Hidden welfare state
{{Short description|Tax expenditures with social welfare objectives}}
{{Page numbers needed|date=September 2010}}
The hidden welfare state is a term coined by Christopher Howard, professor of government at the College of William and Mary, to refer to tax expenditures with social welfare objectives that are often not included in discussions about the U.S. welfare state. Howard's terminology implies that "visible" social welfare programs are designed to help the neediest, but the "hidden" programs often offer benefits to wealthier individuals and companies.
- Programs that constitute the visible welfare state of direct expenditures include: Social Security, Medicare, and Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC, now Temporary Assistance to Needy Families).
- The hidden welfare state refers to tax expenditures (deductions) with social welfare objectives: tax deductions for retirement saving, charitable contributions, higher education, and the home mortgage interest deduction. All of these deductions benefit constituencies with considerable disposable income.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
Tax expenditures and direct expenditures essentially have the same effect on the federal budget. Direct expenditures represent the amount of money the government is paying out, whereas, tax expenditures represent the amount of money not collected by the government.
To better understand the concept of social welfare tax expenditures and how they are similar to direct expenditures, Edward Berkowitz gives the example of, “if a person owes $100 in taxes to the government and the government forgives the obligation on the condition that the person buy a health insurance policy, then the situation is the same as if the government itself spent the $100.”{{Cite journal|last=Berkowitz |first=Edward D. |year=1998 |title=Revealing America's Welfare State |journal=Reviews in American History |volume=26 |issue=3 |pages=620–625 |issn=0048-7511 |doi=10.1353/rah.1998.0042}} Each expenditure also targets a specific portion of the population in an effort to give the selected population some type of relief.
Origins
The visible welfare state was primarily formed during two major periods, the mid-1930s and the mid-1960s. In the first period the Social Security Act was created and Medicare, Medicaid, and a variety of social service, education, and job training programs that targeted the poor was created during the second period. Although the visible welfare state was formed in these two big bursts, the hidden welfare state has been steadily created throughout the twentieth century.{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} The federal government began creating tax expenditures in the twentieth century. Since the 1910s at least two tax expenditures have been created each decade. Even during periods of resistance to social policy initiatives in the late 1910s and 1920s, tax expenditures were created.{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} In the 1930s tax expenditures passed that exempted benefits from public programs created during the New Deal.{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} In the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s tax expenditures related to housing and health care passed. Since the 1960s tax expenditures have been passed that offer individuals alternative sources of income{{Clarify|What are "alternative sources," and who is defining "alternative sources"?|date=August 2009}} and targeted a variety of needs of low-income taxpayers.
Throughout American history the enactment of direct spending social welfare programs has caused debate, controversy and resistance. However, history shows that the tax expenditures associated with the hidden welfare state have been fairly easy to enact.{{Citation needed|reason=e.g. Saul Alinsky et al & many in congress have "debated...and resisted" many benefits for the wealthy, just as those of the opposing ideology "debated...and resisted" the so-called "visible welfare"!|date=August 2009}} They have been enacted at a steady rate and have not been the result of social movements or mass protest. A reason tax expenditures have been able to be enacted without much debate is simply because many people did not know about them.{{Citation needed|reason=Take the biggest one, mortgage-interest is deductible: The average person didn't know about it, despite it being one of the most popular middle-class tax deductions? PUTTING IT ANOTHER WAY, SEE: /Wikipedia:Verifiability#EXCEPTIONAL_CLAIMS_REQUIRE_EXCEPTIONAL_SOURCES|date=August 2009}} These items were not included in the governments until after 1969.{{Clarify|date=August 2009}} As Edward Berkowitz explains, "people who wanted to know the value of, say, the mortgage deduction needed to do the calculations themselves, making an esoteric subject that much more arcane." Moderate and conservative members of United States Congress have been the main people behind many of the tax expenditures that make up the hidden welfare state, which is ironic because they are usually seen as antagonistic to new social programs. Christopher Howard points out that "the tax expenditure for corporate pensions had probably the quietest start of any major social program in contemporary welfare state. It was approved without debate late one night as Congress worked out the details of the Revenue Act of 1926." The Earned Income Tax was created during the debates over the Family Assistance Plan. However, although the Family Assistance plan generated a lot of attention, there was little debate over the Earned Income Tax when it was passed.{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}}
Tax expenditures have also had an easier time being passed than direct expenditures because tax expenditures are funded and authorized by the same congressional committee in each house, whereas direct spending programs are not. In order for a direct spending program to be passed, new legislation has to be passed. However, tax expenditures are also usually{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} added to legislation in must pass revenue bills created by the revenue committees. For example, the Targeted Jobs Tax Credit was passed as an amendment to the Revenue Act of 1978. Howard also claims that tax expenditures have "inherent ambiguity" and that they are "able to gain diverse support because tax expenditures are often ambiguous in terms of their clientele (serve, workers, employers, service providers), and in terms of their purpose (social welfare, economic stimulation, labor support, political constituency, and more."