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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
A million more Americans living in poverty
By Naomi Spencer
1 September 2005
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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 Administrations 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.
Moreover, EPI notes, The real income of the typical household
has fallen five years in a row, despite the fact that the last
three of those years2002, 2003, and 2004have been
years of economic expansion. Over these years, our workforce has
become a great deal more productive, as output per hour is up
15 percent from 2000 to 2004.
The jobless recovery of the US economy has been
primarily a recovery of the US stock market, the realization of
unprecedented corporate profits and obscene executive salaries.
None of this represents a true economic rebound for average Americans.
In fact, the opposite is the case, as is indicated by an understated
unemployment rate that stubbornly exceeds 5 percent even while
leaving the long-term unemployed out of the equation.
Along with unemployment, underemployment and the
rarity of good paying jobs, the continual wage decline of full-time,
year-round workers and drop in relative value of the $5.15 minimum
wage are also indicative of worsening conditions for many Americans
in the midst of a supposed recovery. The Census Bureau reported
that median earnings for women again dropped in 2003-04 by one
percent, to $31,550. Median earnings for men declined by 2.3 percent,
to $40,798. For men, adjusted earnings are less than the median
income in 1973.
As wages decline relative to the cost of living, workers formerly
considered part of the middle class fall into lower-income financial
predicaments, including debt, loss of health coverage, and lack
of savings. Meanwhile, wealth continues to be funneled upward
through income accrued in stock options, bonuses, and through
regressive tax legislation coupled with cuts to public assistance
programs.
See Also:
More US children in poverty
and poor health
[13 August 2005]
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