Opinion

Require more SNAP recipients to work

Requiring able-bodied people to work in exchange for government benefits is a popular idea. It’s a proven way to reduce dependency and break the cycle of poverty. And in the case of the federally funded Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — what used to be called food stamps — it’s also the law. So why are...

John Hood
Opinion

Workfare still superior to welfare

In Washington, Republican lawmakers are insisting that any deal with the Biden administration to raise the federal debt ceiling be accompanied by stricter work requirements for such programs as cash welfare, nutrition assistance, and Medicaid. In Raleigh, Republican state senators tried to make work requirements a condition for expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act,...

John Hood
Opinion

States should take lead on welfare

I’m a fiscally conservative North Carolinian — and I think state taxes should be significantly higher. No, I haven’t lost my head, or my spine. And while I’m a committed supply-sider, I’m not referring here to projected revenues from a fast-growing economy. I truly mean North Carolina ought to levy higher state taxes. But only...

John Hood

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News

N.C. Gets So-So Welfare Grade

RALEIGH — A Washington, D.C.-based libertarian think tank gives North Carolina a mixed review in a 50-state analysis on the implementation of welfare reform. In a policy report published last fall that rated all the states on the results of their policies, the Cato Institute gave the Tar Heel state a “C” grade, along with 19 other states. Idaho, one of four states to earn an “A,” received the highest marks, while Vermont ranked the lowest among the nine states that received an “F.” Cato reviewed the states’ policies and practices in place since the federal overhaul of the welfare system in 1996.

Paul Chesser