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US census report shows falling earnings, rise in uninsured
By Jerry White
30 August 2007
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New census data released this week shows that American workers
continued to see an erosion of their living standards in 2006,
even as the US economy entered its the fifth year of job growth
following the recession of 2001.
The new census report, Income,
Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States,
gives a glimpse of the economic suffering felt by tens of millions
of working people in the US. The data does not take into account
the slowdown and national housing slump that began this year.
According to the report, real median earnings for both men
and women who work full-time, year-round jobs declined by 1.1
and 1.2 percent, respectively. This was the third year in a row
that earnings for full-time workers failed to keep up with the
rate of inflation. According to the Economic Policy Institute,
mens earnings have fallen an average of 0.5 percent annually
from 2000 to 2006, while those of women rose only 0.2 percent
annuallyand have actually fallen steadily since 2004.
The rise in the number of uninsured peoplewhich many
economists believe the census report underestimatesis particularly
staggering. The number of people without health insurance rose
from 44.8 million (15.3 percent of the population) in 2005 to
47 million (15.8 percent) in 2006, mainly due to job losses and
cutbacks in employer-paid medical benefits.
The percentage of people with employer-paid benefits declined
to 59.7 percent in 2006, down from 60.2 in 2005. The percentage
of people receiving government-funded health insurance also dropped
0.3 percent points, to 27 percent. With employers cutting back
health benefits, many families are being forced to drop their
coverage rather than pay higher out-of-pocket expenses.
This has hit children particularly hard. The number of uninsured
children increased from 8 million (10.9 percent) in 2005 to 8.7
million (11.7 percent) in 2006, according to the census data.
The poorest children are most likely to be uninsured. Nearly one
in five children who grew up in an impoverished family had no
healthcare coverage in 2006.
Between 1999 and 2004, the percentage of uninsured children
had actually fallen because of the minimal expansion of Medicaid
and the State Childrens Health Insurance Program, or S-CHIP,
which provides coverage mainly to children living near the poverty
level.
However, over the last two years, the Boston Globe reported
in an article published on Wednesday, those two safety net
programs could not keep up with the steady national decline of
private, employer-provided healthcare plans. In 2000, nearly 66
percent of children nationwide were covered by those programs,
compared with fewer than 60 percent last year, according to census
figures.
Significantly, President Bush has promised to veto any expansion
of the S-CHIP program, saying that the federal government should
not undermine private insurers by paying for medical coverage
for those with middle class incomes.
The national poverty rate in 2006 fell for the first time in
a decade, but the number of people in poverty36.5 millionremained
statistically unchanged, according to the Census Bureau. The real
number of Americans living in poverty is much higher due to the
fact that the US government sets its federal poverty line at the
artificially low level of $20,614 for a family of four.
The West was the only region to see a drop in the number of
impoverished. The South continues to have the highest poverty
rate (13.8 percent) and the lowest median household income. Big
cities with low median incomes included Cleveland, Miami and Detroit,
while smaller ones included Youngstown, Ohio, which has been decimated
by the shutdown of the steel industry in the 1970s and 1980s,
and Syracuse, New York.
Hispanics were the only ethnic group to show a statistically
significant decline in povertyfalling to 20.6 percent from
21.8 percent. The percentage of impoverished whites (8.2 percent),
blacks (24 percent) and Asians (10.3 percent) remained unchanged.
Median real household income rose by only 0.7 percent from
$47,845 in 2005 to $48,201 in 2006, a figure that is nearly 4
percent lower than the peak level achieved in 1999 before the
last recession. The rise, economists say, is chiefly due to the
increased number of family members entering the workforce and
workers laboring for longer hours, although they are working for
lower wages.
Predictably, President Bush pointed to the negligible rise
in household income and drop in the poverty rate as a vindication
of his tax cuts for the wealthy and other incentives for big business.
When we keep taxes low, spending in check, and our economy
openconditions that empower businesses to create new jobsall
Americans benefit, Bush stated. Census Bureau data
released today confirms that more of our citizens are doing better
in this economy, with continued rising incomes and more Americans
pulling themselves out of poverty.
For their part, leading Democrats pointed to the census figures
to promote their claims to be defending working people. Presidential
candidate Senator Hillary Clinton of New York said, When
I began the fight for universal coverage almost 15 years ago,
there were 37 million people uninsured. It was an outrage then
and with 10 million more people uninsured today, it is an even
deeper outrage today. Yet, the uninsured have been invisible to
this president.
In fact, the Democrats are just as guilty as the Republicans
for this outrage. Clinton, who unceremoniously dropped her campaign
for a minimal reform of the healthcare system in 1994,
is now a major recipient of campaign funding from the
insurance, hospital and drug companies. For all their talk of
universal healthcare coverage, none of the leading
Democratic candidates is willing to support any measure that threatens
the profits of big business.
The Democrats have played a central role in the regressive
policies that have driven up social inequality to levels not seen
in generations. They have also rejected any overturn of Bushs
tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy.
The census data indicated the impact of these bipartisan policies
on ordinary working people. More than half of all household income
was concentrated in the top 20 percent of Americans in 2006the
highest share since 1967. The middle-income share was 14.5 percent,
the lowest on record, while the bottom 20 percent of the population
had only 3.4 percent of the nations household income, also
an historic low.
See Also:
Recent tax data shows widening gap between
rich and poor in US
[27 August 2007]
US: CEO pay climbs to stratospheric
heights
[11 June 2007]
Top hedge-fund managers average
$550 million in income
[27 April 2007]
2005 US income figures: top
10 percent had largest share of national wealth since 1928
[30 March 2007]
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