Article: Welfare reform's unintended consequence: hurting of poor children.

Byline: Jane Eisner

The law of unintended consequences knows no boundaries, and not even important federal policy is immune to its unpredictable reach. Willing it away is futile. The challenge is to know what to do when the unintended occurs.

That's the challenge facing Congress and the Bush administration as they debate the reauthorization of the 1996 law that ended more than six decades of guaranteed public assistance to needy families and replaced it with a stricter, smaller safety net.

Welfare reform's top goals _ to reduce caseloads and push recipients into the workforce _ have generally been achieved, thanks to a sound economy and the ...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles:

 
 
Newsweek Harper's Magazine The Washington Post Chicago Tribune Crain's Chicago Business PRNewswire Pediatric News The Nation Advertising Age The Economist (US) A FREE trial gives you access to over 80 million articles! Access over 6,500 publications with a FREE trial!