Federalism, Entitlement, and Punishment across the U.S. Social Welfare State

W. Bach
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Abstract

In a 2018 letter the Trump Administration announced that it was open to proposals to include work requirements and other changes in state Medicaid programs. These proposals came in the form of administrative waiver requests that would allow particular states the flexibility to change the rules of Medicaid eligibility in their state. They were seeking permission to condition the receipt of Medicaid on compliance with work requirements and to “align” the Medicaid program with programs like Temporary Assistance to Needy Families. The Obama administration had consistently rejected such requests on the grounds that work requirements did not further the aims of the Medicaid program, but the Trump administration felt no such qualms, likening Medicaid to Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (colloquially welfare) and arguing that, just like welfare recipients, Medicaid recipients needed to be incentivized to work in order to “build” their dignity. This contest, like many others in the field of social welfare policy, plays out on the terrain of federalism. It is, on the surface, a battle over control among levels of government and over the appropriate rules and structures for particular programs. This chapter argues that these controversies over legal structures, legal rules, and the location of governance, are better understood as arguments about both deservingness and control played out through controversies about administrative structure. In short, programs are called “welfare,” or are urged by some to be more like “welfare,” when what is really meant is that we wish to use the administrative mechanisms of federalism to control, stigmatize, punish, and deter recipients. In contrast, when we perceive recipients as entitled, these mechanisms fall away to be replaced by federally-controlled, far less visible and far more inviting, administrative structures. To make this process visible, this chapter describes the administrative tools of benefit programs as well as the corresponding cultural assumptions tied to each program and then contextualizes a debate like the one over Medicaid work rules using this context.
美国社会福利国家的联邦制、权利和惩罚
在2018年的一封信中,特朗普政府宣布,它愿意接受将工作要求和其他变化纳入州医疗补助计划的建议。这些提案以行政豁免请求的形式提出,允许特定州灵活地改变本州的医疗补助资格规则。他们正在寻求许可,将接受医疗补助的条件设定为符合工作要求,并将医疗补助计划与贫困家庭临时援助等项目“结合”起来。奥巴马政府一直拒绝这样的要求,理由是工作要求无助于推进医疗补助计划的目标,但特朗普政府没有这样的疑虑,将医疗补助计划比作贫困家庭临时援助(口头福利),并辩称,就像福利接受者一样,医疗补助接受者需要被激励去工作,以“建立”他们的尊严。就像社会福利政策领域的许多其他竞争一样,这场竞争在联邦制的版图上展开。从表面上看,这是一场各级政府之间的控制权之争,也是一场针对特定项目的适当规则和结构之争。本章认为,这些关于法律结构、法律规则和治理地点的争论,最好理解为通过关于行政结构的争论而产生的关于应得性和控制权的争论。简而言之,项目被称为“福利”,或者被一些人敦促更像“福利”,而真正的意思是我们希望利用联邦制的行政机制来控制、污名化、惩罚和阻止接受者。相比之下,当我们认为受助人有资格获得资助时,这些机制就会消失,取而代之的是由联邦政府控制的、远不那么显眼、却远更具吸引力的行政结构。为了使这一过程清晰可见,本章描述了福利计划的管理工具以及与每个计划相关的相应文化假设,然后利用这一背景将医疗补助工作规则等辩论置于背景中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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