We’ve hit the point in the legislative process where, even though the energy and the numbers are on the side of going big, centrist members of the Democratic caucus are starting to hedge. As a result, there’s been an uptick in Congress of two of the worst words in American politics: “means testing.”
Centrist Democrats are trying to shave the total cost of President Joe Biden’s proposed $3.5 trillion investment in key domestic priorities over the next decade, even though it’s less than half of what will be invested in the Pentagon in the same time frame. One of the most touted proposals in the Build Back Better Act has been two years of free community college for every American paid by the U.S. government — the very definition of a universal benefit.
But now Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., tells Business Insider reporter Joseph Zeballos-Roig that he could see the program’s being reduced to being accessible only to lower-income Americans.
Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) tells me he could envision tuition-free community college being means tested
— Joseph Zeballos-Roig (@josephzeballos) September 27, 2021
On the surface, that sounds great. You save taxpayer dollars and make sure that only poor Americans can use the programs. Win-win, right? Well, no.
For those unfamiliar with the phrase, “means testing” is the art of limiting the possible.
For those unfamiliar with the phrase, “means testing” is the art of limiting the possible. Say you want to establish a government program to provide free lunches for students, which is proven to be especially beneficial for kids from low-income families. The easiest way to make it happen is to do just that: provide free lunches for all students at public schools through federal funding. Or you could provide lunches only to some students who are most in need. And to determine which students requires adding steps to the process.
That could look like requiring parents to fill out paperwork documenting their annual incomes and the numbers of children they have in school. It could involve having school districts apply a formula for the number of kids per household for every tax bracket to decide whether each student qualifies. Then you have to keep track of every kid in the system and account for every reduced-price or free lunch that is given out. Most likely, you’ll need all of those steps and more — just to make sure some kid whose parents make a bit too much money or who qualifies but never filled out the form doesn’t get access to the school-provided lunch.
The justification for means testing is that it helps keep costs down for programs that are, in theory, paid for with higher taxes. This is done by ensuring that only the “right” people have access to federal aid, the argument goes. “Means testing,” then, is a nicer way of saying, “We want to add more hoops for people to jump through so fewer people can get help.”
If that sounds harsh, consider how social safety net programs were winnowed down as Republicans convinced white Americans that “welfare queens” in the Black community were abusing the system. Also, the participation rates for government programs meant to help those who are eligible are nowhere near 100 percent:
When we look at the participation rates of means-tested programs in the U.S., we typically find that around one in five eligible people are not receiving the benefits they are owed. The overall participation rate of the food stamp program is 85 percent and is only 75 percent for the working poor who likely have a harder time proving their eligibility to the welfare office. The participation rate of Medicaid is 94 percent for children, 80 percent for parents, and around 75 percent for childless adults. The participation rate of the Earned Income Tax Credit (and also presumably the Child Tax Credit) is 78 percent. The low participation in the EITC cuts the poverty-reducing effect of the program by around 33 percent, according to the Census Bureau, meaning that mainstream estimates of the EITC’s impact (e.g. those produced by CBPP) overstate the effectiveness of the program by at least 50 percent.
To repeat, a major factor in this disparity is the administrative hurdles Americans are forced to overcome just to prove that they qualify for assistance. The Atlantic’s Annie Lowry spelled out this year just how burdensome these bureaucratic requirements can be for people who are already struggling to make ends meet:








