WASHINGTON, D.C. - Buying Americans out of poverty is undermining incentives to work, with families living in poverty relying more on taxpayer-funded welfare checks than income from work, according to a newly released report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). Costing well over $1 trillion, America’s social safety net encompasses more than 80 federal programs, and is discouraging beneficiaries from seeking income from work.

The report, which was requested by Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith (MO-08), shows low-income families are becoming increasingly dependent on government transfers. In 1979, families living below the poverty line earned about 60 percent of their income from work. In 2021, that number dropped to an all-time low of around 25 percent. The report also shows how the dramatic increase in dependency on government transfers for low-income families was accelerated by COVID-era benefits.

Chairman Smith issued the following statement in response to CBO’s analysis:

“This first-of-its-kind analysis provides critical insight into how our nation’s welfare system has alleviated material hardship for many of our fellow citizens but at the same time has failed to promote the dignity of work. By counting the full set of income sources available to those living in poverty - including both employment income as well as federal welfare benefits - we see that there has indeed been a dramatic reduction in the number of families living below the official poverty line. However, low-income Americans are receiving an ever-growing share of their financial resources from government transfers, not work. To improve our nation’s welfare system, we must pursue policies that will lift more Americans out of poverty - including strengthening incentives to seek a job like tying benefits to commonsense work requirements. This will help more of our fellow Americans achieve independence and gainful employment. Afterall, a job is the best anti-poverty program that exists.”

Chairman Smith asked CBO to compare data from its most recent Distribution of Household Income report with the Official Poverty Measure (OPM) poverty line threshold. The request came after the Ways and Means Work and Welfare Subcommittee held a hearing in October 2023 to examine weaknesses in the OPM.

Background:

Read the report here.

READ: Five Key Moments From Work & Welfare Subcommittee Hearing on Measuring Poverty

READ: In Chicago, Witnesses Highlight the Power of Work to Lift People Out of Poverty

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