T daily nebraskan '"day, October 23, 1981 Professor says welfare state page 8 contains too much flexibility I 2 i i i I i rT left? o vjU Place: 16th & IKS,S Time: 1:00 p.m. Date: October 25, 1981 Barbecue & Band at 16th & "S" Music by: The Ripchords Starting at 3:00 p.m. Proceeds Go To The Cedars Home For Children By John J. Jesse III An economics professor Thursday traced the devel opment of the VS. welfare state to the time of Henry VIII. 'The welfare state of America today contains lit tle or no original social thought," said Jonathan R.T. Hughes of Northwes tern University. "It is a hodge-podge of concepts ranging in time from Henry VIII to the present The presentation at Shel don Art Gallery was the sec ond in a seven-lecture series funded by the Dr. Scholl Foundation, which is ad ministered by the Associa tion of Private Enterprises Education. The forum is en titled "Security in the 80s: Private Enterprise and Pub mmii nanwiimi ii. imu iw mmiu) m.iw iipiijh i,iiwiini,im mi iinwwmiiK mmm i Jonathan R.T. Hughes He spoke of the origins and great influx of indigent. The lie Policy." It is hosted by development of relief for government tried monetary the College ot Business Ad- the poor. reforms, but, Hughes ex ministration's Department "Poverty is by no means plained, this failed to releive of Economics along with a modern concept," Hughes the pressures on local agen the Center for Study of the said. "We can trace poor cies. American Business System, relief programs all the way Dr. Hughes' talk was on back to Henry VIII's time." "Security and the 'Safety Hughes said during the Net': From Henry VIII to Middle Ages care of the indigent was mainly the responsibility of the Church, along with private 1918 though, charities. The transition of changed and J the Social Security Act. -V -s rt. 1 WW 4 I si 111 ! . M -II (01 fc-TH;ijy.'iii; .'rriv.i.j.r:; mm&M: H i.i.ii:,ii,:,??al - i . rAKvi'W this responsibility to the state began during Henrv VIII's reign in 1535. He prohibited private charity and instructed local govern ments to administer the pro gram. The people's attitude during these times, which was greatly supported by Henry VIII, was that care for indigents was fine, but able-bodied poor and unem ployed tended to severely harm a society's economy. "Today it is felt that vol untary unemployment is a luxury we can afford," Hughes said. The infirm and aged were cared for by the state Hughes said, but it was still an enforced social net against starvation. It was not until the late 19th centruy that unem ployment and poverty were regarded as social problems. These drawbacks had been widely visible since as early as the 1830s, Hughes said. The notion of a guaranteed annual income developed, and was considered to be about 30 percent of a com mon laborer's wage, he said. Hughes added that this did not change until the 1970s when government realized this did not consti tute a living wage. During this period of the 1800s the call began for fed eral intervention in aid for the poor, Hughes said. The old system of local care was not equipped to handle the However, with the out break of World War I , the U.S. economy became a command one, and little thought was given to the poor, Hughes said. After attitudes government tried to achieve rational solutions to social problems. Reforms in labor and indus trial areas were initiated, but little else was done. According to Hughes, the deficiencies of the system were made glaringly appar ent between 1929 and 1933. The number of unem ployed reached 15 million by 1933 and only one-quarter of this number received aid. This led to a call by many for a system which not only aided the crippled and the aged, but the able bodied poor as well. When Franklin D. Roose velt drafted the. Social Se curity Act of 1935, he was against direct relief to the poor, but favored a federal social insurance program, Hughes said. "This was weakened by the fact that local control and responsibility was still quite strong, and there was no standard set on pay ment," he said. There are two major problems with our welfare program today, Hughes added. First, there is "too much flexibility" with the administration of the Social Security System and its ben efits. Hughes said pensions should be put on a straight contractual basi:. "I also feel that the gov ernment should draft a set schedule for payment into and out of the aystem," he said. OPENS OCTOBER 23rd AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU! a TEE1IL0DLM YEELILQIEM TEB&tflfliM TSfMOOtlM GOlOOBSHXtR IMPOnUO t BOTTLCO Br ItOOH. JAIISCO S A SI IOOIS MO SO W Ell m M