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How Poor Are America's Poor? Examining the "Plague" of Poverty in America
Heritage Foundation ^ | 8/27/07 | Robert E. Rector

Posted on 09/02/2007 12:24:41 PM PDT by wagglebee

Poverty is an important and emotional issue. Last year, the Census Bureau released its annual report on poverty in the United States declaring that there were 37 million poor persons living in this country in 2005, roughly the same number as in the preceding years.[4] According to the Census report, 12.6 percent of Amer­icans were poor in 2005; this number has varied from 11.3 percent to 15.1 percent of the population over the past 20 years.[5]

To understand poverty in America, it is important to look behind these numbers—to look at the actual living conditions of the individuals the government deems to be poor. For most Americans, the word "poverty" suggests destitution: an inability to provide a family with nutritious food, clothing, and reasonable shelter. But only a small number of the 37 million per­sons classified as "poor" by the Census Bureau fit that description. While real material hardship certainly does occur, it is limited in scope and severity. Most of America's "poor" live in material conditions that would be judged as comfortable or well-off just a few generations ago. Today, the expenditures per person of the lowest-income one-fifth (or quintile) of house­holds equal those of the median American household in the early 1970s, after adjusting for inflation.[6]

The following are facts about persons defined as "poor" by the Census Bureau, taken from various gov­ernment reports:

  • Forty-three percent of all poor households actu­ally own their own homes. The average home owned by persons classified as poor by the Census Bureau is a three-bedroom house with one-and-a-half baths, a garage, and a porch or patio.

  • Eighty percent of poor households have air conditioning. By contrast, in 1970, only 36 percent of the entire U.S. population enjoyed air conditioning.

  • Only 6 percent of poor households are over­crowded. More than two-thirds have more than two rooms per person.

  • The average poor American has more living space than the average individual living in Paris, London, Vienna, Athens, and other cities throughout Europe. (These comparisons are to the average citizens in foreign countries, not to those classified as poor.)

  • Nearly three-quarters of poor households own a car; 31 percent own two or more cars.

  • Ninety-seven percent of poor households have a color television; over half own two or more color televisions.

  • Seventy-eight percent have a VCR or DVD player; 62 percent have cable or satellite TV reception.

  • Eighty-nine percent own microwave ovens, more than half have a stereo, and more than a third have an automatic dishwasher.

As a group, America's poor are far from being chronically undernourished. The average consump­tion of protein, vitamins, and minerals is virtually the same for poor and middle-class children and, in most cases, is well above recommended norms. Poor children actually consume more meat than do higher-income children and have average protein intakes 100 percent above recommended levels. Most poor children today are, in fact, supernour­ished and grow up to be, on average, one inch taller and 10 pounds heavier than the GIs who stormed the beaches of Normandy in World War II.

While the poor are generally well nourished, some poor families do experience temporary food shortages. But even this condition is relatively rare; 89 percent of the poor report their families have "enough" food to eat, while only 2 percent say they "often" do not have enough to eat.

Overall, the typical American defined as poor by the government has a car, air conditioning, a refrig­erator, a stove, a clothes washer and dryer, and a microwave. He has two color televisions, cable or satellite TV reception, a VCR or DVD player, and a stereo. He is able to obtain medical care. His home is in good repair and is not overcrowded. By his own report, his family is not hungry and he had suf­ficient funds in the past year to meet his family's essential needs. While this individual's life is not opulent, it is equally far from the popular images of dire poverty conveyed by the press, liberal activists, and politicians.

Of course, the living conditions of the average poor American should not be taken as representing all the poor. There is actually a wide range in living conditions among the poor. For example, a third of poor households have both cellular and landline telephones. A third also have telephone answering machines. At the other extreme, however, approxi­mately one-tenth have no phone at all. Similarly, while the majority of poor households do not expe­rience significant material problems, roughly 30 percent do experience at least one problem such as overcrowding, temporary hunger, or difficulty get­ting medical care.

The remaining poverty in the U.S. can be reduced further, particularly poverty among chil­dren. There are two main reasons that American children are poor: Their parents don't work much, and fathers are absent from the home.

In good economic times or bad, the typical poor family with children is supported by only 800 hours of work during a year: That amounts to 16 hours of work per week. If work in each family were raised to 2,000 hours per year—the equivalent of one adult working 40 hours per week throughout the year— nearly 75 percent of poor children would be lifted out of official poverty.

Father absence is another major cause of child poverty. Nearly two-thirds of poor children reside in single-parent homes; each year, an additional 1.5 million children are born out of wedlock. If poor mothers married the fathers of their children, almost three-quarters would immediately be lifted out of poverty.

While work and marriage are steady ladders out of poverty, the welfare system perversely remains hostile to both. Major programs such as food stamps, public housing, and Medicaid continue to reward idleness and penalize marriage. If welfare could be turned around to require work and encourage marriage, poverty among children would drop substantially.

However, while renewed welfare reform can help to reduce poverty, under current conditions, such efforts will be partially offset by the poverty-boost­ing impact of the nation's immigration system. Each year, the U.S. imports, through both legal and illegal immigration, hundreds of thousands of additional poor persons from abroad. As a result, one-quarter of all poor persons in the U.S. are now first-genera­tion immigrants or the minor children of those immigrants. Roughly one in ten of the persons counted among the poor by the Census Bureau is either an illegal immigrant or the minor child of an illegal. As long as the present steady flow of poverty-prone persons from foreign countries continues, efforts to reduce the total number of poor in the U.S. will be far more difficult. A sound anti-poverty strategy must seek to increase work and marriage, reduce illegal immigration, and increase the skill level of future legal immigrants.

What Is Poverty?

For most Americans, the word "poverty" sug­gests destitution: an inability to provide a family with nutritious food, clothing, and reasonable shel­ter. For example, the "Poverty Pulse" poll taken by the Catholic Campaign for Human Development in 2005 asked the general public the question: "How would you describe being poor in the U.S.?" The overwhelming majority of responses focused on homelessness, hunger or not being able to eat prop­erly, and not being able to meet basic needs.[7]

But if poverty means lacking nutritious food, adequate warm housing, and clothing for a family, relatively few of the 37 million people identified as being "in poverty" by the Census Bureau could be characterized as poor.[8] While material hardship does exist in the United States, it is quite restricted in scope and severity. The average "poor" person, as defined by the government, has a living standard far higher than the public imagines.

Ownership of Property and Amenities among the Poor

Chart 1 shows the ownership of property and consumer durables among poor households. The data are taken from the American Housing Survey for 2005, conducted by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Census Bureau, the Survey of Income and Program Partici­pation (SIPP) conducted by the Census Bureau, and the Residential Energy Consumption Survey con­ducted by the U.S. Department of Energy.[9]

As the chart shows, some 43 per­cent of poor households own their own home. The typical home owned by the poor is a three-bedroom house with one-and-a-half baths. It has a garage or carport and a porch or patio and is located on a half-acre lot. The house was constructed in 1969 and is in good repair. The median value of homes owned by poor households was $95,276 in 2005 or 70 percent of the median value of all homes owned in the United States.[10]

Some 73 percent of poor house­holds own a car or truck; nearly a third own two or more cars or trucks. Eighty percent have air conditioning; by contrast, in 1970, only 36 percent of the general U.S. population had air conditioning. Nearly nine in ten poor households own microwaves; more than a third have automatic dishwashers.

Poor households are well equipped with modern entertain­ment technology. It should come as no surprise that nearly all (97 per­cent) poor households have color TVs, but more than half actually own two or more color televisions. One-quarter own large-screen televisions, 78 percent have a VCR or DVD player, and almost two-thirds have cable or satellite TV reception. Some 58 percent own a stereo.

More than a third of poor house­holds have telephone answering machines. Roughly a third have both cell phones and conventional landline telephones. More than a third have per­sonal computers. While these numbers do not sug­gest lives of luxury, they are notably different from conventional images of poverty.

Housing Conditions

A similar disparity between popular concep­tions and reality applies to the housing conditions of the poor. Most poor Americans live in houses or apartments that are relatively spacious and in good repair. As Chart 2 shows, 49 percent of poor house­holds live in single-family homes, either unat­tached single dwellings or attached units such as townhouses. Another 41 percent live in apart­ments, and 10 percent live in mobile homes.[11]

Housing Space

Both the overall U.S. population and the poor in America live, in general, in very spacious housing. As Table 1 shows, 71 percent of all U.S. households have two or more rooms per tenant. Among the poor, this figure is 66 percent.

Crowding is quite rare; only 2.4 percent of all households and 5.6 percent of poor households are crowded with more than one person per room.[12] By contrast, social reformer Jacob Riis, writing on ten­ement living conditions around 1890 in New York City, described crowded families living with four or five persons per room and some 20 square feet of living space per person.[13]

Housing space can also be measured by the number of square feet per person. The Residential Energy Consumption survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy shows that Americans have an average of 721 square feet of living space per per­son. Poor Americans have 439 square feet.[14] Rea­sonably comparable international square-footage data are provided by the Housing Indicator Program of the United Nations Center for Human Settle­ments, which surveyed housing conditions in major cities in 54 different nations. This survey showed the United States to have, by far, the most spacious housing units, with 50 percent to 100 percent more square footage per capita than city dwellers in other industrialized nations.[15](See Table 2.)

America's poor compare favorably with the gen­eral population of other nations in square footage of living space. The average poor American has more square footage of living space than does the average person living in London, Paris, Vienna, and Munich. Poor Americans have nearly three times the living space of average urban citizens in middle-income countries such as Mexico and Turkey. Poor American households have seven times more hous­ing space per person than the general urban popu­lation of very-low-income countries such as India and China. (See the appendix table for more detailed information.)

Some critics have argued that the comparisons in Table 2 are mislead­ing.[16] These critics claim that U.S. housing in general cannot be com­pared to housing in specific Euro­pean cities such as Paris or London because housing in these cities is unusually small and does not repre­sent the European housing stock overall. To assess the validity of this argument, Table 3 presents national housing data for 15 West European countries. These data represent the entire national housing stock in each of the 15 countries. In general, the national data on housing size are similar to the data on specific Euro­pean cities presented in Table 2 and the appendix table.

As Table 3 shows, U.S. housing (with an aver­age size of 1,875 square feet per unit) is nearly twice as large as European housing (with an aver­age size of 976 square feet per unit.) After adjust­ing for the number of persons in each dwelling unit, Americans have an average of 721 square feet per person, compared to 396 square feet for the average European.

The housing of poor Americans (with an average of 1,228 square feet per unit) is smaller than that of the average American but larger than that of the average European (who has 976 square feet per unit). Overall, poor Americans have an average of 439 square feet of living space per person, which is as much as or more than the average citizen in most West European countries. (This comparison is to the average European, not poor Europeans.)

Housing Quality

Of course, it might be possible that the housing of poor American households could be spacious but still dilapidated or unsafe. However, data from the American Housing Survey indicate that such is not the case. For example, the survey provides a tally of households with "severe physical prob­lems." Only a tiny portion of poor households and an even smaller portion of total households fall into that category.

The most common "severe problem," according to the American Housing Survey, is a shared bath­room, which occurs when occupants lack a bath­room and must share bathroom facilities with individuals in a neighboring unit. This condition affects about 1 percent of all U.S. households and 1.6 percent of all poor households. About one per­cent of all households and 2.3 percent of poor households have other "severe physi­cal problems." The most common are repeated heating breakdowns and multiple upkeep problems.

The American Housing Survey also provides a count of households affected by "moderate physical prob­lems." A wider range of households falls into this category—9 percent of the poor and 4 percent of total households. However, the problems affecting these units are clearly mod­est. While living in such units might be disagreeable by modern middle-class standards, they are a far cry from Dickensian squalor. The most common problems are upkeep, lack of a full kitchen, and use of unvented oil, kerosene or gas heaters as the pri­mary heat source. (The last condition occurs almost exclusively in the South.)

Poverty and Malnutrition

Malnutrition (also called undernu­trition) is a condition of reduced health due to a chronic shortage of calories and nutriments. There is little or no evidence of poverty-induced malnutrition in the United States. It is often believed that a lack of financial resources forces poor people to eat low-quality diets that are defi­cient in nutriments and high in fat. However, survey data show that nutriment density (amount of vita­mins, minerals, and protein per kilocalorie of food) does not vary by income class.[17] Nor do the poor consume higher-fat diets than do the middle class; the percentage of persons with high fat intake (as a share of total calories) is virtually the same for low-income and upper-middle-income persons.[18] Over-consumption of calories in general, however, is a major problem among the poor, as it is within the general U.S. population.

Examination of the average nutriment consump­tion of Americans reveals that age and gender play a far greater role than income class in determining nutritional intake. For example, the nutriment intakes of adult women in the upper middle class (with incomes above 350 percent of the poverty level) more closely resemble the intakes of poor women than they do those of upper-middle-class men, children, or teens.[19] The average nutriment consumption of upper-middle-income preschoolers, as a group, is virtually identical with that of poor preschoolers but not with the consumption of adults or older children in the upper middle class.

This same pattern holds for adult males, teens, and most other age and gender groups. In general, children aged 0–11 years have the highest average level of nutriment intakes relative to the recom­mended daily allowance (RDA), followed by adult and teen males. Adult and teen females have the lowest level of intakes. This pattern holds for all income classes.

Nutrition and Poor Children

Government surveys provide little evidence of widespread undernutrition among poor children; in fact, they show that the average nutriment con­sumption among the poor closely resembles that of the upper middle class. For example, children in families with incomes below the poverty level actu­ally consume more meat than do children in fami­lies with incomes at 350 percent of the poverty level or higher (roughly $72,000 for a family of four in today's dollars).

Table 4 shows the average intake of protein, vita­mins, and minerals as a percentage of the recom­mended daily allowance among poor and middle-class children at various age levels.[20] The intake of nutriments is very similar for poor and middle-class children and is generally well above the recom­mended daily level. For example, the consumption of protein (a relatively expensive nutriment) among poor children is, on average, between 150 percent and 267 percent of the RDA.

When shortfalls of specific vitamins and miner­als appear (for example, among teenage girls), they tend to be very similar for the poor and the middle class. While poor teenage girls, on average, tend to under-consume vitamin E, vitamin B-6, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, iron, and zinc, a virtually identical under-consumption of these same nutri­ments appears among upper-middle-class girls.

Poor Children's Weight and Stature

On average, poor children are very well nour­ished, and there is no evidence of widespread signif­icant undernutrition. For example, two indicators of undernutrition among the young are "thinness" (low weight for height) and stuntedness (low height for age). These problems are rare to nonexistent among poor American children.

The generally good health of poor American chil­dren can be illustrated by international compari­sons. Table 5 provides data on children's size based on the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Data Base on Child Growth: Children are judged to be short or "stunted" if their height falls below the 2.3 percentile level of standard height-to-age tables.[21] Table 5 shows the percentage of children under age five in developing nations who are judged to be "stunted" by this standard.

In developing nations as a whole, some 43 percent of children are stunted. In Africa, more than a third of young children are affected; in Asia, nearly half.[22]By contrast, in the United States, some 2.6 percent of young children in poor households are stunted by a comparable standard—a rate only slightly above the expected standard for healthy, well-nourished chil­dren.[23]While concern for the well-being of poor American children is always prudent, the data overall underscore how large and well-nourished poor Amer­ican children are by global standards.

Throughout this century, improvements in nutri­tion and health have led to increases in the rate of growth and ultimate height and weight of American children. Poor children have clearly benefited from this trend. Poor boys today at ages 18 and 19 are actu­ally taller and heavier than boys of similar age in the general U.S. population in the late 1950s. Poor boys living today are one inch taller and some 10 pounds heavier than GIs of similar age during World War II, and nearly two inches taller and 20 pounds heavier than American doughboys back in World War I.[24]

Poverty and Obesity

The principal nutrition-related health problem among the poor, as with the general U.S. popula­tion, stems from the overconsumption, not under­consumption, of food. While overweight and obesity are prevalent problems throughout the U.S. population, they are found most frequently among poor adults. Poor adult men are slightly less likely than non-poor men to be overweight (30.4 percent compared to 31.9 percent); but, as Chart 3 shows, poor adult women are significantly more likely to be overweight than are non-poor women (47.3 percent compared to 32 percent).[25]

Poverty and Consistency of Food Supply

It is clear that poor Americans are not under­nourished and, over time, experience an abundance rather than a chronic shortfall of food. However, even though the poor, in general, have an ample food supply, some do suffer from temporary food shortages. For example, even if a poor household, on average, has an ample food supply, it might have to cut back meals or go without if food stamps run out at the end of the month. This problem of tem­porary food shortages leads some advocates to claim there is widespread "hunger" in the United States.[26]

In reality, government data show that most poor households do not suffer even from temporary food shortages. Overall, as Chart 4 shows, 98 percent of U.S. households report that they always had "enough food to eat" during the past four months, although not always the kinds of food they would have preferred. Some 1.8 percent of all households report they "sometimes" did not have enough food to eat during the previous four months, while 0.4 percent say they "often" did not have enough food.[27]

Among the poor, the figures are only slightly lower: 92.5 percent of poor households assert that they always had "enough food to eat" during the pre­vious four months, although 26 percent of these did not always have the foods they would have pre­ferred. Some 6 percent of poor households state that they "sometimes" did not have enough food and 1.5 percent say they "often" did not have enough food.[28] The bottom line: Although a small portion of poor households report temporary food shortages, the overwhelming majority of poor households report that they consistently have enough food to eat.

Chart 5 provides six additional questions that explore this issue in greater detail. Across this array of questions, 73 percent to 95 percent of poor households report they are free of the par­ticular food problem mentioned. Significant food shortages affect only a minority of poor house­holds. For example, 13 percent of poor house­holds with children report that their children sometimes or often did not have enough food to eat during the past four months. Disturbingly, one poor adult in twenty reports going at least one entire day in the previous four months with­out eating at all due to a lack of money for food.[29] While this represents a stressful condi­tion for the individual involved, it is atypical of the poor in general.

While significant temporary food shortages do occur for some households in the U.S., they are rare. For example, across the whole U.S. population, in a given month, one child in three hundred will skip a meal because of the family's lack of money for food. One child in a thousand will go a whole day without eating for the same reason.[30]

Living Conditions and Hardships among the Poor

Overall, the living standards of most poor Amer­icans are far higher than is generally appreciated. The overwhelming majority of poor families are well housed, have adequate food, and enjoy a wide range of modern amenities, including air condition­ing and cable television. Some 70 percent of poor households report that during the course of the past year they were able to meet "all essential expenses," including mortgage, rent, utility bills, and impor­tant medical care.[31] (See Chart 6.)

However, two caveats should be applied to this generally optimistic picture. First, many poor families have difficulty paying their regular bills and must scramble to make ends meet. For exam­ple, more than a third of poor families are late in paying the rent or utility bills at some point dur­ing the year.

Second, the living conditions of the average poor household should not be taken to represent all poor households. There is a wide range of living conditions among the poor: a third of poor house­holds have both cell phones and landline phones; a third also have telephone answering machines. But, at the other extreme, a tenth of the poor have no telephone at all. Similarly, most of America's poor live in accommodations with two or more rooms per person, but around 7 percent of the poor are crowded, with less than one room per person.

These points are illustrated in Table 6, which lists the financial and material hardships among poor households in 2003.[32] During at least one month in the preceding year, 21 percent of poor households reported they were unable to pay their fuel, gas, or electric bills promptly; around 4 percent had their utilities cut off at some point due to nonpayment. Another 14 percent of poor households failed, at some point in the year, to make their full monthly rent or mortgage payments, and 1 percent were evicted due to failure to pay rent. One in 10 poor families had their phones disconnected due to non­payment at some time during the preceding year.

Overall, more than one-third of poor families experienced at least one financial difficulty during the year. Most had a late payment of rent or utility bills. Some 16 percent had phones or utilities cut off or were evicted.

Poor households also experienced the material problems listed on Table 6.[33] Some 13 percent had a family member who needed to go to a doctor or hospital at some point in the prior year but did not go; 7 percent reported that they did not have enough food at some point in the previous four months; and around 7 percent were overcrowded, with more than one person per room. Around 3 percent of poor households experienced upkeep problems with the physical conditions of their apart­ments or homes, having three or more of the physical problems listed in Table 7.

Overall Hardship

Altogether, around 62 percent of poor households experienced none of the financial or physical hardships listed in Table 6 These families were able to pay all their bills on time. They were able to obtain medical care if needed, had enough food, were not crowded, and had few upkeep prob­lems in the home. Another 17 percent of poor households experienced one financial or material problem during the year. Around 21 percent of poor households had two or more financial or material problems.

The most common problem facing poor households was late payment of rent or utilities. While having diffi­culty paying monthly bills is stressful, in most cases late payment did not result in material hardship or depriva­tion. Relatively few of those who were late in payments subsequently had their utilities cut off or were evicted. If late payment problems are excluded from the count, we find that 71 per­cent of poor households had none of the remaining problems listed in Table 6. Some 18 percent had one problem, and 11 percent had two or more problems.

While it is appropriate to be con­cerned about the difficulties faced by some poor families, it is impor­tant to keep these problems in per­spective. Many poor families have intermittent difficulty paying rent or utility bills but remain very well housed by historic or inter­national standards. Even poor families, who are overcrowded by U.S. standards or face temporary food shortages, are still likely to have living con­ditions that are far above the world average.

Reducing Child Poverty

The generally high living standards of poor Amer­icans are good news. Even better is the fact that our nation can substantially reduce remaining pov­erty, especially among children. To accomplish this, we must focus on the main causes of child pov­erty: low levels of parental work and high levels of single parenthood.

In good economic times or bad, the typical poor family with children is supported by only 800 hours of work during a year: That amounts to 16 hours of work per week. If work in each family were raised to 2,000 hours per year—the equiva­lent of one adult working 40 hours per week through the year—nearly 75 percent of poor chil­dren would be lifted out of official poverty.[34]

The decline in marriage is the second major cause of child poverty. Nearly two-thirds of poor children reside in single-parent homes; each year, an additional 1.5 million children are born out of wedlock. Increasing marriage would substantially reduce child poverty: If poor mothers married the fathers of their children, almost three-quarters would immediately be lifted out of poverty.[35]

In the late 1990s, the United States established a reasonable record in reducing child poverty. Suc­cessful anti-poverty policies were partially imple­mented in the welfare reform legislation of 1996, which replaced the old Aid to Families with Depen­dent Children (AFDC) program with a new pro­gram called Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF).

A key element of this reform was a requirement that some welfare mothers either prepare for work or get jobs as a condition of receiving aid. As this requirement went into effect, welfare rolls plum­meted and employment of single mothers increased in an unprecedented manner. As employment of single mothers rose, child poverty dropped rapidly. For example, in the quarter-century before welfare reform, there was no net change in the poverty rate of children in single-mother families; after reform was enacted, the poverty rate dropped in an unprec­edented fashion, falling from 53.1 percent in 1995 to 39.8 percent in 2001.[36]

In general, however, welfare reform has been lim­ited in both scope and intensity. Even in the TANF program, over half the adult beneficiaries remain idle on the rolls and are not engaged in activities leading to self-sufficiency. Work requirements are virtually nonexistent in related programs such as food stamps and public housing. Even worse, despite the fact that marriage has enormous financial and psychological benefits for parents and children, welfare reform has done little or nothing to strengthen marriage in low-income communities. Overall, the welfare system continues to encourage idle dependence rather than work and to reward sin­gle parenthood while penalizing marriage.

If child poverty is to be reduced, welfare must be transformed. Able-bodied parents must be required to work or prepare for work, and the welfare system should encourage rather than penalize marriage.

Immigration and Poverty

Unfortunately, any effort to reduce the number of poor persons in the U.S. will be partially offset by current immigration policies. Each year, immigra­tion (both legal and illegal) adds hundreds of thou­sands of new persons to the nation's poverty count. Overall, first-generation immigrants and their minor children account for nearly one-fourth of all poor people in the U.S.[37]

Illegal as well as legal immigrants play a signifi­cant role in swelling the count of Americans in pov­erty. This may seem surprising as there is a common perception that illegal immigrants are not recorded in Census Bureau's Current Population Survey (CPS), which forms the basis of the official poverty estimate. This perception is inaccurate. The CPS and other Census surveys record whether an individual is an immigrant or non-immigrant but do not distin­guish between legal and illegal immigrants. Close examination reveals that the number of self-identi­fied immigrants appearing in the CPS exceeds the potential number of legal immigrants in the U.S. by some 10 or 11 million persons. These "extra" immi­grants in the CPS are, in fact, illegal immigrants.[38] Because millions of illegal immigrants are reported in the CPS, these same illegal immigrants are also included in the official count of poor persons which is based on CPS data. 

Roughly 30 percent of illegal immigrants are poor by official government standards. Among the children of illegal immigrants, the poverty rate is 37 percent.[39] Overall, illegal immigrants and their chil­dren represent between 4.5 percent and 5.0 percent of the U.S. population, but they are roughly one-tenth of all poor persons appearing in government poverty reports.[40]

Immigrants have high levels of poverty because they have low levels of education compared to non-immigrants. Roughly a third of immigrant households are headed by persons without a high school degree. Among adult illegal immigrants, some 50 percent to 60 percent lack a high school degree. By contrast, only 12 percent of non-immigrant households are headed by persons without a high school degree.[41]

Another major factor contributing to poverty among children of immigrants is out-of-wedlock childbearing. Hispanic immigrants account for around 59 percent of all births to immigrants. Among the Hispanic immigrants, 42.3 percent of children are born out of wedlock. In general, chil­dren born and raised outside marriage are seven times more likely to live in poverty than are children born and raised by married couples.[42]

As long as the current steady influx of low-skilled, poverty-prone immigrants continues, efforts to reduce the number of poor in the U.S. will be far more difficult. By contrast, policies to stop the flood of illegal immigrants into the U.S. and to  increase the education and skill levels of future legal immigrants would substantially reduce the number of poor persons in the U.S. in future years.

Conclusion

The living conditions of persons defined as poor by the government bear little resemblance to notions of "poverty" promoted by politicians and political activists. If poverty is defined as lacking adequate nutritious food for one's family, a reasonably warm and dry apartment to live in, or a car with which to get to work when one is needed, then there are relatively few poor per­sons remaining in the United States. Real mate­rial hardship does occur, but it is limited in scope and severity.

The typical American defined as "poor" by the government has a car, air conditioning, a refrigera­tor, a stove, a clothes washer and dryer, and a micro­wave. He has two color televisions, cable or satellite TV reception, a VCR or DVD player, and a stereo. He is able to obtain medical care. His home is in good repair and is not overcrowded. By his own report, his family is not hungry and he had suffi­cient funds in the past year to meet his family's essential needs. While this individual's life is not opulent, it is equally far from the popular images of dire poverty conveyed by the press, liberal activists, and politicians.

But the living conditions of the average poor per­son should not be taken to mean that all poor Amer­icans live without hardship. There is a wide range of living conditions among the poor. Roughly a third of poor households do face material hardships such as overcrowding, intermittent food shortages, or difficulty obtaining medical care. However, even these households would be judged to have high liv­ing standards in comparison to most other people in the world.

Moreover, the United States can readily reduce its remaining poverty, especially among children. The main causes of child poverty in the United States are low levels of parental work, high numbers of single-parent families, and low skill levels of incoming immigrants. By increasing work and mar­riage, reducing illegal immigration, and by improv­ing the skill level of future legal immigrants, our nation can, over time, virtually eliminate remaining child poverty.

Robert Rector is Senior Research Fellow in Domestic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.

 


[4] U.S. Census Bureau, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2005, Current Population Report, P60-231, August 2006, p. 13.

 

[5] Ibid., p. 46.

 

[6] Comparison of the average expenditure per person of the lowest quintile in 2001 with the middle quintile in 1973. Sources: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Expenditure Survey: Integrated Diary and Interview Survey Data, 1972–73, Bulletin No. 1992, released in 1979, and U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Expenditures in 2001, Report No. 966, April 2003. Figures adjusted for inflation by the personal consumption expenditure index.

 

[7] See Catholic Campaign for Human Development, Poverty Pulse Low Income Survey Wave IV, January 2005, at www.usccb.org/cchd/povertyusa/povpulse.htm. Interestingly, only about 1 percent of those surveyed regarded poverty in the terms the government does: as having an income below a specified level.

 

[8] The Census Bureau defines an individual as poor if his or her family income falls below certain specified income thresholds. These thresholds vary by family size. In 2006, a family of four was deemed poor if its annual income fell below $20,615; a family of three was deemed poor if annual income was below $16,079. There are a number of problems with the Census Bureau's poverty figures: Census undercounts income, ignores assets accumulated in prior years, and disregards non-cash welfare such as food stamps and public housing in its official count of income. However, the most important problem with Census figures is that, even if a family's income falls below the official poverty thresholds, the family's actual living conditions are likely to be far higher than the image most Americans have in mind when they hear the word "poverty."

 

[9] U.S. Census Bureau, American Housing Survey for the United States, 2005 Data Charts, at www.census.gov/hhes/www/housing/ahs/nationaldata.html#jump2 (August 23, 2007); U.S. Census Bureau, Survey of Income and Program Participation, 2001 Panel, Wave 8 Topical Module, 2003; and U.S Department of Energy, Housing Characteristics, 2001, Appliances Tables, at www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/consumption  (August 21, 2007).

 

[10] U.S. Census Bureau, American Housing Survey for the United States, 2005 Data Charts.

 

[11] Ibid.

 

[12] Ibid.

 

[13] Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives (New York: Dover Press, 1971), pp. 6, 41, 59.

 

[14] U.S. Department of Energy, Housing Characteristics 1993, 1995, pp. 46, 47. The figures in the text refer to total living space, including both heated and non-heated living space.

 

[15] U.N. Center for Human Settlements and World Bank, Preliminary Findings, Vol. II of The Housing Indicators Program (New York: United Nations, 1993), Table 5.

 

[16] See Katha Pollitt, "Poverty: Fudging the Numbers," The Nation, November 2, 1998. Pollitt argues that it is misleading to compare the living space of poor Americans nationwide to that of average citizens in major cities in other nations, since European cities, in particular, have small housing units that are not representative of their entire nations. However, the author of the United Nations Housing Indicators report asserts that, in most cases, the average housing size in major cities can be taken as roughly representative of the nation as a whole. A comparison of the data in Table 3 and the appendix table  would appear to confirm this.

 

[17] C. T. Windham et al., "Nutrient Density of Diets in the USDA Nationwide Food Consumption Survey, 1977–1978: Impact of Socioeconomic Status on Dietary Density," Journal of the American Dietetic Association, January 1983.

 

[18] Interagency Board for Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research, Third Report on Nutrition Monitoring in the United States (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1995), p. VA 167.

 

[19] K. S. Tippett, S. J. Mickle, J. D. Goldman, K. E. Sykes, D. A. Cook, R. S. Sebastian, J. W. Wilson, and J. Smith, Food and Nutrient Intakes by Individuals in the United States, 1 Day, 1989–91, PB95-272746, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, September 1995.

 

[20] Ibid., Tables 10-1, 10-4. Table 4 in the present paper also provides the "mean adequacy ratio" for various groups. The mean adequacy ratio represents average intake of all the nutriments listed as a percent of RDA. However, in computing mean adequacy, intake values exceeding 100 percent of RDA are counted at 100, since the body cannot use an excess consumption of one nutriment to fill a shortfall of another nutriment.

 

[21] The World Health Organization uses standard height-for-age tables developed by the National Center for Health Statistics at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the U.S. Department and Health and Human Services.

 

[22] M. de Onis and J. P. Habicht, "Anthropometric Reference Data for International Use: Recommendations from a World Health Organization Expert Committee," American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1996, pp. 650–658.

 

[23] Heritage Foundation calculation using National Health and Nutrition Evaluation Survey III data and WHO standard tables for shortness for age. Shortness for age is the result of genetic variation as well as nutritional factors. The World Health Organization standards assume that even in a very well-nourished population, 2.3 percent of children will have heights below the "stunted" cut-off levels due to normal genetic factors. Problems are apparent if the number of short children in a population rises appreciably above that 2.3 percent.

 

[24] Bernard D. Karpinos, "Current Height and Weight of Youths of Military Age," Human Biology, 1961, pp. 336–364. Recent data on young males in poverty provided by the National Center for Health Statistics of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, based on the second National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

 

[25] Interagency Board for Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research, Third Report on Nutrition Monitoring, p. VA 219.

 

[26] Food Research Action Council, "Hunger in America, and Its Solutions: Basic Facts," July 2004, at www.frac.org/pdf/HungerFacts.pdf (August 21, 2007).

 

[27] Calculated from U.S. Census Bureau, Survey of Income and Program Participation, 2001 Panel, Wave 8 Topical Module, 2003.

 

[28] Ibid.

 

[29] Ibid.

 

[30] Mark Nord, Margaret Andrews, Steven Carlson, Household Food Security in the United States, 2005, Economic Research Report, Number 26, United States Department of Agriculture, November 2006, p. 47.

 

[31] Calculated from U.S. Census Bureau, Survey of Income and Program Participation, 2001 Panel, Wave 8 Topical Module, 2003.

 

[32] Ibid.

 

[33] Ibid. The Wave 8 Topical Module also contains a question about whether members of the household needed to see a dentist but did not go. Because the question does not specify whether or not the failure to visit the dentist was due to an inability to pay, it was not included in this report.

 

[34] Robert E. Rector and Rea S. Hederman, Jr., "The Role of Parental Work in Child Poverty," Heritage Foundation Center for Data Analysis Report No. CDA03–01, January 27, 2003, at www.heritage.org/Research/Family/cda-03-01.cfm.

 

[35] Robert E. Rector, Kirk A. Johnson, Ph.D., Patrick F. Fagan, and Lauren R. Noyes, "Increasing Marriage Would Dramatically Reduce Child Poverty," Heritage Foundation Center for Data Analysis Report No. CDA03-06 May 20, 2003, at www.heritage.org/Research/Family/cda0306.cfm.

 

[36] Robert Rector and Patrick F. Fagan, "The Continuing Good News About Welfare Reform,"Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1620, February 6, 2003, at www.heritage.org/Research/Welfare/bg1620.cfm.

 

[37] Robert Rector, "Importing Poverty: Immigration and Poverty in the United States," Heritage Foundation Special Report No. 9, October 25, 2006, p. 6, at www.heritage.org/Research/Immigration/SR9.cfm.

 

[38] See Jeffrey S. Passel, Unauthorized Migrants: Numbers and Characteristics, Pew Hispanic Center, Washington, D.C.,June 14, 2005, at http://pewhispanic.org/files/reports/46.pdf  (August 21, 2007). Most experts believe that some 90 percent of illegal immigrants are represented in the Census's annual Current Population survey. 

 

[39] Rector, "Importing Poverty," p. 18.

 

[40] Estimate based on Passel, Unauthorized Migrants, pp. 18 and 34.

 

[41] Rector, "Importing Poverty.

 

[42] Ibid., p. 19. Among native born Hispanic women the out-of-wedlock childbearing rate is even higher, 49.6 percent.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: heritagefoundation; poor; poverty; thepoor; wagglebee
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To: wagglebee

The MSN.com website did an article earlier this year on poverty, almost as an afterthought asking its readers who grew up impoverished to tell their stories.

The reaction was dramatic to say the least. The tales related made for gripping reading and would no doubt provide fertile material for enterprising screenwriters. The gist of it was a bit different from what the writer may have originally anticipated, however...

There are no two ways about it; in these United States, unless one is hobbled by disability, crippling injury, or chronic illness, long-term poverty is the reliable result of bad behavior, usually accompanied by addiction. Time and again the respondents told stories of chronically drunk, drugged, gambling or absent parents. Serial divorce, unwed childbearing, or an out-and-out aversion to gainful employment.

The depressing tales put another spin into John Maynard Keynes’ saying that there is a lot of ruin in a country but it also reinforced the ideal of hard work and education as the same people who wrote in with their hard-scrabble yarns were also the ones who had managed to overcome their grim circumstances, who had fought their way through abuse, neglect and shame to make good and build a life. I can’t give directions to the article and thread in question in the MSN.com archives but I’m pretty sure one can dig it up.


41 posted on 09/02/2007 3:12:33 PM PDT by sinanju
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To: mamelukesabre
I bought my COLOR TV USED FOR 35 BUCKS! I guess that makes me rich though, doesn’t it??!?!!
Your color TV beats the TV my parents bought in 1950 all holler. This article makes clear that the "poor" eat - or could, for the same price - as good a diet as I did growing up. And if they show up at the emergency room they have to be treated, with procedures/medicines which were not available to my family when I was a kid.

The fact that you're too cheap to pay full price - a whole $60 or so - for a TV doesn't change the fact that you have a good (compared to anything I had before I was 30, great) TV. Poor people in my day didn't have TV, my parents had decent jobs and we didn't, until I was ten years old. Today "poor" people have not merely color TV, they have cable.

Look, if you're so het up about escalating the standard of what it takes not to be "poor," tell Hillary that the standard for "quality" health care she prattles about constantly is woefully inadequate. Because (unless she gets to "fix" the health care system first) standards of health care in 2040 will be such as to make 2007 medicine as unacceptable then as 1970 medicine would be unacceptable today.


42 posted on 09/02/2007 3:17:03 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (The idea around which liberalism coheres is that NOTHING actually matters except PR.)
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To: ktscarlett66

“Then I look at roly-poly kids hanging on the cart and don’t have to wonder how they got that way.”
______________________________________________________________

You’ve got to check out Discovery Channel’s “Honey, we’re killing the kids” reality series where the dietician-therapist trains the cameras on a family 24/7 for a few weeks before bringing them in for consultation. It’s always variations on the same theme: No sitting down together, no family activities, no exercise, everyone in their own little electronic world after work or school. And (with a few exceptions) very little honest-to-God cooking to boot—fast food, frozen food, convenience food to the max.


43 posted on 09/02/2007 3:20:08 PM PDT by sinanju
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To: mamelukesabre

Lots of people were dirt poor when they married. I know many. Neither bride or groom had nice clothes, cars or anything else.

Your quality of life isn’t based on how well or badly your neighbors do. If you think so, I suggest you go somewhere that is truly poor, where they don’t know when or where the next meal is coming so you can appreciate what you do have. And if you are bent on basing your quality of life verses everyone else then the simple fact is you are very likely much, much better off than at least 3/4 of the planet’s people.


44 posted on 09/02/2007 3:23:44 PM PDT by DB
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To: ktscarlett66

Even fruit juice isn’t that great in large quantities. Sure it’s “Natural Sugar” but it’s still sugar.

Moderation is best!


45 posted on 09/02/2007 3:41:10 PM PDT by Grizzled Bear ("Does not play well with others.")
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To: wagglebee

While there is some poverty in the monetary sense, the poverty of spirit is much larger.


46 posted on 09/02/2007 3:44:02 PM PDT by Drango (A liberal's compassion is limited only by the size of someone else's wallet.)
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To: B4Ranch; nothingnew; Grizzled Bear

To B4Ranch: I would like you to read my post #27.

Although I am better off than my dad was in terms of “toys”, I am much worse off than he in other ways. My standing in society is so much lower that I cannot even approach a suitable mate for courtship. By now my age is such that it’s pointless anyway. I would probably not be accepted by any of the clubs that he was/is a member of...rotary, shriners, etc. I have no investments or savings. He never went to college. I have a master’s degree in engineering. In his day, a person like me would’ve had it made...without the college education. I love to work. I like manual labor. I am mechanically enclined. I know how to fix stuff. I inherited these attributes from him and he prospered from them. I am cursed by them, and by a changing economy. My personality is such that I cannot work at a desk all day 6 days a week...just as my father could not. I never should have been in college for as long as I was. It’s just not my thing. But I did it because I started it and I don’t quit, I finish what I start. The work I am doing today payed in 1970 more than a college professor made in 1970. Today it pays about the same as a garbage man makes, I think.

I never did join a union. Mostly on principal. But if I had, I probably would be in a much better situation right now. My dad was never in a union either. But it was different then.


47 posted on 09/02/2007 3:49:56 PM PDT by mamelukesabre
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To: mamelukesabre
No, I have nothing really. I was never able to convince a girl to marry me. Women are shallow when it comes to money. If you don’t have the nice car and the impressive clothes and a fancy vacation every summer, they think less of you.

It all depends on the type of woman you’re looking for. Yes, many women are obsessed with material possessions. Where did you meet these women who wouldn’t give you the time of day? Did you take your free time and maybe check out some local churches? There’s a lot more women then men at church! How about volunteering in the community? I met my wife when I volunteered to work as a sound technician for a theater group on an Army Base in Germany.

You should also examine your attitude. Try just being friends with a few ladies. Don’t try to take it any further! After awhile ask them for advice. They might even know the right lady for you.

Look; there’s plenty of creeps out there who don’t have two nickles to rub together who have no problem getting women. I’m not just talking about sex, I’m talking about long term relationships. You own a home and three vehicles. That’s more than a lot of other guys have.

You’ve got a lot going for you. Focus on that!

48 posted on 09/02/2007 3:57:08 PM PDT by Grizzled Bear ("Does not play well with others.")
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To: DB
You totally missed the whole point of my posts. I’m sure I’m better off than 90 percent of the planet. But so what? I live in america. Just being here entitles me to a better life than half the people on the planet. That’s how rich america is.
49 posted on 09/02/2007 4:01:08 PM PDT by mamelukesabre
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To: wagglebee

The poor in this country have no idea how wealthy they are. I sponsor a little girl from Honduras through the Christian Foundation for Children and Aging. She was abandoned by both parents, and lives with her grandmother in a hut with a dirt floor. Thirty bucks a month provides her with food, health care and tuition for school.

To have someone with a roof over their head, ample food, free access to health care, running water and electricity, a car, a TV, a stereo and a dishwasher whine about their “poverty” makes my blood boil.


50 posted on 09/02/2007 4:11:31 PM PDT by Juana la Loca
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To: mamelukesabre
I live in america. Just being here entitles me to a better life than half the people on the planet.

No. Being here does NOT entitle you to a better life! You have the freedom to pursue a better life but that's about it.

If I’m mistaken please let me know what part of the Constitution you are referring to.

51 posted on 09/02/2007 4:21:18 PM PDT by Grizzled Bear ("Does not play well with others.")
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To: mamelukesabre

Just curious, how old are you?


52 posted on 09/02/2007 4:22:44 PM PDT by Luke Skyfreeper
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To: wagglebee
We're the only country in the world with FAT poor people.

If you live without cable, cell phone or expensive sneakers....you're poor in America.

53 posted on 09/02/2007 4:22:51 PM PDT by Dick Vomer (liberals suck....... but it depends on what your definition of the word "suck" is.,)
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To: mamelukesabre

And what job are you doing?


54 posted on 09/02/2007 4:23:12 PM PDT by Luke Skyfreeper
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To: mamelukesabre
And do you want to have more in the way of money and material possessions than you currently have?
55 posted on 09/02/2007 4:23:58 PM PDT by Luke Skyfreeper
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To: Luke Skyfreeper

About 40, why?


56 posted on 09/02/2007 4:24:39 PM PDT by mamelukesabre
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To: Grizzled Bear
“Entitled” may not have been the best choice of words. What I meant was that in america, even the handicapped, the retarded, and the lazy bums have a standard of living that is above half the planet. So I think it is stupid to measure myself against the planet when even people such as the ones I listed are better off than half the planet simply because they happened to be born american.
57 posted on 09/02/2007 4:28:48 PM PDT by mamelukesabre
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To: Luke Skyfreeper

It’s hard to put a title on my job since I am operating outside the unions. But I am a combination of these: Electrician, plumber, boilermaker, fitter, HVAC, foreman, bidder/estimator, and sometimes engineer. I’m primarily a fitter by the hours of work I do. But primarily a boilermaker by my credentials. Well, unless you count my college degrees, then I’m primarily an engineer.

Why does it matter?


58 posted on 09/02/2007 4:39:33 PM PDT by mamelukesabre
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To: Luke Skyfreeper

Duh


59 posted on 09/02/2007 4:41:02 PM PDT by mamelukesabre
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To: JimRed

Many, many people have also survived the bad luck portion of their lives due to making prudent choices earlier. Therefore, nearly all poverty is caused by poor choices.


60 posted on 09/02/2007 4:45:53 PM PDT by 3Lean
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