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Social programs in the United States

The United States spends approximately $2.3 trillion on federal and state social programs including cash assistance, health insurance, food assistance, housing subsidies, energy and utilities subsidies, and education and childcare assistance. Similar benefits are sometimes provided by the private sector either through policy mandates or on a voluntary basis. Employer-sponsored health insurance is an example of this.

American social programs vary in eligibility with some, such as public education, available to all while others, such as housing subsidies, are available only to a subsegment of the population. Programs are provided by various organizations on a federal, state, local, and private level. They help to provide basic needs such as food, shelter, education, and healthcare to residents of the U.S. through primary and secondary education, subsidies of higher education, unemployment and disability insurance, subsidies for eligible low-wage workers, subsidies for housing, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, pensions, and health insurance programs. Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children's Health Insurance Program are prominent social programs.


Research shows that U.S. government programs that focus on improving the health and educational outcomes of low-income children are the most effective, with benefits substantial enough that the government may even recoup its investment over time due to increased tax revenue from adults who were beneficiaries as children.[2][3] Veto points in the U.S. structure of government make social programs in the United States resilient to fundamental change.[4][5]

Congressional funding[edit]

Not including Social Security and Medicare, Congress allocated almost $717 billion in federal funds in 2010 plus $210 billion was allocated in state funds ($927 billion total) for means tested welfare programs in the United States, of which half was for medical care and roughly 40% for cash, food and housing assistance. Some of these programs include funding for public schools, job training, SSI benefits and medicaid.[6] As of 2011, the public social spending-to-GDP ratio in the United States was below the OECD average.[7]


Total Social Security and Medicare expenditures in 2013 were $1.3 trillion, 8.4% of the $16.3 trillion GNP (2013) and 37% of the total Federal expenditure budget of $3.684 trillion.[8][9]


In addition to government expenditures, private welfare spending, i.e. social insurance programs provided to workers by employers,[10] in the United States is estimated to be about 10% of the U.S. GDP or another $1.6 trillion, according to 2013 OECD estimates.[11] In 2001, Jacob Hacker estimated that public and private social welfare expenditures constituted 21% and 13–14% of the United States' GDP respectively. In these estimates of private social welfare expenditures, Hacker included mandatory private provisions (less than 1% of GDP), subsidized and/or regulated private provisions (9–10% of GDP), and purely private provisions (3–4% of GDP).[12]

whether the program is universal or targeted towards certain groups

the size of the social program benefits (larger benefits incentivize greater mobilization to defend a social program)

the visibility and traceability of the benefits (whether recipients know where the benefits come from)

the proximity and concentration of the beneficiaries (this affects the ease by which beneficiaries can organize to protect a social program)

the duration of the benefits (longer benefits incentivize greater mobilization to defend a social program)

the manner in which a program is administered (e.g. is the program inclusive, does it follow principles?)

Administration of federal assistance in the United States

Wealth inequality in the United States

Welfare economics

Welfare in California

Welfare in Puerto Rico

Welfare trap

Horan, Caley. 2021. . University of Chicago Press.

Insurance Era: Risk, Governance, and the Privatization of Security in Postwar America

MaCurdy, Thomas; Jones, Jeffrey M. (2008). . In David R. Henderson (ed.). Concise Encyclopedia of Economics (2nd ed.). Library of Economics and Liberty. ISBN 9780865976658. OCLC 237794267.

"Welfare"

Alison Siskin, , Congressional Research Service, 12 December 2016.

Noncitizen Eligibility for Federal Public Assistance: Policy Overview

Media related to Category:Social programs in the United States at Wikimedia Commons