Martin Morse Wooster from the August/September 1994 issue
Unsentimental Compassion
By Martin Morse Wooster
The Homeless, By Christopher Jencks, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 122 pages, $17.95
Northwestern University sociologist Christopher Jencks has always been an interesting, iconoclastic liberal. In the 1960s, he was the left's leading advocate for school choice, championing ideas very similar to those promoted 20 years later by John Chubb and Terry Moe. Over the past two decades, Jencks has shifted his interests from education to welfare, but his intellectual independence and his incisive, powerful style remain unchanged.
Now Jencks directs his attention to homelessness, drawing on resources unavailable to most writers. A Rockefeller Foundation grant enabled a research assistant to spend "hundreds of hours at his computer terminal analyzing Census surveys." And the Russell Sage Foundation not only gave Jencks a one-year fellowship but even sponsored a conference at which various experts gave Jencks advice about his manuscript.
These grants, and his independent mind, ensure that Jencks has a fresh take on homelessness. While liberals will be comforted by Jencks's conclusion--that the government should spend a great deal of money on the homeless--they are less likely to be soothed by the substance of The Homeless. In closely scrutinizing the available data, Jencks neatly demolishes nearly every argument made by homeless advocates.
Here are some of the claims refuted by Jencks:
* America is suffering from an epidemic of homelessness, with
nearly 3 million homeless people on the streets. Jencks
documents that homeless advocate Mitch Snyder made up his numbers
and cites a Nightline interview in which Snyder told Ted
Koppel that his estimates of millions of homeless people "have no
meaning, no value."
Using Census Bureau data and studies by the Urban Institute and the Columbia University School of Social Work, Jencks estimates that America had about 125,000 homeless people in 1980 and between 300,000 and 400,000 homeless people in 1987. Since 1987, Jencks says, the number of homeless people has either stayed constant or declined slightly. "Estimates above 500,000," Jencks says, "are considerably harder to reconcile with the available evidence unless one believes that the `invisible' homeless are very numerous indeed."
* The homeless are people just like you and me who happen to have a
streak of bad luck. No, they're not, Jencks argues. Homeless
people are more likely to be male, single, alcoholic,
drug-addicted, and black, and more likely to have limited job
skills, than the population as a whole. Homeless people are also
more likely to have come from troubled families and to have spent
some time in their childhood with foster parents. "If bad luck were
the main cause of homelessness," Jencks writes, "most people would
be homeless occasionally, but few would be homeless for long. In
reality, most people are never homeless, a sizeable number are
homeless briefly, and a few are homeless for long periods."
"The homeless are indeed just like you and me in most respects," adds Jencks. "But so are saints and serial killers." Ignoring the differences between homeless
people and Americans who have homes, he suggests, "is to substitute sentimentality for compassion."
* Reagan administration budget cutters caused the rise in
homelessness in the early 1980s by slashing low-income housing
programs. Jencks freely admits that housing subsidies rose,
not fell, during the Reagan administration; all the Reaganites did
was to slow the rate of increase in spending for these programs.
"The slow but steady growth of low-income housing subsidies under
Presidents Reagan and Bush was one of the few liberal success
stories in a generally conservative era," Jencks writes. "Federal
outlays for low-income housing rose faster than outlays for either
social security or defense."
It is only in the last chapter of The Homeless that Jencks, having shown the fallaciousness of most of the arguments put forth by homeless advocates, joins his liberal colleagues in calling for more tax dollars to end homelessness. He suggests that perhaps as much as $18 billion each year might be necessary to ensure that the homeless have shelters and jobs.
Consider the most common types of homeless people: single mothers and their children, and childless adult males. Workfare is not an effective solution for single mothers, Jencks argues, because unless a job pays at least $7.00 an hour, a single parent won't be able to afford day care, transportation, or work clothes. So he feels the government has to subsidize rents, day-care fees, food purchases, and health insurance for these mothers until they are able to establish themselves in the work force.
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