November 3, 2011
Bleak Portrait of Poverty Is Off the Mark, Experts Say
By JASON DePARLE, ROBERT GEBELOFF and SABRINA TAVERNISE
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/04/us/experts-say-bleak-account-of-poverty-missed-the-mark.html?_r=1&hpw

WASHINGTON — When the Census Bureau said in September that the number
of poor Americans had soared by 10 million to rates rarely seen in
four decades, commentators called the report “shocking” and “bleak.”
Most poverty experts would add another description: “flawed.”

Concocted on the fly a half-century ago, the official poverty measure
ignores ever more of what is happening to the poor person’s wallet —
good and bad. It overlooks hundreds of billions of dollars the needy
receive in food stamps and other benefits and the similarly formidable
amounts they lose to taxes and medical care. It even fails to note
that rents are higher in places like Manhattan than they are in
Mississippi.

On Monday, that may start to change when the Census Bureau releases a
long-promised alternate measure meant to do a better job of counting
the resources the needy have and the bills they have to pay. Similar
measures, quietly published in the past, suggest among other things
that safety-net programs have played a large and mostly overlooked
role in restraining hardship: as much as half of the reported rise in
poverty since 2006 disappears.

The fuller measures have also shown less poverty among children but
more among older Americans, who are plagued by high medical costs.
They have shown less poverty among blacks but more among Asians; less
poverty in rural areas and more in cities and suburbs, where the cost
of living is high. And they have found fewer people in abject
destitution, but a great many more crowding the hard-luck ranks of the
near poor, who do not qualify for many benefit programs and lose
income to taxes, child care and medical costs.

“The official measure no longer corresponds to reality,” said Jane
Waldfogel, a professor of social work at Columbia University. “It
doesn’t get either side of the equation right — how much the poor have
or how much they need. No one really trusts the data.”

Coming amid soaring need and bitter debt debates, the findings in
Monday’s release are likely to offer fodder both to defenders of
safety-net programs and fiscal conservatives who say the government
already does much to temper hardship and needs to do no more.

Experts expect the new report to be consistent with a decade of
research about the ways in which the official poverty rate distorts
the realities of American poverty.

The numbers in this article are based on that research — by the
census, the National Academy of Sciences and others — and include not
just cash income but also government benefits, work expenses, taxes
and cost of living. Many experts expect Monday’s census report, based
on similar methods, to add a bit to the official poverty count of 46.2
million, while most experts also expect the recent growth will ap-pear
less steep.

One alternate census data set quietly published last week said the
number of poor people has grown by 4.6 million since 2006, not by 9.7
million as the bureau reported in September. At least 39 states showed
no statistically significant poverty growth despite surging
unemployment, according to an analysis by The New York Times,
including Michigan, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Tennessee and Texas.

In North Carolina, poverty has risen by more than 250,000 people by
official count, but stayed flat under the alternate measure despite
soaring unemployment.

One explanation can be found in programs the official count ignores:
food stamps and tax credits. Combined the two programs delivered $221
billion across the country last year, according to the Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities, more than doubling since 2006.

In Charlotte, Angelique Melton was among the beneficiaries. A divorced
mother of two, Ms. Melton, 42, had worked her way up to a $39,000 a
year position at a construction management firm. But as building
halted in 2009, Ms. Melton lost her job.

Struggling to pay the rent and keep the family adequately fed, she
took the only job she could find: a part-time position at Wal-Mart
that paid less than half her former salary. With an annual income of
about $7,500 — well below the poverty line of $17,400 for a family of
three — Ms. Melton was officially poor.

Unofficially she was not.

After trying to stretch her shrunken income, Ms. Melton signed up for
$3,600 a year in food stamps and received $1,800 in nutritional
supplements from the Women, Infants and Children program. And her
small salary qualified her for large tax credits, which arrive in the
form of an annual check — in her case for about $4,000.

Along with housing aid, those subsidies gave her an annual income of
nearly $18,800 — no one’s idea of rich, but by the new count not poor.

“They help you, my God,” Ms. Melton said. “I would not have made it otherwise.”

The official way of counting poverty — beloved not even by many of the
people who run the count — is a historical artifact. A federal
official named Mollie Orshansky created it as a placeholder in 1963
until something more sophisticated came along.

It takes a limited view of income by counting cash alone. It ignores
expenses, like taxes and medical costs. And it set the poverty
threshold in an outmoded way — as a multiple of food costs, which have
dwindled as a share of most budgets, as is typical as a country
becomes richer over time.

All three elements need updating, experts say. Yet other than to
adjust the poverty line for inflation, the government has not changed
it since Ms. Orshansky’s day. Efforts to do so have been slowed by
both technical and political concerns. Conservatives worry liberals
will inflate the number to justify more spending; liberals worry
conservatives will define poverty away.

Virtually every effort to take a fuller view — counting more income
and more expenses — shows poverty rising more slowly in the recession
than the official data suggests. That is true of localized studies in
New York City and Wisconsin and at least four different national data
sets that the Census Bureau publishes. While the official national
measure shows a rise of 9.8 million people, the fuller census measures
show a range from 4.5 million to 4.8 million.

“That’s a big difference,” said Timothy Smeeding, an economist at the
University of Wisconsin who oversaw the study in that state. “It’s
about time we started counting the programs we use to fight poverty.”

Arloc Sherman, a senior researcher at the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities, said the new measure “is showing that government help is
keeping millions of families above the poverty line right now.”

While most scholars have called the fuller measure a step forward,
Robert Rector, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, argues that both
census counts — old and new — sharply overstate the amount of
deprivation in the United States. In a recent study, he cited
government data showing many poor families had game systems like Xbox.

“When the American public hears the word poverty, they are thinking
about material hardship — bad housing, homelessness and hunger,” he
said. “Most of the people that are defined as poor by the government
are not poor in that sense.”

One consistent finding in the alternate measures is that poverty falls
among children, the target of many government programs. And it rises
among Americans 65 or older, who often have high out-of-pocket medical
costs, despite being covered by Medicare.

Such is the case for John William Springs, 69, a retired city worker
in Charlotte who gets nearly $12,000 a year in Social Security and
disability checks. That leaves him about $1,300 above the poverty
threshold for a single adult his age — officially not poor. Then
again, Mr. Springs had a heart attack last summer and struggles with
lung disease. Factor in the $2,500 a year that he estimates he spends
on medicine, and Mr. Springs crosses the statistical line into
poverty.

An upbeat survivor of a lifetime of need, Mr. Springs fills his
prescriptions in partial amounts and argues the poverty counters got
him right the first time.

“I ain’t poor,” he said. “I eat. I got a roof over my head.”

Some experts say cases like that of Mr. Springs may point to a hidden
need among the elderly, whose official poverty rates have sharply
declined over the past generation. Others have cautioned that the new
measure still has flaws — failing to capture, for instance, that many
elderly can draw from savings and are less reliant on annual income
and benefits than younger people.

One concern in recent years is the sharp rise in “deep” poverty,
defined as living on less than half the money it would take to no
longer be poor. That is partly because of changes that make cash
welfare harder to get. Yet many of the very poor do receive food
stamps, a program whose rapid expansion has made it a safety net of
last resort.

In part by counting food stamps, the fuller Census measure analyzed by
The Times shows deep poverty falling by nearly 25 percent.

At the same time, all the new measures show many more people in “near
poverty” — living on incomes between 100 percent and 150 percent of
the poverty line. The alternate census data show a 50 percent rise in
their numbers, with 44 million Americans in that economic band, where
benefits dwindle in sums lost to taxes and child care, and medical
expenses mount. “That’s where your safety net benefits phase out,”
said Sheila Zedlewski, a researcher at the Urban Institute.

Even with assistance, life is a series of hard choices. Ashley Bolton
was lifted above the poverty line under the new measure by about
$10,000 in federal programs that cushioned her earnings as a hostess
at the Original Pancake House in Charlotte. Still, sometimes she lets
her car insurance lapse. She juggles two part-time jobs with classes
to become a pharmacy technician, and relies on her mother, who works
nights, to put her children to bed.

“I live the recession,” Ms. Bolton said. “All that stuff that happened
to people — that’s my life every day.”
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