>From yesterday's Washington Post.

Ed


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As 44 million Americans live in poverty, a crisis grows

By Katrina vanden Heuvel

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

 

It's clear that the Great Recession battered those on the bottom most heavily, 
adding 6 million people to the ranks of the officially poor, defined as just 
$22,000 in annual income for a family of four. Forty-four million Americans -- 
one in seven citizens -- are now living below the poverty line, more than at 
any time since the Census Bureau began tracking poverty 51 years ago. 
Shamefully, that figure includes one in five children, more than one in four 
African Americans or Latinos, and over 51 percent of female-headed families 
with children under 6.

 

These numbers are bad enough. But dig deeper -- as Georgetown University law 
professor Peter Edelman has been doing for nearly 50 years in his battle 
against poverty -- and the story told by these figures is even more staggering. 



Edelman points out that 19 million people are now living in "extreme poverty," 
which is under 50 percent of the poverty line, or $11,000 for a family of four. 
"That means over 43 percent of the poor are extremely poor," said Edelman, who 
served as an aide to Sen. Robert Kennedy (D-N.Y.) and in the Clinton 
administration before resigning in protest over welfare reform that shredded 
the safety net. "That's over 6 percent of the population, and that figure has 
just been climbing up and up." 



Edelman says that the number of people living at less than two times the 
poverty line ($44,000 for a family of four) is equally significant. 

"Data shows that's really the line between whether or not you can pay your 
bills," said Edelman. "That has reached 100,411,000 people. That's 33 percent 
of the country. That's the totality of the problem -- whether you call it 
poverty or not." 



For too long we have accepted the narrative -- promoted by well-funded 
conservative think tanks -- that claims people who are struggling are to blame 
for their troubles, and at the same time we don't have effective anti-poverty 
policies. So tackling the problem is seen as wasteful. 



"So many people think it's their own fault," said Edelman. "They don't see the 
structural problem in our economy." 

But with so many in poverty, that narrative has become harder to sustain during 
the Great Recession, and so renewed work is being done to take on poverty and 
its structural underpinnings.



[If you want to read more, go to: 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/28/AR2010092802356.html?wpisrc=nl_opinions
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