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                                                                                            Updated July 18, 2019

The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)

Block Grant


Introduction
The Temporary  Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
block grant was created in the 1996 welfare reform law (the
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
Reconciliation Act of 1996, P.L. 104-193). That law was
the culmination of a series of legislative changes that
altered the rules for providing benefits and services to
needy families with children.

Brief  History
Public cash assistance to needy families with children has
its origin in the early 1900s state and locally financed
mother's pension programs that aided single mothers
(often widows) so that children could be raised in their own
homes rather than institutionalized. The Social Security Act
of 1935 provided federal funding for these programs with
the explicit goal to aid mothers so they would not have to
work and could stay home to raise their children.
Post-1935 changes altered the context in which programs
for needy families with children operated. In 1939,
survivors' benefits were added to Social Security, providing
benefits to widows and their children. The increase in labor
force participation among married mothers altered views
about whether government should aid single mothers to stay
at home. Families with children whose fathers were alive
but absent comprised more of the public cash assistance
caseload. The caseload also became more nonwhite. Cash
assistance to needy families with children became among
the most controversial of social programs, particularly
beginning in the late 1960s as the cash assistance caseload
had its first large increase. Welfare reform was debated
across four decades, ultimately leading to the 1996 welfare
reform law.

The   TANF Block Grant
The TANF  block grant's overall purpose is to increase the
flexibility of states to meet four statutory goals:
(1) provide assistance to needy families so that children
may remain in their homes; (2) reduce dependency of needy
parents on government benefits through work, job
preparation, and marriage; (3) reduce out-of-wedlock
pregnancies; and (4) promote the formation and
maintenance of two-parent families. The 1996 welfare
reform law and the creation of TANF altered the federal
rules that applied to states for their cash assistance
programs. It also established a broad-purpose block grant
that provides funds to states to address both the effects and
root causes of childhood economic disadvantage.

Federal  Grants  and State Funds
TANF  provides grants to the 50 states, District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Virgin Islands.
American  Indian tribes may also operate their own TANF


programs with federal dollars. The bulk of TANF funding is
in a basic block grant of $16.5 billion per year. Every year,
each state receives a fixed grant based on how much it
received in federal funding in the pre-1996 cash assistance
and related programs during the early- and mid-1990s.
Tribes also may receive grants based on mid-1990s
expenditures.
The TANF   block grant has not been increased since the
enactment of the 1996 welfare law. There has been no
adjustment for inflation or population change. During
TANF's  history, states have at times received TANF funds
in addition to the basic block grant. For FY2019, the only
additional funding to states for TANF is through the TANF
contingency fund.
In addition to federal funding, states are required to expend
a minimum  amount of their own funds on the TANF-related
population and TANF-related programs (a total minimum
of $10.3 billion per year.) This amount is also based on
historical expenditures in pre-TANF programs and is
known  as the maintenance of effort (MOE) requirement.
Some  states spend more than the minimum.

Use  of TANF   Funds
States may use federal block grant and MOE funds in any
manner that is reasonably calculated to achieve TANF's
statutory purpose and goals. States have used TANF funds
for a wide range of benefits and services. In FY2017, a total
of $31.1 billion was spent by states from federal TANF and
state MOE funds. TANF  assistance, which includes the
monthly cash benefits often called welfare, totaled $7.1
billion, which was 23% of total TANF federal and state
MOE   funds. In addition to assistance, TANF contributes to
state funds used for work and training programs, child care,
pre-kindergarten programs, programs to provide services to
children who have been abused and neglected or are at risk
of it, and other services (youth activities, responsible
fatherhood and healthy marriage promotion).
Figure I. Uses of Federal TANF  and  State MOE  Funds
by Category:  FY2017

               Basic Assistance               $7.1B
                   Child Care            $5.B
      Work, Education and TrainingB
           Refundable Tax Credit    $2.88
               Pre-K/Head Start    $25B      Total:
                 Child Welfare    $2.2B      $31.1
                 Administration   $2.2B      Billion
 Emergency and Short-Term Benefits 1,3B
                Other Services          $a.7B

Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on data from
the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).


https:/crsreports.congress go


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