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It's about Equality and Taxes, not Skills It's about Equality and Taxes, not Skills
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Compensators and Targeted Policies: Clinton's Fair Record Compensators and Targeted Policies: Clinton's Fair Record
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Welfare Repeal: Ignoring Lousy Jobs Welfare Repeal: Ignoring Lousy Jobs
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The Nearby Labor Force: Why Job-Based Poverty Won't Go Away The Nearby Labor Force: Why Job-Based Poverty Won't Go Away
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Other Nations Compensate for Market Weakness Other Nations Compensate for Market Weakness
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Is the U.S. Welfare State Really Backward? Is the U.S. Welfare State Really Backward?
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Ten Staying Poor in the Clinton Boom: Welfare Reform, the Nearby Labor Force, and the Limits of the Work Ethic
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Published:September 2007
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Abstract
This chapter examines welfare reform, labor force, and work ethic during the administration of Bill Clinton. It looks at the reasons for the persistence of poverty in the United States 40 years after the War on Poverty. More specifically, the chapter analyzes why welfare reform has been a failure and why economic growth will not reduce even job-related poverty. It considers what happened to people who left welfare and why economic growth failed to alleviate poverty as fast as it had in the 1950s and 1960s. The chapter discusses Clinton's policies aimed at assisting the poor before concluding with an assessment of welfare reform and the labor market under his administration.
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