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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, June 1, 2018
White America’s racial resentment is the real impetus for welfare cuts, study says
A sign opposing Medicaid expansion is displayed on a roadway in Center Cross, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)
By Caitlin DeweyMay 30 at 8:00 PM
White Americans are increasingly critical of the country’s social safety net, a new study suggests, thanks in part to a rising tide of racial resentment.
White Americans are increasingly critical of the country’s social safety net, a new study suggests, thanks in part to a rising tide of racial resentment.
The study, conducted by researchers at two California universities and
published Wednesday in the journal Social Forces, finds that opposition
to welfare programs has grown among white Americans since 2008, even
when controlling for political views and socioeconomic status.
White Americans are more likely to favor welfare cuts when they believe
that their status is threatened and that minorities are the main
beneficiaries of safety net programs, the study says.
The findings suggest that political efforts to cut welfare programs are
driven less by conservative principles than by racial anxiety, the
authors conclude. T hat also hurts white Americans who make up the
largest share of Medicaid and food-stamp recipients. President Donald
Trump and Congressional Republicans have proposed deep cuts to both
programs.
“I think our research is very relevant to politics,” said Rachel Wetts, a
doctoral candidate in sociology at UC Berkeley and the lead author of
the new research. “My main hope here is that people take a step back,
look at what these sorts of programs do for the poor, and think about
what’s driving opposition to them.”
Wetts and her co-author, Stanford University sociologist Robb Willer,
conducted three separate experiments designed to gauge white Americans’
attitudes toward welfare and the factors that influenced them.
In the first, the researchers analyzed 10 years of nationally
representative survey data on attitudes toward race and welfare
programs. Between 2008 and 2012 in particular, they found, opposition to
welfare rose among all Americans -- but far more sharply among whites,
who also began scoring higher on racial resentment scales during that
period.
These trends weren’t necessarily linked, however. So to determine if
there was a connection, Wetts and Willer designed two more experiments:
one in which they quizzed respondents on their feelings about welfare
after seeing a graph about U.S. demographic change, and another in which
respondents took a similar quiz after viewing information on average
income by race and the demographics of welfare beneficiaries.
The Trump administration is
calling Medicaid work requirements a positive "incentive" for
beneficiaries, but critics say they're a harmful double standard. (Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)
White Americans called for deeper cuts to welfare programs after viewing
charts that showed they would become a racial minority within 50 years.
They also opposed welfare programs more when they were told that people
of color benefit most from them.
Those results show that the push to cut welfare programs is not driven
by pure political motives, such as decreasing government spending or
shrinking government bureaucracy, Wetts said.
“We find evidence that these shifts [in sentiment against welfare
programs] are specifically directed at programs people see as benefiting
minorities instead of whites,” she added.
Wetts isn’t ruling out the possibility that alternate factors could also
be at play, of course. Some researchers have found that people embrace
more conservative politics during periods of rapid social change -- not
necessarily because they fear their racial status is threatened, but
because they fear change is happening too fast. Others have argued the
connection between white Americans’ racial resentment and their politics
has been exaggerated.
But there's a growing body of evidence to suggest that white Americans
who fear a loss of racial status are driving major shifts in policy and
politics. A major study in
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in April concluded
that President Donald Trump was voted into office by people anxious
about rising racial diversity and globalization.
Researchers have also shown that white Americans' racial prejudice affects their views on everything from healthcare policy to the death penalty to dogs. On the same day Wetts' paper published, a separate study in the journal Environmental Politics found that people with high levels of "racial resentment" are more likely to believe that the scientific consensus on climate change is false.
"[White] racial resentment has become much more highly correlated with
particular political attitudes, behaviors and orientations," political
scientists Adam M. Enders and Jamil S. Scott wrote in a January analysis for the Post's Monkey Cage blog.
"More and more, white Americans use their racial attitudes to help them
decide their positions on political questions such as whom to vote for
or what stance to take on important issues including welfare and health
care."
When it comes to welfare, those stances will become important in coming months, Wetts noted.
Budget Director Mick Mulvaney
described Trump's replacement for the food stamp program as a "Blue
Apron-type program." What will the boxes actually look like? (Jhaan Elker, Patrick Martin/The Washington Post)
The Trump administration has begun allowing states to impose work requirements on Medicaid recipients, and has proposed tripling the rentsfor
the poorest households receiving federal housing assistance. The House
is also scheduled to vote again next month on a plan to cut $9 billion from food-stamp benefits over 10 years and require most adults to hold a job to receive payments.
A minority of Democrats and Republicans say they support cuts to poverty spending,
according to a 2017 poll by the Pew Research Center. Figures from the
federal government and the Kaiser Family Foundation show
that white Americans make up 36 percent of food-stamp recipients, 43 percent of Medicaid recipients and 28 percent of recipients for cash welfare.