By Paul Buchheit
July 2, 2018
Source: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/49769.htm
July 2, 2018
Source: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/49769.htm
The
extreme level of inequality in the U.S. is battering the poor
Deniers like Nikki Haley refuse to admit that
mass poverty exists in their prosperous nation. That would reflect poorly on their
capitalist beliefs. But if the skeptics would look at the half of America they
don't care to see, the stark display of destitution might shock them. At least
until they invent an excuse to remove it all from their minds.
The U.S. poverty rate in 2016 was between 12.7 and 14.0 percent.
But the poverty threshold is
based on an outmoded formula from the
1960s. According to the Congressional Research Service (CRS),
the threshold should be THREE TIMES HIGHER today. And it could be even higher
if the true nature of poverty is considered.
Poverty is Not Just a Dollar Figure
There is poverty in the diminishing quality of life for
Americans who are unable to pay for
medical treatment during years of declining health, and instead turn to
life-threatening opioid painkillers, readily available in a nation with less
than 5 percent of the world's population and 30 percent of
the world's opioid consumption. Poverty is the lack of community support in a
winner-take-all society; the stress of overwhelming debt;
the steady decline of
jobs that pay enough to support a family; the inability to afford a move to a
desired neighborhood; the deadening impact of inequality on
physical and mental well-being. The United Nations describes America
as a nation near the bottom of the developed world in safety net support and
economic mobility, with the highest infant mortality rate in the developed
world, the world’s highest incarceration rate, and the highest obesity levels.
Low-income Americans are often surrounded by food deserts,
with insufficient access to clean water and
sanitation, and with the pollutionlevels of third-world countries.
The poorest among us are even susceptible -- unbelievably -- to rare tropical
diseases and once-eradicated scourges like hookworm. Part
of the definition of
poverty is "the state of being inferior in quality." The extreme
level of inequality in
the U.S. is battering the poor with a sense of inferiority. It's ripping apart once-interdependent
communities, and it's triggering a surge in
drug and alcohol and suicide "deaths of despair."
Wealth is Almost Nonexistent for the Bottom 50%
Census data in 2011 showed that nearly half of
Americans were in poverty or considered low-income. Since then average wealth
for the poorest 50% has
plummeted 27.5 percent, and average wealth for the poorest 40% is
virtually ZERO. The median American household has less wealth in current
dollars than it did 35 years ago.
The Poorest 50% Are Barely Sustained by Their Incomes
According to CareerBuilder,
3 out of 4 American workers are living paycheck to paycheck, unable to meet any
major expense in health care or home and auto repairs. Charles Schwab says
3 out of 5 Americans live paycheck to paycheck. That's 60 to 75 percent of
us.
The United Way ALICE Project
has calculated that 43% of
U.S. households can't afford a monthly budget that includes housing, food,
child care, health care, transportation and a cell phone. The Federal Reserve concurs,
estimating that 42% of U.S. adults are experiencing a high likelihood of
material hardship.
Expenses Surging: Almost All Income for the Poorest 50% Goes to Vital Needs
For every $1 in expenses twenty years ago, an American household now pays $1.25.
But for every $1 earned twenty years ago, the median household still earns just
$1.
Housing, child care, and health costs are crushing Americans. Nearly HALF of
renters are cost-burdened, paying 30 percent or more of their income to their
landlords. The median American household in most states would have to spend
over 10 percent of
its income just to send a 4-year-old to full-time preschool. The employee
portion of medical costs for
a typical family of four averages over $12,000, or about 20 percent of median
household income.
For many families, that's 60 percent of their income just for housing, child
care, and health costs. Many are mired in debt. The average household in the
poorer half of America is anywhere from $4,000 to $10,000 in credit card debt.
Retirement? Probably Not
Numerous sources report that half of
Americans have little or nothing saved for retirement, and the most
recent GoBankingRates
survey concluded that 42 percent of Americans will retire with
less than three months' retirement expenses.
So Who Gets the Government Benefits?
Deniers argue that few American families are really poor, because they benefit
from low-income government programs. But Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez, and
Gabriel Zucman have calculated that,
on average in 2014, the 40% of American adults with incomes just below the top
10% -- the middle class -- received more in
safety net government transfers (Medicare, Medicaid, tax credits, food stamps/SNAP,
Veterans’ benefits, etc.) than the bottom 50% of Americans.
When Social Security is included, the richest 10% on average received
approximately as much in government transfers as the poorest 50%.
Everyone benefits, thankfully, from essential government programs. But as
the U.N. found, the
American safety net is less supportive than that of almost all other developed
nations. And the richest among us somehow manage to take the greater part of
benefits meant for the poor. By any rational definition of poverty, half of our
country's households are dealing with it.
No comments:
Post a Comment