BREYER, Circuit Judge.
This case concerns the constitutionality of a Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
regulation that governs payments made to certain SSI recipients who rent living accommodations. The regulation provides that the Secretary will consider significant differences between the fair market value of the accommodation and a lower rental payment to be part of the SSI recipient’s “income.” The Secretary, in appropriate cases, will reduce the SSI payment accordingly. 20 C.F.R. § 416.1125(d) (1980). The district court found, 506 F.Supp. 1230, that this regulation violated the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the federal constitution.
We disagree and reverse the judgment of the district court.
I.
SSI pays benefits to those blind, aged, or disabled applicants whose income and resources fall below certain specified levels. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1382, 1382a, 1382b. Essentially, the Secretary computes an SSI payment by deducting the claimant’s income (as defined by statute and regulation)
from the SSI “standard payment.” The difference between the two amounts is the level of benefits that the claimant will receive. Congress has provided that for purposes of making this calculation “income” is to include “both earned and unearned income, and . . . unearned income means all other income, including .. . support and maintenance furnished in cash or in kind. . .. ” 42 U.S.C. § 1382a(a)(2)(A).
The Secretary, pursuant to his general rulemaking authority,
has promulgated nu
merous regulations that define and describe the treatment accorded “income ... in kind.” Thus, income includes “the receipt by any individual of any property or service which he can apply either directly or by sale or conversion to meeting his basic needs for food, clothing, and shelter.” 20 C.F.R. § 416.1102. Moreover, “support and maintenance in kind encompasses food, clothing, and shelter or any portion of any . . . such items.” 20 C.F.R. § 416.1125(a). Further, “the value of in-kind support and maintenance refers to its current market value.... ”
Id.
The regulations go on to define precisely how food or shelter received “in kind” is to be valued in a variety of situations. These situations include the case of a claimant who lives with his children or other family and receives food or housing. 20 C.F.R. § 416.1125(d)(1). They also include the circumstance at issue here — the receipt of assistance in the form of a reduced rental.
In the “reduced-rental” situation an SSI claimant typically lives in a house or apartment owned by a friend or relation and pays a rent below current market value. The relevant regulation treats this claimant by and large like a claimant who lives with his children.
It provides that when “an individual .. . lives in his own household, including a commercial establishment, and receives support and maintenance in kind . . .,” the “maximum value of such support and maintenance is presumed to be [an amount equal roughly to slightly more than one-third of the standard SSI payment, but the presumption may be] . . . rebutted by the individual’s establishing that the current market value of such support and maintenance, less any payment he makes therefor, is lower than the presumed value____” 20 C.F.R. § 461.1125(d).
Under this regulation, the Secretary will count the difference between the fair market value of the accommodation and the amount the claimant pays for it as “in-kind” income. The Secretary will value this “income” as equal to no more than about one-third of the standard SSI payment; and the Secretary will value this “income” at a lesser amount if the claimant can show that it is worth less.
Plaintiffs receive, or have received, SSI benefits. They live in apartments owned
by their children. They pay rent in amounts significantly less than fair market value.
In each case, the Secretary has reduced or terminated the plaintiffs’ benefits in accordance with § 461.1125(d). Plaintiffs sued in the federal district court challenging these reductions. Passing upon cross-motions for summary judgment, the court found (1) that the regulation at issue is authorized by statute, but (2) that it unconstitutionally discriminates between those in plaintiffs’ circumstances and others who either have formal leases or who live in federally subsidized housing. The Secretary has appealed. After considering the arguments of both the Secretary and the plaintiffs-appellees, we agree with the district court’s holding on the first of these questions but disagree with its holding on the second.
II
We begin with plaintiffs’ claim that the Secretary is not authorized by Congress to consider a “reduced rental” as income received in kind. The argument is difficult to reconcile with the plain language of the statute, which instructs the Secretary to include as “unearned” income
“all
other income” and specifically refers to “support and maintenance furnished ... in kind.” Plaintiffs, however, seek to circumvent this language as follows.
First, they point to a longstanding welfare policy that “only such net income as is
actually available
for current use on a regular basis” will be counted in determining a welfare claimant’s “income.”
See
45 C.F.R. § 233.20(a)(iii)(C).
They state that it was Congress’ intent that this policy be re-
fleeted in the statute and they argue that the income at issue here is not “actually available” because it cannot “readily be converted into cash.”
Plaintiffs’ argument is unsound, however, for income in kind can be “actually available” to a person without being convertible into cash. When one receives food, or clothing, or shelter, one receives an actual benefit whether or not there is a market in which one might sell that benefit. Indeed, in the very statute at issue, Congress referred to one form of “in-kind” income — the provision of shelter in the home of a relative — that is ordinarily
not
convertible into cash. 42 U.S.C. § 1382a(a)(2)(A). The Secretary has embodied the ordinary English meaning of the term “actually available” when he defines “income” as the receipt of “any property or services” which the recipient can “apply
either directly or
by sale or conversion” to meet “basic need for food, clothing, and shelter.” 20 C.F.R. § 416.-1102. (Emphasis added.) In this case, plaintiffs received the income “directly.”
None of the cases that plaintiffs cite suggests the contrary. Those cases involve, for example, (1) the question of whether the income of a “man in the house” without legal obligation to support a child shall be counted as part of the income of a child who does
not
receive it,
(2) the question of whether income for a welfare family shall be calculated by averaging
past
income despite the fact that their present income may well be lower,
and (3) the question of whether mortgaged assets shall be valued at
gross
market value without considering that the value of the equity in the assets
was far lower.
In all of these cases the courts rejected rules or practices that would have counted as income or assets benefits or funds that a welfare claimant did
not
receive. On the other hand, when courts have considered the type of income at issue here, they have held that it is “actually available” to the SSI claimant because the claimant did receive an actual economic benefit.
Kimmes v. Harris,
647 F.2d 1028 (10th Cir. 1981),
rev’g Kimmes v. Califano,
472 F.Supp. 474 (D.Colo.1979);
Antonioli v. Harris,
624 F.2d 78 (9th Cir. 1980);
Styles v. Harris,
503 F.Supp. 125 (D.Md.1980); and
Wynn v. Harris,
494 F.Supp. 878 (W.D.Tenn.1980).
We note that this is not a ease in which the Secretary has been hypertechnical or stingy in his application of the regulation. He has not imputed benefits to the plaintiffs on the basis of fluctuating market values or the debatable opinions of expert real estate appraisers. Four of the five plaintiffs have stipulated that the assessed values are correct, and each of the “fair market values,” as determined by the Secretary, suggests to us that plaintiffs are receiving real and tangible benefits.
Plaintiffs’ second argument is that Congress, by referring to some types of “in-kind” income in the statute, meant to exclude others from consideration. In the statutory provision here at issue Congress, after stating that support and maintenance furnished in cash or kind would be included in income, wrote:
“except that in the case of any individual
.. .
living in another person’s household
and receiving support and maintenance in kind ... the dollar amounts otherwise applicable ... shall be reduced by 33V3 percent. .. . ” 42 U.S.C. § 1382a(a)(2)(A). (Emphasis added.) The language quoted, however, does not purport to define all “in-kind” income. To the contrary, by using the words “except in the case of,” the statute specifically suggests an awareness that other types of “in-kind” income exist. Moreover, subsequent Congresses have confirmed this understanding. In 1974, even before the regulation here at issue was promulgated, a House Conference Report on an amendment to the SSI statute stated:
Under the SSI program for the aged, blind and disabled,
all forms of
income—
including room and board furnished for
less than cost
— are used to reduce the amount of benefits payable.
H.R.Conf.Rep.No.93-1407, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. (1974),
reprinted in
[1974] U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 5992, 5995, 5996. (Emphasis added.) Following the promulgation of the regulations, a further House Report recognized without criticizing the Secretary’s interpretation of the Act to require an imputation of income in the “reduced-rental” situation. H.R.Rep.No.94-1091, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 21 (1976). In response, Congress created a specific exemption from this regulation for those who receive federal housing assistance. Housing Authorization Act of 1976, Pub.L. 94-375 § 2(h), 90 Stat. 1067, 1068 (1976). Yet in that same year § 1382a(a)(2)(A) itself was twice amended and the Secretary’s interpretation of countable income was left undisturbed. Pub.L. 94 — 331, § 4(a), 90 Stat. 781 (June 30, 1976); Pub.L. 94-455, Title XXI, § 2125, 90 Stat. 1920 (October 4, 1976). Finally, in 1977 a Senate Report referred without criticism to the administrative practice, under the statute, of counting shelter received for less than fair market value as unearned income. “The Supplemental Security Income Program,” Report of the Staff to the Senate Committee on Finance, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 72-75 (1977).
Even if the statute were less clear, the fact that this consistent administrative interpretation has been specifically and repeatedly recognized without criticism by Congresses that have amended and revised the Act in other ways provides evidence that the Secretary’s interpretation is correct.
NLRB v. Bell Aerospace Co.,
416 U.S. 267, 274-75, 94 S.Ct. 1757, 1761-1762, 40 L.Ed.2d 134 (1974). Thus, we join the other courts which have considered this issue and hold that the regulation is authorized by statute.
Ill
Plaintiffs argue that, if validly promulgated, the regulation (and the statute insofar as it authorizes the regulation) is unconstitutional. The Supreme Court has held that, in reviewing this type of challenge, we are to keep in mind that
the equal protection obligation imposed by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment is not an obligation to provide the best government possible.... Unless a statute employs a classification that is inherently invidious or that impinges on fundamental rights, areas in which the judiciary has a duty to intervene in the democratic process, this Court properly exercises only a limited review power over Congress, the appropriate representative body through which the public makes democratic choices among alternative solutions to social and economic problems. ... At the minimum level, this Court consistently has required that legislation classify the persons it affects in a manner rationally related to legitimate governmental objectives.
Schweiker v. Wilson,
450 U.S. 221, 230, 101 S.Ct. 1074, 1080, 67 L.Ed.2d 186 (1981).
We have examined plaintiffs’ claim that this regulation arbitrarily discriminates between them and certain other groups. We reject that claim, for we believe that any difference in treatment is rationally related to reasonable and identifiable governmental objectives.
At the outset, it is important to understand that the rule applicable to those who receive reduced-rental benefits, is not, in any sense relevant here, “special.” To the contrary, the rule applied to plaintiffs is one variation of a general policy that treats in a somewhat similar way all who receive benefits in the form of food, shelter, or clothing. Although there are some variations, the regulations set forth a basically similar approach to those who receive some part of, and those who receive all of, their food, clothing, or shelter from family, from friends, or from others.
In most of these instances, the regulations assume that the value of the items received is no greater than approximately one-third of the basic SSI allowance (plus an unearned income exclusion). This figure, known as the “presumed maximum value” (PMV) is presently about $83 per month. In other words, no more than $83 per month will be deducted from the SSI claimant’s check whether his son provides him with a palace or a hovel. If the recipient has been given a hovel, however, he has the opportunity to show that it is worth less than the PMV, in which case his deduction will be reduced to the actual value.
It is important to understand this system, because the PMV, together with a low level of benefits and the varying degrees of generosity among recipients’ children, is responsible for many of the discrepancies to which plaintiffs point. Take, for example, the case of a woman who lives on her own and receives the maximum SSI payment of about $189 per month. If her children send her food and pay her rent she will have about $80 deducted from her payment and is left with about $110 per month for other items. If her son only pays for her apartment, she will receive that same $110 which must then be used to cover food as well. If her son owns an extra apartment worth, say, $200 per month, which he rents to her at $100 per month, she will be left with that same $110, which she now must use to cover not only food but also the $100 rental payments. All these differences and discrepancies flow, not from different treatment by the regulations, but rather from differences in the level of the children’s generosity. And, once a PMV generosity level (of about $83 per month) is reached, the regulations do not take further generosity differences into account.
Thus, a son, for example, might invite his father to live rent-free in a separate house owned by the son, see
Boone v. Califano,
459 F.Supp. 636 (E.D.Va.1978), to live rent-free in a separate house owned by the son provided that the father pay for taxes and maintenance, see
Antonioli v. Harris, supra,
to live rent-free in a trailer owned by the son if the father will pay for upkeep, see
Kimmes
v.
Harris, supra,
to live in an apartment owned by the son if the father will pay reduced rental, see
Styles v. Harris, supra,
or to live in the son’s own household and receive either shelter or food. 20 C.F.R. § 416.1125(c)(1), (d)(1). In each case, the Secretary does the same thing: in effect he reduces the claimant’s SSI benefits by an amount equal to the value of the benefit that he receives in in-kind income, but never by more than the PMV. Given the statute, this is not a harsh policy as administered. It basically encourages SSI claimants’ children to make contributions of food and shelter by not counting those contributions once they exceed the PMV. Thus, given the need for fairly simple, administrable rules, a tendency for the regulations to err on the side of generosity, and a specific Congressional mandate to treat
“support and maintenance received in kind” as income including, but not limited to, support of persons who live in their children’s homes, 42 U.S.C. § 1382a(a)(2)(A), the types of benefit differences referred to would not support an equal protection violation.
The district court’s finding of unconstitutionality, however, did not rest upon benefit anomalies, but rather upon two specific instances of differential treatment created when the regulation is applied in practice. The district court found the first instance of differential treatment to be the result of the practice of imputing “reduced-rental” income to claimants only when they do not have a formal lease. It was argued to the district court, and the district court was persuaded, that if the claimants here had simply entered into a formal lease arrangement with their children, the Secretary would have
presumed
that they were paying fair market value for their living accommodations. The district court found no basis for distinguishing in this way between those who do, and those who do not, have formal leases with their children.
To penalize plaintiffs simply because they do not have a written lease document memorializing their low rent would certainly raise a suspicion of arbitrary agency action. Yet, in our view, the district court’s finding that such a distinction exists was a result of confusion as to the operation of the regulations below. During discovery, the Secretary answered an interrogatory about his practices by stating, “where the residence is rented under a formal lease arrangement (commercial), the amount of rent established in the lease equals the current market value (C.M. 12355(h)(2)).” The plaintiffs and the district court evidently took this answer as a statement that the Secretary . would not look behind any written lease to actual value.
The word “commercial” and the reference to the Claims Manual procedure, “(C.M. 12355(h)(2)),” however, make it clear that the amount of rent specified in a lease is accepted as the current market value only when the rental property is “commercial,” i.e., the lease was the result of arms-length bargaining. The existence of a lease by itself proves nothing, but is merely one factor which the Secretary uses to determine whether a property is indeed commercial. In his appellate briefs the Secretary clearly outlined the proper procedure and at oral argument counsel for the Secretary stated unequivocally that it is not and was not the Secretary’s policy to make the existence of a lease dispositive as to the existence of reduced-rental income. Plaintiffs could point to nothing in the record (other than the ambiguous interrogatory) tending to show the contrary. Since we have been assured that the district court’s view of the Secretary’s policy is incorrect and since the record supports and does not contradict the Secretary’s asserted policy, we find no instance of differential treatment in this regard and hence no violation of the Constitution.
The second instance of differential treatment that underlay the district court’s decision is the discrepancy created by a 1976 amendment to the United States Housing Act, which provides low-income assistance known as “Section 8 housing.” Congress noted in 1976 that the “income in kind” SSI provisions made Section 8 housing less attractive to SSI recipients. Congress passed an amendment that created a specific exemption from the “income in kind” calculation for those having federal housing assistance. It provided,
Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, the value of any assistance paid with respect to a dwelling unit . . . [under this program] may not be considered as income . . . for the purpose of determining ... the amount of the benefits payable to ... [an SSI recipient].
Housing Authorization Act of 1976, Pub.L. 94-375 § 2(h), 90 Stat. 1067, 1068 (1976). The House Report on the amendment explained that the Social Security Act required a reduction in the SSI payment to reflect the value of the shelter received under the government program.
This means that an SSI recipient residing in Section 8 housing will suffer a reduc
tion in SSI payments of one-third and then be charged a rental fee of not more than 25% of his remaining income. No other group of low-income persons, on or off public assistance rolls, suffer this extreme cost for accepting Federal Housing assistance. Although SSI recipients are among the lowest of income levels and in greatest of need, they are effectively denied use of the Section 8 program because of this regulation. All others receiving Section 8 assistance pay rents not to exceed 25% of income.
H.R.Rep.No.94-1091,94th Cong., 2d Sess. 21 (1976). Plaintiffs would now have us hold that this amendment, when taken together with the SSI “income in kind” provisions, creates an unconstitutional discrimination.
The answer to plaintiffs’ claim is that the difference in treatment at issue here reflects a rational effort by Congress to achieve a legitimate legislative objective. As the House Report explicitly states, Congress feared that the “income in kind” provisions discouraged SSI recipients from taking advantage of Section 8 housing. Moreover, it felt that those provisions were unfair as between those Section 8 housing recipients who did receive SSI assistance and those Section 8 housing recipients who did not receive SSI assistance. Congress-passed the exemption in order to make Section 8 housing more attractive to SSI recipients and to produce greater fairness as among all Section 8 housing recipients. We cannot say that this legislative judgment was unreasonable.
Of course, when viewed from the-perspective of all SSI recipients, rather than from that of all Section 8 housing recipients, those who benefit from
both
programs appear to have a special advantage. But it was not irrational, given the Section 8 housing objectives, to create that advantage. As the Supreme Court stated in
Jefferson v. Hackney,
406 U.S. 535, 546-47, 92 S.Ct. 1724, 1731, 32 L.Ed.2d 285 (1972):
A legislature may address a problem ‘one step at a time,’ or even ‘select one phase of a field and apply a remedy there, neglecting the other,’
Williamson
v. Lee
Optical Co.,
348 U.S. 483, 489 [75 S.Ct. 461, 465, 99 L.Ed. 563] (1955). So long as its judgments are rational and not invidious, the legislature’s efforts to tackle the problems of the poor and the needy are not subject to a constitutional straightjacket. The very complexity of the problems suggest that there will be more than one constitutionally permissible method of solving them.
More importantly, there is no requirement that all, or several, government programs, when viewed as a totality, must operate so as to create a completely fair or rational distribution of their total package of benefits among all who arguably suffer from equivalent need. Given the vast number of different government programs, with varying definitions of need and page after page of accompanying, program-specific rules and regulations, any “rational total net result" requirement would interfere with congressional efforts to distribute limited resources to those whom it judges to be particularly in need. If Congress cannot constitutionally offer intended beneficiaries of Program A any special advantage unless it also offers it to those who are outside Program A, it might simply choose not to offer the special benefit — a result that would work to no one’s advantage.
Consider, for example, the present case. Plaintiffs are arguing for inter-program equality of benefits on the ground that SSI recipients within a Section 8 housing program and those outside Section 8 have equivalent needs. If we accepted plaintiffs’ view, Congress could enact an “in-kind” income exemption for “Section 8/SSI” recipients, only if it extended the exemption to all SSI recipients. But, if Congress had been forced to include all SSI recipients in any “in-kind” income exemption for a few, it might well have decided to grant no one an exemption.
As a result, Congress
would not only act less generously, but it would also be unable to deal with the unfairness that it perceived when it compared “Section 8/SSI” recipients with other
Section 8 housing
recipients. We find nothing in the Constitution that requires placing Congress in any such straightjacket.
In sum, we believe that where two different Congressional programs are at issue and where there is no question of “suspect” categories or interference with fundamental rights, Congress enjoys wide discretion to offer special benefits to some without offering them to all. We believe that it is rational for Congress to have offered such a special benefit to SSI recipients who also receive federal housing assistance. Thus, we find no violation of constitutionally protected “equal protection” rights.
Reversed.