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US poverty rose sharply in 2001
By Kate Randall
27 September 2002
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The proportion of Americans living in poverty rose sharply
in 2001, according to a report issued by the US Census Bureau
on September 24. In percentage terms, the poverty rate increased
to 11.7 percent from 11.3 percent in 2000, the first such yearly
rise in eight years. The number of poor Americans swelled to 32.9
million, a rise of 1.3 million.
Income inequality also grew. The wealthiest fifth of the population
took in half of all household income last year, a 5 percent rise
over 1985. The poorest fifth received only 3.5 percent of total
household income, down 4 percent from 1985.
There were 6.8 million poor families last year, an increase
of more than 6 percent over the 6.4 million in 2000. The Census
Bureau classified a family of four as poor if its cash income
was less than $18,104. The poverty threshold for a family of three
was $14,128; for a married couple, $11,569; and for an individual,
$9,039.
The number of severely poorthose with family
incomes less than half the official poverty levelalso shot
up, increasing by almost 6 percent to 13.4 million from 12.6 million
in 2000.
While poverty has risen, the very rich have continued to add
to their fortunes. The income of one of the nations richest
individuals illustrates the obscene levels of wealth that have
been concentrated in the hands of a tiny minority at the top of
American society. Jack Welch, former chairman and CEO of General
Electric Corporation, was given a retirement package that included
a $9 million annual pension. In addition to various
perksincluding sports and opera box seats, country club
memberships and a luxury apartment in ManhattanWelchs
deal guaranteed him $17,307 per day for consultingmore
than a family of three at the poverty level can expect to earn
in an entire year!
The Census report drastically underestimates the real scale
of poverty in the US, because the official poverty thresholds
are absurdly low. A more realistic cut-off point would be close
to double the official figures, in the area of $30,000 for a family
of four. A more accurate estimate of the US poverty rate is 30
percent.
One of the main reasons for the low official threshold is the
fact that eligibility for social benefits such as food stamps,
Medicaid, and rent and heating subsidies is pegged to the governments
poverty criteria. Excluding millions of poor people from the official
poverty rolls enables the government to continue its policy of
slashing social welfare expenditures.
Included in Americas 32.9 million poor were 11.7 children
under the age of 18. According to the Census Bureau, 16.3 percent
of children in 2001 were poor, a rate virtually unchanged since
2000. Again, the actual child poverty rate is much higher. But
even if one accepts the Census Bureaus standards, a 16.3
percent rate means that more than one-sixth of US children live
in poverty.
A major contributing factor to child poverty is the number
of poor families headed by a single female. In 2001 there were
close to 3.5 million such families, up by about 1 percent from
2000. Many of these women have been forced off welfare and into
poverty-wage jobs.
Median household income fell to $42,228 in 2001, a drop of
$934, or 2.2 percent, from the previous year.
The most significant increase in poverty was among non-Hispanic
whites, where the rate rose to 7.8 percent from 7.4 percent in
2000.
Median household income for blacks fell last year by $1,025,
or 3.4 percent, to $29,470, while median income for Hispanics
remained steady, at $33,565. The median income of $53,635 for
Asian Americans represented a drop of 6.4 percent.
Areas showing the largest increases in poverty included the
suburbs and the countrys South. The number of poor people
in suburban areas rose to 12 million, up by 700,000 from the year
before. The Souths poverty rate rose to 13.5 percent, from
12.8 percent in 2000, and accounted for more than 50 percent of
the national increase in the number of poor.
Income declined in every region of the country except the Northeast,
where it remained flat. The Midwest showed the biggest decline,
3.7 percent, reflecting the impact of downsizing and layoffs in
the manufacturing sector.
The Census Bureau report was the first to reflect the impact
on household income of last years surge in layoffs and corporate
downsizing, which began in hi-tech and telecommunications and
spread to virtually every sector of the economy. It is an indication
of the depth of the current economic downturn, which began in
March 2001.
Last year, US corporations eliminated nearly 2 million jobs
(1,956,876, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray &
Christmas), 1.3 million more than in 2001. Those sectors carrying
out the most severe job-cutting included:
* Telecommunications, 327,777
* Computer industry, 168,395
* Industrial goods, 153,952
* Electronics, 153,432
* Automotive, 133,686
* Transportation, 133,017
Many of these discarded workers are still unemployed, or have
been forced into lower-paying, temporary or part-time jobs. For
those unable to find new work, the ability to collect unemployment
insurance (UI) benefits has been sharply curtailed. Whereas in
the 1950s more than half of workers qualified for UI benefits,
only one in three qualifies today.
One measure of the impact of last years jobs cuts on
poverty is the fact that the increase in the number of poor in
America1.3 millionwas equal to the increase in job
cuts from 2000 to 2001.
The figures on poverty show that whatever economic benefits
trickled down to the majority of working families during the stock
market boom of the 1990s, any increases in their living standards
were nominal and only temporary. Rather, this boombased
on speculation, inflation of stock values and rampant corporate
corruption and fraudoverwhelmingly benefited the wealthiest
layers of society. It did nothing in any fundamental or permanent
way to alter the general trajectory of declining living standards
for working peoplewhich have been under continuous attack
for more than two decades.
With the bursting of the stock market bubble, the price for
the orgy of speculation and corporate plundering is to be paid
by the broad masses of working families and the poorin the
form of unemployment, loss of income and poverty.
The Census Bureaus poverty report provides only a glimpse
of the rising levels of social distress among broad layers in
America, under conditions where no section of the political establishmentDemocrats
and Republicans alikeaddresses the crisis facing working
families. While the Bush administration and the Republican Party
advocate more tax cuts and other windfalls for the rich, the Democrats
offer at most token measures that do not begin to confront what
is a deep-going and worsening social crisis.
See Also:
US welfare reform
forces more children to separate from their parents
[14 August 2002]
Millions of poor US families
face utility shutoffs
We live in America ...but its like a Third World
country
[12 July 2002]
US welfare bill attacks the
poor
[13 June 2002]
Two decades of rising inequality
Recession intensifies social polarization in the US
[8 June 2002]
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