Showing posts with label Child Poverty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Child Poverty. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2018

Replace Poverty with Hope

Poverty Can Be Beaten

Not all at once. And poverty will always be with us, but there is a way out if we can offer hope.  Access to good schools, healthcare, electricity and safe water are among some of the basics needed to help people move out of poverty.



"People who believe in their futures are more likely to invest in those futures (for instance going back to school to get a job credential or following good preventive health practices) and to have better outcomes. The hope channel is particularly important for individuals with less means, for whom making such investments requires greater trade-offs. If they do not believe these investments will pay off, then they are much less likely to make them." Carol Graham - The Loss of Hope in Low Income America


The absence of hope defines true poverty

How Many?

Nearly 1/2 of the world's population — more than 3 billion people — live on less than $2.50 a day. More than 1.3 billion live in extreme poverty — less than $1.25 a day. 1 billion children worldwide are living in poverty. According to UNICEF, 22,000 children die each day due to poverty.

45 Million Americans Still Stuck Below Poverty Line: Census. 

Despite five years of economic recovery, poverty is still stubbornly high in America. More than 45 million people, or 14.5 percent of all Americans, lived below the poverty line last year, the Census Bureau reported on Tuesday.Sep 16, 2014


Declining Numbers

The numbers in the United States declined in 2015 and 2016 as the economy grew. According to the US Census Bureau:

  • The official poverty rate in 2016 was 12.7 percent, down 0.8 percentage points from 13.5 percent in 2015. This is the second consecutive annual decline in poverty. 

  • Since 2014, the poverty rate has fallen 2.1 percentage points from 14.8 percent to 12.7 percent. 

  • In 2016 there were 40.6 million people in poverty, 2.5 million fewer than in 2015 and 6.0 million fewer than in 2014. 
  • The poverty rate in 2016 (12.7 percent) was not significantly higher than the poverty rate in 2007 (12.5 percent), the year before the most recent recession. 
These are just numbers. They suggest that if we throw money at the problem all will be well. Poverty is a lot more than a lack of income. True poverty is the absence of hope. It is despair and misery because there seems to be no way out.




The Loss of Hope in Low-Income America

Carol Graham is a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and a Professor at the University of Maryland. She recently wrote a book, “Happiness for All? Unequal Hopes and Lives in Pursuit of the American Dream,” published by Princeton University Press.


Her research uncovered a growing number of poor whites living in true poverty. Her work shows that poor whites have very little hope for the future on one hand, and high levels of stress, worry, and anger on the other. The lack of hope is manifesting itself in increasing isolation and poor health and preventable deaths (such as suicide, opioid overdose, and alcohol poisoning). It is because the American Dream no longer seems attainable. Growing income inequality is a root cause.

The World Bank's View

According to the World Bank, moving out of poverty means, "access to good schools, healthcare, electricity, safe water and other critical services remains elusive for many people, often determined by socioeconomic status, gender, ethnicity, and geography. Moreover, for those who have been able to move out of poverty, progress is often temporary: economic shocks, food insecurity and climate change threaten to rob them of their hard-won gains and force them back into poverty. "

The Cost


The cost of child poverty: $500 billion a year in the U.S. 

The United States has the second-highest child poverty rate among the world's richest 35 nations, and the cost in economic and educational outcomes is half a trillion dollars a year, according to a new report by the Educational Testing Service. Jul 25, 2013

About 15 million children in the United States – 21% of all children – live in families with incomes below the federal poverty threshold, a measurement that has been shown to underestimate the needs of families. Research shows that, on average, families need an income of about twice that level to cover basic expenses. (National Center for Children in Poverty)


Is It A Big Deal?

Yes! According to Global Issues, "Poverty is the state for the majority of the world's people and nations. ... Such causes of poverty and inequality are no doubt real. But deeper and more global causes of poverty are often less discussed. Behind the increasing interconnectedness promised by globalization are global decisions, policies, and practices."

Return the hope for a better future and people will work themselves out of despair. The beginning of new hope comes from listening to those who are living it.  From there... positive messages and increasing inclusiveness...not division.














Sunday, April 22, 2018

Rents Are Up...Income Is Not

Household Income Not Keeping Pace

Pew Research and APM's Marketplace are reporting that household income is not keeping pace with increases in rent. According to Pew, after the recession of 2007 - 2009 fewer people were able to transition from rentals to home ownership. Add to that the influx of millennials into the workforce increasing the demand for rentals, and the supply of rentals is down while demand is up.


The Rent Is Too Damn High


Millennials are taking a double whammy. Home prices stagnated and fell during the recession and its aftermath have rebounded to the higher prices seen during the bubble of 2007. Millenials are priced out of the market. Millennials aren't the only demographic facing the financial pinch.


American Families Face a Growing Rent Burden


17 million are rent burdened and the numbers keep going up. Rent Burdened is defined by HUD as cost-burdened families. Those “who pay more than 30 percent of their income for housing” and “may have difficulty affording necessities such as food, clothing, transportation, and medical care.” Severe rent burden is defined as paying more than 50 percent of one's income on rent.



The Pew study finds 38 percent of all renter households are burdened. Severely rent burdened households—spending 50 percent or more of monthly income on rent—increased by 42 percent. It is now 17% of all renters.


The chart below demonstrates that the problem has been getting worse since 2001.




Less Disposable Income

Households that are rent burdened have fewer dollars to spend. They often make choices between healthcare, food and education. 
According to Pew's findings:
Rent-burdened families are also financially insecure in many other ways:
  • Nearly two-thirds (64 percent) had less than $400 cash in the bank; most (84 percent) of such households are African-American-headed.
  • Half had less than $10 in savings across various liquid accounts, while half of homeowners had more than $7,000.

The growing disparity is leading to a growing underclass that is on the outside looking in with little hope of reversing their situation.  Our economy is stronger when our citizens are able to participate as individuals and as consumers. Keeping large portions of the population on the outside will only further divide us. 


And there's a growing cost of poverty. The cost of child poverty: $500 billion a year. The United States has the second-highest child poverty rate among the world's richest 35 nations, and the cost in economic and educational outcomes is half a trillion dollars a year, according to a new report by the Educational Testing Service.