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Both Hands Tied: Welfare Reform and the Race to the Bottom in the Low-Wage Labor Market PDF

241 Pages·2010·1.54 MB·English
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BOTH HANDS TIED JANE L. COLLINS AND VICTORIA MAYER Both Hands Tied WELFARE REFORM AND THE RACE TO THE BOTTOM IN THE LOW-WAGE LABOR MARKET / THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS CHICAGO AND LONDON JANE L. COLLINS is the Evjue Bascom Professor of Community and Environmental Sociology and Gender and Women’s Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and the author of Threads: Gender, Labor & Power in the Global Apparel Industry, among other titles. VICTORIA MAYER is assistant professor of sociology at Colby College. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637 The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London © 2010 by The University of Chicago All rights reserved. Published 2010 Printed in the United States of America 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 1 2 3 4 5 isbn-13: 978-0-226-11405-7 (cloth) isbn-10: 0-226-11405-8 (cloth) isbn-13: 978-0-226-11406-4 (paper) isbn-10: 0-226-11406-6 (paper) Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Collins, Jane Lou, 1954– Both hands tied : welfare reform and the race to the bottom in the low-wage labor market / Jane L. Collins and Victoria Mayer. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn-13: 978-0-226-11405-7 (cloth : alk. paper) isbn-10: 0-226-11405-8 (cloth : alk. paper) isbn-13: 978-0-226-11406-4 (pbk. : alk. paper) isbn-10: 0-226-11406-6 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Working poor—United States. 2. Poor—Employment— United States. 3. Poor women—Employment—United States. 4. Public welfare—United States. I. Mayer, Victoria. II. Title. hd8072.5.c656 2010 331.5'4—dc22 2009030879 a The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences— Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ansi z39.48-1992. List of Illustrations / vi Acknowledgments / vii Preface / ix 1 Introduction: The Connection between Welfare and Work / 1 2 Welfare Reform’s Context: The Growth of the Low-Wage Service Sector / 26 3 Welfare Reform’s Content: Building Connections between Work and Welfare / 55 4 Tying the First Hand: The Solitary Wage Bargain / 83 5 Tying the Second Hand: Challenges to Economic Citizenship / 114 CONTENTS 6 Both Hands Tied: The Race to the Bottom in the Low-Wage Labor Market / 147 7 Conclusion: Untying the Hands / 159 Appendix A. Description of Interview Process / 165 Appendix B. Interview Protocol / 167 Appendix C. Economic Composition of Sample / 174 Appendix d. Industrial Composition of Milwaukee and Racine / 175 Appendix e. Wisconsin Works (W-2) Documents / 177 Notes / 179 References / 201 Index / 215 ILLUSTRATIONS FIGuRES 2.1. Unemployment rates in Milwaukee and Milwaukee Metropolitan Statis- tical Area, 1990–2005 / 42 2.2. Unemployment rates in Racine and Racine Metropolitan Statistical Area, 1990–2005 / 43 2.3. Distribution of women in the study by type of job last held / 50 2.4. Income of women in the study by source, 1998–2003 / 51 2.5. Income of women in the study compared to poverty threshold, 1998– 2003 / 52 3.1. The W-2 employment ladder / 64 3.2. Milwaukee County caseload and unemployment rate, 1998–2005 / 74 3.3. Caseload and W-2 contract allocations, 1998–2006 / 75 d.1. Composition of economy, Milwaukee and Racine Counties, 2000 / 175 e.1. Wisconsin Works (W-2) participation agreement / 177 e.2. Wisconsin Works (W-2) employability plan / 178 TABLES c.1. Comparison of women in the study to all women in lower tier of Wisconsin Works / 174 d.1. Ten largest private sector employers, Milwaukee, 1970 / 176 d.2. Ten largest private sector employers, Milwaukee, 2004 / 176 A gallery of photos follows page 82. ACkNOwLEDGMENTS We conducted the initial research for this book, a study entitled “Mother’s Family Networks and Livelihood Strategies,” with the support of the Child Support Demonstration Evaluation, Phase III, administered by Professors Maria Cancian and Daniel Meyer at the University of Wisconsin’s Institute for Research on Poverty and funded by the Wisconsin Department of Work- force Development. We thank Maria and Dan for their support and guidance and Maria especially for her continuing interest in and engagement with the project as it grew beyond its initial goals and scope. Victoria Mayer received additional research support through a grant from the OΩce of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, administered by Thomas Kaplan, associate director of Programs and Management and senior scientist at the Institute for Research on Poverty. The Women’s Studies Research Center and the Graduate School at the University of Wisconsin provided resources for Jane Collins in the later phases of the research. Many individuals at the Institute for Research on Poverty provided invalu- able assistance in the day-to-day management of the project. We are grateful to Pat Brown and Steve Cook for their help with sample selection and access to quantitative data, Emma Caspar for her project management skills, Bill Wam- bach for budget administration, Allison Hales Espeseth and Margaret Darby Townsend for their oversight of human subjects research protocols, and Robin Snell for many kinds of help. Thomas Kaplan provided essential introductions to the network of Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) agencies in Milwaukee and valuable insight into the history of welfare reform in Wiscon- sin. David Pate Jr., then a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Research on Poverty and now assistant professor of social work at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, helped us design our methods, from the initial letter we sent to potential interview subjects to the interview experience itself. His moral support and intellectual feedback enriched the project immensely. vii viii ACkNOwLEDGMENTS Two superbly dedicated and gifted research assistants helped with the interviews: Nicole Breazeale, a doctoral student in sociology, and Angela Cunningham, a student in the master of social work program, both at UW– Madison. Nicole and Angela participated in the time-consuming work of scheduling interviews and later transcribing them; they also conducted or participated in many of the interviews, proving themselves to be deeply en- gaged, empathetic listeners who o∏ered women optimal conditions for the telling of their stories. A number of researchers and activists talked with us about this work as it developed, including Andrea Robles, Pamela Fendt, Laura Dresser, and Mar- cus White. Heidi Herschede provided an excellent “sociological orientation” to Milwaukee. Micaela di Leonardo, Maria Cancian, Je∏ Maskovsky, William Jones, Chad Goldberg, Myra Marx Ferree, and an anonymous University of Chicago Press reviewer provided insightful and engaged critique of various versions of the manuscript. Micaela, in particular, pushed us to make the book accessible to a broader audience and provided brilliant advice and editing as we did so. Members of local TANF agencies took time from demanding sched- ules to discuss their work and graciously accepted our presence while they interacted with program participants. The women at the heart of our study (the names reported here are all pseud- onyms) were bold, thoughtful, witty, generous, and kind. They believed in the importance of having their stories heard and sought to tell them as clearly and comprehensively as possible. They inspired us in so many ways. Victoria thanks her husband, Todd Miller, and her son, Isaiah Miller, for the joy they brought that sustained her through this work. And she thanks her parents, Joan and Paul Mayer, and her friends from Madison, who, though too numerous to name, were vital in helping her balance the needs of family and work while conducting this research. Jane thanks her son, Robert Painter, for his support and good humor and her sister Bonnie Landry and friends Nancy Kaiser, Aimee Dechter, Patricia Hodson, Alda Blanco, Michaeline Crichlow, Timothy Moermond, and Thomas Schweigert for their many acts of kindness. PREFACE In February 2009, the New York Times published two articles charting trends in U.S. employment and income security. On February 6, it announced that women, holding more than 49 percent of the nation’s jobs, were poised to surpass men in the labor force for the first time in American history. The ar- ticle reported that men’s loss of good manufacturing jobs and women’s greater employment in areas less sensitive to downturn left more women serving as breadwinners for their families. “Women may be safer in their jobs,” the author noted, “but tend to find it harder to support a family. . . . The jobs women have—and are supporting their families with—are not necessarily as good.”1 On February 2, the paper reported that despite soaring unemployment and the worst economic crisis in decades, eighteen states had cut their welfare rolls in 2008. Indeed, the number of people receiving cash assistance in the nation was at the lowest level in more than forty years.2 Seemingly unrelated, these news stories reference trends that are integrally connected in the lives of poor working families, contributing to the increasing diΩculty women face in com- bining work and family responsibilities at the low end of the labor market. Their dilemma is the subject of this book. Americans tend to think of work and welfare as opposites, as the poles of a spectrum of diligence or virtue. At one end is the industrious wage earner, the epitome of citizenship since the 1840s. At the other are imagined to be slothful and shiftless “welfare queens” and others who refuse to work. This over- wrought distinction obscures several facts. The first is that “welfare” programs, writ broadly, benefit a wide swath of the population. Imagine life without, for example, social security, workers’ compensation, unemployment insur- ance, tax deductions for interest on homes, or federally insured mortgages and student loans. Second, welfare writ small—those means-tested assistance programs directed toward the poor—has always been a safety net designed to mitigate labor market and family failures. Since welfare “reform” in 1996, however, the federal government has introduced new rules and structured ix

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Both Hands Tied studies the working poor in the United States, focusing in particular on the relation between welfare and low-wage earnings among working mothers. Grounded in the experience of thirty-three women living in Milwaukee and Racine, Wisconsin, it tells the story of their struggle to balan
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