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A million more Americans living in poverty

by wsws (reposted)
US poverty increased as real wages stagnated and more Americans lost health insurance between 2003 and 2004, according to Census data released August 30. The latest estimates are based on information collected in 2005, combined with a slightly older annual supplement to the federal Current Population Survey.
For the fourth consecutive year, the poverty rate has risen. In 2000 31.6 million people, 11.3 percent of the population, lived at or below the federal poverty threshold. Last year 37 million Americans, 12.7 percent, fell into this category. This is an average increase of well over a million people a year.

Official criteria defining poverty are artificially low. The poverty threshold was developed in 1963-64 and adopted as part of the Johnson Administration’s War on Poverty campaign. Families at that time were estimated to spend a third of their income on food; therefore the government set the poverty threshold at three times the Department of Agriculture estimate of the cost of a nutritionally adequate diet. It was originally intended to assess economic risks and lack of opportunity, not serve as a guide for acceptable minimum income limits for families. Today, the poverty line still does not factor in the skyrocketing costs of transportation, child care, rent, or many other expenses in the life of a working-class family.

The 2005 federal poverty threshold for a family of four is set at $19,350, a subsistence level. This averages out to a full-time hourly wage of $9.30 an hour. For a single parent with two children, the limit is $16,090 a year, or about $7.75 an hour. A person living on his or her own is considered in poverty only if they earn less than $9,570 a year, which averages out to $4.60 an hour. These are grossly inadequate wages in all areas of the country, but particularly in cities where the cost of living requires substantially more than the federally determined minimum for even the barest necessities.

Last year, according to the Census data, 45.8 million people had no form of medical coverage, nearly 16 percent of the population. In addition to this extremely vulnerable segment of US society, another 79 million Americans, 27.2 percent, depend on government-funded programs, including Medicaid and Medicare, for health insurance.

Census figures indicate that in 2003, those who were unemployed or under-employed applied to government programs in greater numbers than full-time workers, many of whom lost private company coverage and tended to do without. Many workers are not immediately aware that they qualify for public assistance programs and so go for several months between coverage plans. The growth of both the uninsured and government-insured groups during the past several years is the result in part of corporate downsizing through elimination of jobs and revocation of health insurance plans and pensions.

Adjusting for annual inflation of 2.7 percent, median household income stood unchanged at $44,389 in 2004. Households in the Midwest region saw a 2.8 percent decline. In real terms, the median income has not changed since 2002, and is still low in comparison to 2000, before the recession and official economic recovery periods.

On August 31, the Economic Policy Institute pointed out that the 1.2 percent average decline in median incomes represented a poor labor market. “Since 2000, the median household income of non-elderly households is down $2,572 (or 4.8 percent) compared to $1,669 (or 3.6 percent) for all households.”

Read More
http://wsws.org/articles/2005/sep2005/cens-so1.shtml
§1.1 Million Americans Join Poverty Ranks
by Beyond Chron (reposted)
Lost amidst hurricane coverage and relegated to page 2 in today's Chornicle is a Census Bureau report on the significant rise in America’s poverty rate over the past year. Jumping from 12.5 percent to 12.7 percent, the rise brought the number of poor people in the country to its highest level since 1994. Many news outlets, however, failed to note the stark juxtaposition of billions being spent on the war in Iraq as countless U.S. residents find it increasingly difficult to secure themselves and their families the basic necessities of life, including adequate food, shelter and medical care.

The Census Bureau revealed the rise in a report released early Tuesday morning, detailing a variety of statistics about income levels among Americans. Nearly all showed a decline in economic standing residents, including a decrease in the median household income, bringing it to a level that hasn’t been as low since 1997.

In addition, a minor increase in the number of people without health insurance occurred, from 15.6 percent to 15.7 percent. More than 45 million of America’s 290 million residents currently lack health insurance, while 37 million live in poverty.

The U.S. now stands as the nation with the highest level of poverty of any industrialized nation, capping years of growing hostility towards providing welfare, health care, and housing to the country’s most vulnerable citizens.

Whether the current administration will respond to the report remains to be seen, but the chances are slim. The steady rise in the poverty rate – this will be the fourth year in a row it has grown – coincides almost perfectly with George W. Bush replacing Bill Clinton.

More importantly, it serves as yet another reason for asking Bush to justify the enormous expense of fighting the war in Iraq. The billions upon billions being sunk into a battle fought for dubious reasons could be spent on any number of ways to reduce poverty at home. Increases in national health care, job programs for inner-city youth, and food subsidies for low-income families represent just a few.

As the war appears to be dragging on with no end in sight, and that ‘end’ possibly bringing about a situation in Iraq not significantly better than before the occupation began, Bush should be increasingly facing pressure to explain the benefit of the war to the populace.

Cindy Sheehan’s emotional request for justification after the death of her son serves as a perfect example of how everyday citizens can show Bush’s lack of moral sense. The loss of hundreds of lives for a dubious goal has struck a chord with many Americans, and could serve as a catalyst for more conservatives and centrists to oppose the war.

Hopefully, yesterday’s report will increase the pressure for Bush to provide economic justification as well. Americans should consider the fact that the globe’s wealthiest and most powerful nation allows more than one million of its residents to live in poverty shameful, and demand their leaders do whatever it takes to reverse the poor’s swelling numbers.
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wsws (reposted)
Thu, Sep 1, 2005 10:58PM
Roland
Thu, Sep 1, 2005 8:07AM
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