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critics of the welfare system have argued that
welfare programs contribute to the creation of a
society in which the values and beliefs of people
receiving public assistance are fundamentally
different from those of people not receiving
public assistance. To
examine attitudes toward welfare and working
mothers, parents were asked if they strongly
agreed, agreed, disagreed, or strongly disagreed
with the following statements: (i) Welfare makes
people work less than they would if there weren't
a welfare system; (ii) A working mother can
establish just as warm and secure a relationship
with her children as a mother who does not work;
and (iii) When children are young, mothers should
not work outside the home.
The responses reflect the
attitudes of the parent or primary caregiver who
knows the most about the health care and
education of children in the household. Parents
were classified as receiving public assistance if
someone in their family was a beneficiary of the
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program
(or its predecessor) or the Food Stamp Program at
the time of the survey.
Nationally, 78 percent of
parents agreed or strongly agreed that welfare
provides a disincentive to work. Variation among
the 13 states surveyed was slight: The greatest
agreement was 81 percent, in Florida, while the
least was 72 percent, in Massachusetts.
There was also little
difference nationally by income group, although
the difference was statistically significant.
Seventy-four percent of parents with low family
incomes (below 200 percent of the federal poverty
level) agreed that welfare provides a work
disincentive, compared to 81 percent of parents
with higher family incomes. However, parents in
families receiving public assistance were much
less likely to agree that welfare provides a
disincentive to work than parents in families not
receiving public assistance: 64 percent versus 80
percent, respectively, a statistically
significant difference.
Nationally, 78 percent of
parents agreed or strongly agreed that working
mothers can establish as warm and secure a
relationship with their children as mothers who
do not work. Again, there were only slight
differences between the states, ranging from a
low of 71 percent agreement in California to a
high of 81 percent in Massachusetts and
Minnesota.
There was also a
statistically significant, but small, difference
nationally by income, with 75 percent of parents
from low-income and 79 percent of those from
higher-income families agreeing or strongly
agreeing that working mothers can establish as
warm and secure a relationship with their
children as mothers who do not work. There was
almost no difference in agreement between parents
in families receiving public assistance (79
percent) and those in families not receiving
assistance (77 percent).
Finally, only 49 percent of
parents nationally agreed or strongly agreed that
when children are young, mothers should not work
outside the home. This statement provoked more
varied responses by state than the other two,
ranging from 43 percent agreement in Wisconsin to
59 percent agreement in California.
Nationally, 47 percent of
higher-income parents agreed or strongly agreed
that mothers of young children should not work,
while 53 percent of low-income parents did, a
statistically significant, but modest,
difference. There was also very little difference
in agreement by welfare status. Fifty-two percent
of parents in families receiving public
assistance agreed or strongly agreed, compared to
49 percent of parents in families not receiving
assistance.
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