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Policy Basics

The federal government provides a fixed TANF block grant to states, which use those funds to operate their own programs. (To receive federal funds, states must also spend some of their own dollars on programs for families in need.)

Because states have broad flexibility over their use of federal TANF funds, TANF programs vary widely from state to state in how effectively they assist needy families. In every state, however, TANF reaches fewer poor families with children than when the program began.

We make recommendations on how to improve state programs by increasing benefit levels, reaching more eligible families, and focusing spending on core areas like basic assistance, work and work supports, and child care.

Simplifying the Child Care Eligibility “Maze”

An important way to help low-income working families meet their basic needs and improve their lives is to make sure they receive the work supports for which they qualify, such as health coverage,...

It’s Time to Bolster TANF

Cash assistance benefits for the nation’s poorest families with children fell again in purchasing power in 2013, we explain in our annual update of state benefits under the Temporary Assistance for...

New Evidence That Subsidized Jobs Programs Work

Thirty-nine states and the District of Columbia used $1.3 billion from the TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) Emergency Fund to place more than 260,000 low-income adults and youth in...

Greenstein on the Ryan Budget

CBPP President Robert Greenstein has issued a statement on House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan’s new budget.  Here’s the opening: When House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan released...

Don’t Forget Ryan’s Budget of Last Year

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) will reportedly begin to release the details of his new budget proposal on Wednesday.  House Republicans have already announced their goal is to...