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FREE TO CHOOSE: A Personal Statement
As complaints about welfare programs have mounted, so have
the number of programs to be complained about.
There is a rag-
bag of well over 100 federal programs that have been enacted to
help the poor. There are major programs like Social Security, un-
employment insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, aid to families with
dependent children, supplemental security income,
food stamps,
and myriad minor ones most people have never heard of, such as
assistance to Cuban refugees; special supplemental feeding for
women, infants, and children; intensive infant care project; rent
supplements; urban rat control; comprehensive hemophilia treat-
ment centers; and so on. One program duplicates another. Some
families who manage to receive assistance
from numerous pro-
grams end up with an income decidedly higher than the average
income for the country. Other families, through ignorance or
apathy, fail to apply for programs that might ease real distress.
But every program requires a bureaucracy to administer it.
Over and above the more than $130 billion per year spent un-
der Social Security, expenditure on these programs is around $90
billion a year—ten times the amount spent in 1960. This is clearly
overkill. The so-called poverty level for 1978, as estimated by the
Census, was close to $7,000 for a nonfarm family of four, and
about 25 million persons were said
to be members of families
below the poverty level. That is a gross overestimate because it
classifies families solely by money income, neglecting entirely any
income in kind—from an owned home, a garden, food stamps,
Medicaid, public housing. Several studies suggest that allowing
for these omissions would cut the Census estimates by one-half
or three-quarters.
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But even if
you use the Census estimates, they
i mply that expenditures on welfare programs amounted to about
$3,500 per person below the poverty level, or about $14,000 per
family of four—roughly twice the poverty level itself. If these
funds were all going to the "poor," there would be no poor left—
they would be among the comfortably well-off, at least.
Clearly, this money is not going primarily to the poor. Some is
siphoned off by administrative expenditures, supporting a massive
bureaucracy at attractive pay scales. Some goes to people who by
no stretch of the imagination can be regarded as indigent. These
are the college students who get food
stamps and perhaps other