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Common Dreams: US Economy Leaving Record Numbers in Severe Poverty

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LongTomH Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-24-07 06:13 PM
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Common Dreams: US Economy Leaving Record Numbers in Severe Poverty
Edited on Sat Feb-24-07 06:14 PM by LongTomH
More evidence that Bush's "Booming Economy" is leaving more people worse off. Time to face it, gang: There's no pony under that pile; it's horseshit all the way down.

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines07/0223-09.htm

The McClatchy analysis found that the number of severely poor Americans grew by 26 percent from 2000 to 2005. That's 56 percent faster than the overall poverty population grew in the same period. McClatchy's review also found statistically significant increases in the percentage of the population in severe poverty in 65 of 215 large U.S. counties, and similar increases in 28 states. The review also suggested that the rise in severely poor residents isn't confined to large urban counties but extends to suburban and rural areas.


The plight of the severely poor is a distressing sidebar to an unusual economic expansion. Worker productivity has increased dramatically since the brief recession of 2001, but wages and job growth have lagged behind. At the same time, the share of national income going to corporate profits has dwarfed the amount going to wages and salaries. That helps explain why the median household income of working-age families, adjusted for inflation, has fallen for five straight years.


Here's something that should scare the rest of us who aren't severely poor -- yet.

As more poor Americans sink into severe poverty, more individuals and families living within $8,000 above or below the poverty line also have seen their incomes decline. Steven Woolf of Virginia Commonwealth University attributes this to what he calls a "sinkhole effect" on income.


"Just as a sinkhole causes everything above it to collapse downward, families and individuals in the middle and upper classes appear to be migrating to lower-income tiers that bring them closer to the poverty threshold," Woolf wrote in the study.
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