The conservative attacks on the welfare system in the United
States over the past several decades have put liberal defenders of
poverty relief and social insurance programs on the defensive. In
this no-holds-barred look at the reality of American social policy
since World War II, William Epstein argues that this defense is not
worth mounting--that the claimed successes of American social
programs are not sustained by evidence. Rather than their failure
being the result of inadequate implementation or political
resistance stemming from the culture wars, these programs and their
built-in limitations actually do represent what the vast majority
of people in this country want them to be.
However much people may speak in favor of welfare, the proof of
what they really want is in the pudding of the social policies that
are actually legislated. The stinginess of America's welfare system
is the product of basic American values rooted in the myth of
"heroic individualism" and reinforced by a commitment to social
efficiency, the idea that social services need to be minimal and
compatible with current social arrangements.
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