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Those
Who Don't Get By
by Barbara Ehrenreich
The
view from the White House, not to mention much of Capitol Hill,
is idyllic. True, there are a few blotches on the landscape--a
queasy stock market and what conservatives see as a long-running
deterioration of America's core moral values. But other than
that, what's to complain? Americans are gratefully cashing in
their tax rebates to redo the kitchen counters or pay off some
credit card bills. Welfare reform has been declared a universal
success, with more than 60 percent of former recipients making
their own way in the job market. Unemployment is yesterday's
problem, and the official poverty rate has reached a comfortingly
low 12 percent.
But
look more closely and the scenery becomes a whole lot grimmer.
On July 24, the Washington, D.C.-based Economic Policy Institute
released a report showing that 29 percent of American families
with young children--precisely the sort of families that policymakers
should be most concerned about--do not earn enough to live at
any acceptable level of comfort and security.
The
EPI researchers got to this appallingly high number by calculating
the basic--make that very basic--budget a family needs to live
on. This is a budget that includes health insurance, child care
costs, and telephone, but no meals out, vacations, movies, cigarettes,
beer, or other routine middle class indulgences. So, for nearly
a third of American families, things that the more affluent
take for granted--like Internet access, video rentals, and occasional
cab rides--are almost impossible luxuries.
But
they get by, don't they? Not exactly.
Of
the families who earned less than the "basic" budget,
which amounts to $33,511 for a family of four, more than 70
percent worried about food, sometimes missed rent payments,
and/or had to rely on an emergency room for their medical care.
Nearly 30 percent reported facing far more dire hardships--having
to miss meals, forgoing needed medical care, being evicted from
their housing.
In
a purely selfish way, I'm relieved by all this statistical bad
news: At least it shows that the conditions I faced while researching
my recent book, Nickel
and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, were not due
entirely to my own bad luck or incompetence.
I
spent a total of three months, in three different cities, attempting
to support myself on the wages I could earn as an entry-level
worker--as a waitress, a hotel housekeeper, a maid with a housecleaning
service, a nursing home aide, and a Wal-Mart floor clerk. At
the risk of spoiling the story for you, the result was that
I could not make ends meet, not with one job, anyway. I averaged
$7/hour, an amount that fell tragically short of my barebones
expenses--gas, food, and, above all, rent.
My
co-workers had various strategies for coping.
Many
of them shared expenses with another breadwinner--a husband,
boyfriend, or grown child.
A
surprisingly high number worked more than one job--typically
an eight-hour shift followed by a six-hour one--an arrangement
that is utterly destructive to family life as well as health
and stamina.
Most
passed on the company's health insurance, simply because they
couldn't afford to pay the employee contribution, which was
often well over $100 a month.
Possibly
some of them received help from the government in the form of
food stamps or the Earned Income Tax Credit, although I never
once heard these programs mentioned.
But
some of my co-workers were clearly not coping.
I
worked alongside people who turned out to be homeless, although
in the peculiar hierarchy of poverty, they didn't consider themselves
homeless as long as they had a van or a car to sleep in.
Others
were not getting enough to eat, and not, as I first imagined,
because they were dieting.
Lunch,
in low-wage America, can mean a small-size bag of Doritos or
a few hot dog rolls.
What
my experience shows anecdotally, and the EPI's "Hardships
in America" report shows far more systematically, is that
we've been fooling ourselves with the official poverty level,
now pegged at $17,463 for a family of four. That number is still
calculated by the archaic method of taking the bare bones cost
of food for a family of a given size and multiplying this number
by three. Yet food is relatively inflation-proof, at least compared
to medical care and housing costs. Rents especially have gone
through the roof: I found a half-size trailer renting for $625
a month, a room in a genuinely creepy residential motel for
$250 a week. But the government persists in believing that "low-rent"
is an appropriate synonym for "poor."
There's
another reason for our leaders' inability to see the true extent
of economic misery in America: They're used to thinking of poverty
as a consequence of unemployment. Hence, for example, the optimistic
assumption that welfare recipients would be lifted out of poverty
once they were hustled into the workforce. But the relatively
high-paying, traditionally unionized blue collar jobs that brought
an earlier generation into the middle class have been deindustrialized
out of existence. What's left are the service and retail jobs--and
a new world of relentless toil, rewarded by poverty-level wages.
If
the consequences of this massive economic shift are almost invisible
from Pennsylvania Avenue, they are painfully evident to America's
hard-pressed charities.
According
to the hunger-relief organization America's Second Harvest,
food banks all over the country are experiencing "a torrent
of need which [they] cannot meet," and the U.S. Conference
of Mayors reports that 67 percent of the adults requesting emergency
food aid are now working people with jobs.
Almost
everyone--94 percent of Americans, according to a 2000 poll
conducted by Jobs for the Future, a Boston-based employment
research firm--agrees that "people who work full time should
be able to earn enough to keep their families out of poverty."
When that straightforward proposition no longer holds, then
the social contract, at least as I always understood it, is
no longer in force. And it is hard to imagine a more serious
abrogation of "America's core moral values" than that.
We
have a choice: either raise all wages to a "living wage"
level or greatly expand the government programs that make life
a little easier for low-wage families--food stamps, health insurance,
child care subsidies, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and--yes--welfare
for families whose breadwinners must stay home as caregivers
for the very young, the elderly, or the chronically ill. Ideally,
we should do both.
At
4.5 percent unemployment, most Americans who can work have jobs.
Now it's the system that isn't working.
Source:
http://www.TheProgressive.org/0901/ehr0901.html
Related
Story:
Rich-Poor Gap
Widening
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