Posted on 09/14/2009 8:41:12 AM PDT by IbJensen
ccording to statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau, the poverty rate is at an 11-year high while household incomes are at a 10-year low, all thanks to the worst recession since the Great Depression.
The percentage of people living in poverty in the United States has jumped to 13.2 percent from 12.5 percent in 2007. This is the highest it has been since 1997. While 37.3 million Americans lived in poverty in 2007, the Census Bureau now places the number at 39.8 million. The Bureau considers the poverty level to be an annual income of $22,025 or less for a family of four, $17,163 or less for a three-person family, and $14,051 or less for a two-person household.
Record levels of unemployment 9.7 percent in August, a 26-year high contributed to a 3.6-percent drop in real median household income, which is now down to a 10-year low of $50,303. The 3.6 percent drop was the largest annual decline since 1991, and it snapped a three-year-long streak of annual income increases.
An end to all of this is not yet in sight. While close to seven million people have already lost their jobs since the recession began, unemployment is projected to reach over 10 percent in early 2010. A September 10 Reuters article mentioned the gloomy prognosis given to the Senates Joint Economic Committee by the Commerce Departments Undersecretary for Economic Affairs Rebecca Blank: Unfortunately, even with an improving economy, the higher unemployment rates during 2009 will almost surely lead to further declines in income and further increases in poverty.
Reuters also quoted Sheldon Danziger, a Russell Sage Foundation fellow and professor at the University of Michigan: The poverty rate will not fall back to the 2007 rate until the economy expands enough that the unemployment rate falls back below 5 percent. This is not likely to happen for several years.
The Los Angeles Times on September 11 referred to Harvard University economist Lawrence Katzs assessment that the reduction in median income was the biggest decline for the first year of a recession since World War II. Considering that other recent income gains were rather meager, Katz says, Weve basically seen a lost decade for typical American families.
Census Bureau figures also pointed out the flawed nature of Americas employment-based health insurance system. As millions more workers lost their jobs in 2008, the number of people receiving health insurance coverage through an employer fell from 177.4 million to 176.3 million. This has swollen the estimated number of uninsured persons in America to 46.3 million, up from 2007s figure of 45.7 million.
Sadly, it is all to easy to draw flawed or incomplete conclusions from this data. Danziger is quoted by Reuters as saying that government policies must stay focused on helping those among the poor and near-poor who have been left behind by economic growth in recent years. What this doesnt consider is that government policies have been making people poor in the first place.
For example, so-called free-trade agreements have flooded American markets with inexpensive foreign goods that U.S. companies cant compete with. Cheap Chinese tires have taken such a large share of the U.S. tire market that more than 5,000 U.S. workers have lost their jobs. Two thousand jobs are now being lost in one fell swoop as a Cooper tire plant shuts down in the small town of Albany, Georgia.
Federal tax policies regarding favorable breaks for employment-based health insurance were never extended to give breaks to those who buy their own health insurance. Government caused the problems of employment-based coverage in the first place.
Government policies regarding trade, immigration, taxation, workplace regulation, the environment, and even the military are all contributing to the problem. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have dragged on for eight years, and now there is talk of committing more troops to Afghanistan. American workers are fighting and dying for the economies of foreign nations when they should be back home earning a living and contributing to the American economy.
The Census Bureau statistics paint a grim picture, but it is wise to remember that the federal government is largely responsible for determining the color and the quantity of that paint.
The source of all woe can be blamed on Washington D.C. the seat of the socialist 'central government.'
Get the federales out of our states, our classrooms and our hospitals!
Hold elected representatives feet to the fire. They're not doing what they were elected to do: attack the encroachment of the federal government and make it retreat in tatters!
This is normal for Socialist countries. We need to get used to it because it’s going to get worse.
Bush’s fault....
Hey obama, how’s that economic recovery looking? Not so good eh? A**.
You ask to much of our Federal Government. Their answer will be to raise taxes so they have more money to give to ACORN so they can spread it around to people that WON’T work.....no matter what the economy does.
What is the misery index at today?
I think they should raise taxes, and MORE people will be POOR.
He's got yet another speech on the economy coming up shortly. That will be good for another slight bump. He's supposed to boast about how he brought the economy back from the brink. All he did is kill small business and the private sector. His lackey Summers said they don't expect to see jobs for YEARS.
Wow, that was fast: from Hope and Change to Cope and Pain in less than a year! It’s working! Tell Joe Biden!
Yes, and does anyone really think that Obama didn't have this planned all along? The whole point of Socialism is to "equalize" the masses, making them poor, such that the government can swoop in, make promises, and then line their own pockets.
Revolution is a-brewing... I hope.
We've been circling the socialist drain ever since the democrats "Great Society." The only direction it ever took us was down. Oboma will finish us off.
Good one!....
The poverty rate has to be high to keep the poverty pimps Al Sharpton and Jesse HiJackson in business....
Down here in the capitol of the old south we can’t even walk into our local Whole Foods without tripping over the emaciated bodies of our starving fellow citizens.
GREAT graphic!
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