Welfare Recipients’ Quality of Life: Lessons from the United Nations’ Human Development Index for the US Welfare Policy
Monica Maria Alzate, 2006
Abstract
This article is part of a study on single mothers who were welfare recipients in Georgia, US (n_/53,323) in the year 2000 which used the Human Development Index (HDI) to
measure their quality of life (QOL) and that of the overall Georgia population by race. The United Nations created the HDI in 1990 to compare QOL across nations, but the HDI has also proved to be suitable for sub-populations within countries. Based on the QOL study in Georgia, the first one to use the HDI to measure QOL of women on welfare, this article discusses lessons derived from the use of the HDI that can be drawn for the US welfare policy. Specifically, the discussion focuses on: (1) the role of health coverage; (2) the role of infant mortality rate; (3) the role of maternal mortality rate; (4) the mismatch between education and standard of living; and (5) the need for a welfare policy with a human development approach. These issues are also relevant to other welfare nations where their restructuring, especially welfare-to-work policies, have most affected lone mothers.