[D66] US hunger, homelessness soar amid cuts in social spending
Antid Oto
protocosmos66 at gmail.com
Fri Dec 16 09:40:45 CET 2011
US hunger, homelessness soar amid cuts in social spending
Half of Americans either poor or low-income
By Andre Damon
16 December 2011
Amid continuous attacks on social services in the United States, hunger and
homelessness are growing at epidemic rates, according to a report released
Thursday by the United States Conference of Mayors.
The group’s annual survey of hunger and homelessness in its 29 member-cities
states that requests for emergency food assistance grew by 15.5 percent in the
past year. The number of homeless families grew by 16 percent. The survey covers
the period between September 1, 2010 and August 31, 2011.
The mayors’ report is but the latest in a string of recent studies documenting
the growth of poverty and social inequality in the US. Two days earlier, the
National Center on Family Homelessness reported a 38 percent increase in child
homelessness between 2007 and 2010, with the result that one in 45 American
children are homeless. (See: “US child homelessness soars”).
The Associated Press, citing Census figures released last month, reported
Thursday that half of the American population is either poor or low-income. With
long-term unemployment at record levels, food pantries and homeless shelters are
being overwhelmed by the growing ranks of the poor.
These grim statistics, which provide only a pale reflection of cascading human
suffering and social distress, make a mockery of the claims of the Obama
administration and the media that the US in an economic “recovery.” In recent
days, Obama has hailed the November jobs report, which registered a 0.4 percent
decline in the official unemployment rate to 8.6 percent, as evidence that his
policies are working. He ignores the fact that the drop in the jobless rate was
due to the exodus of 315,000 discouraged job-seekers from the labor force.
Nor has Obama mentioned, in his stage-managed attempts to present himself as an
advocate of “middle-class” workers, any of the recent reports documenting the
social disaster fuelled by his pro-corporate policies.
The mayors’ report cites cuts in federal commodities and funding as a factor in
the diminishing ability of emergency kitchens and food pantries to keep up with
surging demand. It notes that 27 percent of the people needing emergency food
assistance did not receive it.
The amount of food distributed has failed to keep pace. While demand for food
aid shot up by 15 percent, the amount of food given out by cities increased by
only 10 percent.
The inadequacy of resources has had a tangible effect: 86 percent of cities
surveyed said that food pantries and emergency kitchens have had to reduce the
amount of food given out to visitors. Eighty two percent said they had been
forced to turn people away from food kitchens, and 68 percent said they had to
tighten rules on how often families could visit food pantries.
None of the 29 cities surveyed said they expected the demand for emergency food
assistance to fall in the next year, while all but two expected the demand to
increase.
Meanwhile, three quarters of the cities said they expected the amount of money
available for aid to fall next year, and 41 percent said the decrease would be
“substantial.”
About half of those seeking emergency food assistance came as families. A
quarter were employed. Eleven percent were homeless.
Sixty percent of the cities reported an increase in family homelessness. Among
individuals, homelessness increased by 6 percent.
The mayors’ survey found that an average of 18 percent of homeless people who
requested assistance did not receive it. It also found that shelters in two
thirds of the surveyed cities were forced to turn away homeless families with
children, while 70 percent had to turn away individuals.
Sixty four percent of surveyed cities said they expected the number of homeless
families to increase next year, while the same percentage of cities said they
expected the amount of recourses available to help the homeless to decrease.
Individual cities paint an even bleaker picture of social distress. In Detroit,
the number of requests for emergency food assistance grew by 30 percent in the
past year, while in Salt Lake City, Utah the figure grew by 35 percent.
The mayors’ report comes a month after the Census Bureau released its 2010
Supplemental Poverty Measure, which, employing different criteria than the
official report, increased the number of Americans estimated to be in poverty
from 46.2 million to 49 million and the poverty rate from 15.1 to 16 percent.
Buried within the Supplemental Poverty Measure report is perhaps its most
shocking finding: the percentage of the population classified as “low-income,”
that is, making between 100 and 200 percent of the poverty rate, has nearly
doubled. The official statistic puts the portion of families making between 100
and 200 percent of the poverty rate at 18.8 percent of the total population,
while the new statistic puts it at 31.8 percent.
According to the supplemental Census report, there are 49.1 million people in
poverty and an additional 97.3 million who are considered low-income. The two
figures combined total 146.4 million out of a population of 300 million.
Alongside mass unemployment, falling wages play a critical role in the
staggering growth of poverty in the US. Just over the past 12 months, wages have
fallen by 1.7 percent in real terms.
This is the result of a coordinated and national corporate assault on workers’
wages that was inaugurated with the Obama administration’s forced bankruptcy of
General Motors and Chrysler in 2009. Obama insisted that government loans to the
auto companies be contingent on a vast expansion of tier-two wages ($14 an hour)
for new-hires, and an overall reduction of labor costs to those at non-union
foreign transplant auto factories.
Together with the collapse in home values, mass unemployment and wage-cutting
have thrown even families with working adults into poverty. According to a study
by the Working Poor Families Project released this month, the portion of
employed families that classify as low-income grew from 27 percent in 2002 to
31.2 percent in 2010.
“Many of these families used to be solidly middle class but have seen their
incomes drop below the low-income threshold because of a pay cut, a reduction in
hours, or because a spouse lost their job,” said Mark Mather, a co-author of the
analysis.
In the face of this mounting social catastrophe, no section of the political
establishment, Democratic or Republican, is proposing any measures to alleviate
the crisis and create jobs. Rather, the entire framework of the official
discussion revolves around savage austerity measures to make the working class
pay for the multi-trillion-dollar bailout of the banks. These measures include
hundreds of billions of dollars in cuts to food stamps, home heating assistance,
education and core social programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.
http://wsws.org/articles/2011/dec2011/pove-d16.shtml
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