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Thursday, June 19, 2014

1.17 Million Children in U.S. Survive on $2 per Day or Less | janresseger

1.17 Million Children in U.S. Survive on $2 per Day or Less | janresseger:



1.17 Million Children in U.S. Survive on $2 per Day or Less

We know how poverty among children constrains opportunity and affects school achievement, but it is difficult to consider what can be done. Yesterday’s NY Times published a short, comprehensive and extraordinarily moving column by Thomas Edsall, professor of journalism at Columbia University, about how our nation’s welfare policies have shaped poverty in the United States today: Cutting the Poor Out of Welfare.  I urge you to read it.
Edsall reports that even when the value of food stamps and the earned income and child care tax credits are calculated, there has been dramatic growth in the number of households in the United States in which each member of the family survives on $2 a day or less, “from 409,000 households in 1996, before passage of welfare reform, to 613,000 households in 2011, including 1.17 million children.”
It is difficult for most of us to sort out and remember how welfare policy has been shaped—the end of Aid to Families with Dependent Children in 1996 and its supposed replacement with Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)—the impact of the earned income tax credit since its enactment in 1975—the passage of the child and dependent care tax credit in 1997 to provide childcare assistance for low-income and middle-income families—the passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010.  Haven’t we helped our poorest citizens with these programs?  According to Edsall, our federal policies have reduced poverty overall, but they have not helped our most desperate families including over a million children.
Edsall concludes: when added together, these programs clearly benefit parents who are married and those who have been able to secure jobs, even low-income jobs.  “For the poorest of the poor, the results have been devastating:  in 1983,  56 percent of total government transfers going to the poor and near-poor went to those on the bottom, those making 50 percent or less of the federal poverty level income.  By 2004, that number had fallen to 32 percent.”  Overall, inflation-adjusted federal spending on the poor grew by 74 percent between 1975 and 2007, “But those on the lowest rungs of the ladder have seen their government benefits decline….”
Federal policy has been designed to require work, encourage marriage, and penalize those who, we imagine, lack initiative. Edsall reports, however, that the problem is neither primarily 1.17 Million Children in U.S. Survive on $2 per Day or Less | janresseger: