The Hill recently published an article that should be filed under “telling it like it is.” The title is explanatory: “The War on Fraud is Really a War on the Poor.”
I’ve published several recent posts addressing the multiple inadequacies of what passes for America’s social safety net, especially focusing on the fact that very little of the money we spend on welfare programs actually gets to the beneficiaries of those programs; thanks to lawmakers’ obsession with determining recipients’ “merit,” we’ve erected a large and costly bureaucracy to screen applicants and to eliminate those perennial bugaboos “fraud and waste.”
As The Hill points out, what is described as a war on fraud and waste is really a war on poor people.
Every few years, someone digs up an example of someone gaming the system, and the response is always the same: “more paperwork, more surveillance, more hoops to jump through for people who are already struggling. The United States has long organized its anti-poverty programs around one overriding assumption: that poor people are likely to cheat.”
The article notes the costs of this misperception–including the expense of the enormous bureaucracy we’ve erected to ensure that no poor person gets a penny to which s/he is not “entitled.”
Families who claim the Earned Income Tax Credit are audited at dramatically higher rates than wealthier taxpayers. Families applying for SNAP benefits–aka Food Stamps–have to document income, housing and household composition not just when they first apply, but in “re-certifications” every few months. Those who miss a deadline or misunderstand a form lose their benefits — not because they did something fraudulent, but because they “failed to navigate an administrative maze designed to catch it.”
And cash benefits? As the article notes, after decades of “reform” intended to weed out the fraudulent and ineligible, only one in five eligible families currently receives any cash assistance, and even for those who do, benefit levels don’t begin to cover basic needs.
This approach also corrodes trust. When every interaction with the government begins with suspicion — when benefits arrive late, disappear without warning or require endless proof — people learn that institutions are not there to help them. They disengage. They stop applying.
None of this means fraud should be ignored. Public programs need safeguards. Taxpayer dollars matter. But fraud losses are a cost of doing business in every system — from corporate accounting to defense contracting. We don’t respond to those risks by forcing CEOs to recertify their eligibility every six months or freezing entire programs over isolated scandals. We reserve that treatment for those living in poverty, and it doesn’t have to be this way.
This obsession with suspected “Welfare Queens” who abuse government generosity isn’t based on experience or data; multiple audits have found that actual fraud by benefit recipients is rare. Improper payments — most of which are errors, not fraud — make up only a small fraction of spending. As the linked article points out, “We have constructed a massive enforcement apparatus to root out a small minority, and in the process, we have made life materially harder for millions.”
What is particularly galling about this war on poor people is the mounting, irrefutable evidence that the people looting the treasury aren’t poor single mothers “raking in” $450 a month. The real “fraud and waste” comes from the millionaires and billionaires making shady (or worse) deals with the Trump administration, and they’re making out like bandits.
As numerous watchdog organizations, including the Campaign Legal Center, have reported, Trump has been rewarding his biggest donors with political favors and providing his donors and friends with countless opportunities to enrich themselves at the expense of the American people. Crew reports that 20 cabinet members have directed at least 30 million dollars to “pad Trump’s political coffers, pet projects or personal bottom line.” Government officials and secret service members have spent untold hours at Trump resorts, paying inflated rates and filling Trump family coffers. The list goes on.
The Intercept reports that Trump–with the help of the Republicans in Congress– funded his tax cuts for corporations and the uber-rich by cutting billions of dollars in services for the poor and for working people, including Medicaid, and that large numbers of corporate executives are “quietly enriching themselves on Trump’s policies.”
And while massive grift and theft goes on at the top, our intrepid lawmakers are making sure that no one can spend their food stamps on sodas…
We’re waging war on the wrong people.
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