Chapter 16: Social Safety Nets
Welfare State
A government with a board set of safety net programs
Market Economy
An economic system characterized by private ownership of productive assets; decisions about how to use these assets are made by individuals and firms operating in a market rather that by government
Cost-Of-Living Adjustment (COLA)
Automatic annual cost-of-living adjustment made to Social Security benefits
Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC)
Federal entitlement program that provided income support for poor families until it was repaved by TANF in 1996
Medicare
Federal health insurance program for the elderly and the disabled
Child Health Insurance Program (CHIP)
Federally regulated program that allocates money to the states to help them pay for medical services
Entitlements
Government benefits that are distributed automatically to citizens who qualify on the basis of a set of guidelines set by law; for example, Americans over the age of 65 are entitled to Medicare coverage
Safety Nets
Government programs that protect the minimum standard of living of families and individuals against loss of income
Social Insurance
Government programs that provide services or income support in proportion to the amount of mandatory contributions made by individuals to a government trust fund
Means-Tested
Meeting the criterion of demonstrable need
Medicaid
Program administered by the states that pays for health care services for the poor; jointly funded by the federal government and the states
Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF)
Program designed to help needy families achieve self-sufficiency. States receive block grants to design and operate programs that accomplish one of the purposes of the TANF program.
Unemployment Insurance
Program funded by taxes on employers to provide short-term income support to laid-off workers; also called unemployment compensation
Public Assistance
Programs funded by general tax funds that provide money or services for the poor
Social Security
Social insurance program that provides income support for the elderly, those with disabilities, and family survivors of deceased working Americans
Poverty Line
The federal government's calculation of the amount of income families of various sized need to stay out of poverty
Great Depression
The period of economic crisis in the United States that lasted from the stock market crash of 1929 to America's entry into WWII
New Deal
The programs of the administration of President F.D.R.