue in terms of income lost on
additional earnings. According to the Congressional Budget Office, there
are very few instances when all 100 cents of an additional dollar
earned would go to taxes and replacing lost benefits. In fact, among
low- and moderate-income taxpayers, less than one percent lose 80 cents or more of every additional dollar earned.
Those most affected would likely be individuals who earn near or just
above the poverty level (about $20,000 in a three-person household),
who are also enrolled in multiple benefit programs that are set to phase
out with any additional income. This is not the norm.
Most people earning at or near the poverty level lose about 30 percent in taxes and offset benefits on their additional income.
Losing 100 percent of every dollar earned to taxes or replacing lost
benefits is "possible but rare," said Eugene Steuerle at the Urban
Institute. "High 40 to 60 percent rates are more common, and, if one
adds in cost of transportation and clothing (not a tax but a loss from
working), higher still."
It’s difficult to know when or how people factor lost benefits in
their employment decisions, the Congressional Budget Office said.
Benefits from government assistance programs are complex and determined
by a multitude of factors, both financial (like salary, enrollment in
other assistance programs) and nonfinancial (marital status, number of
children). It would be hard for an individual to decide if working an
extra few hours a week or taking that promotion is going to impact their
benefits. Our ruling
In his book, Rubio wrote, "If people work and make more money, they lose more in benefits than they would earn in salary."
There is evidence that when a large chunk of the amount of every
additional dollar earned goes to taxes or to offset a decrease in
benefits, people work less. Further, there are scenarios where a
low-income individual with children receiving assistance from the
government through multiple programs could potentially lose more in
benefits than he or shewould gain by a slight or modest increase in income.
But these examples are a small minority. The vast majority of people
face some higher taxes and lost benefits when they make more money, but
they would still take home more in pay than they would under a lower
salary.
The statement contains some element of truth but ignores critical
facts that would leave a different impression. We rate the statement
Mostly False.
Marco Rubio, American Dreams, Jan. 13, 2014
Cato Institute, "The Work Versus Welfare Tradeoff: 2013," 2013
Cato Institute, "Welfare: A Better Deal than Work," Aug. 21, 2013
Congressional Budget Office, "Effective Marginal Tax Rates for Low- and Moderate-Income Workers," November 2012
Congressional Budget Office, "Snapshot of Marginal Tax Rates for Low- and Moderate-Income Workers," Oct. 23, 2013
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, "Policymakers Often Overstate
Marginal Tax Rates for Lower-Income Workers and Gloss Over Tough
Trade-Offs in Reducing Them," Dec. 3, 2014
Email interview with LaDonna Pavetti, vice president, Family Income
Support at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Jan. 8, 2015
Eugene Steuerle, Institute Fellow and Richard B. Fisher Chair at the Urban Institute, Jan. 12, 2015
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