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David Brady
Photo:Jon Gardiner |
Each August, we Americans tell ourselves a lie. That's when
the U.S. Census Bureau releases the official poverty rates
for the year. The rates for 2004, made public on August 30,
prompted pundits, politicians, the press, and the president
to engage in their annual rehearsal of empty remarks on why
poverty was higher than last year. As usual, they attributed
this failure to things that really have nothing to do with
poverty's true causes. In my research and in a freshman seminar
on poverty, I explore the nature of poverty in affluent democracies.
Central to this inquiry is a deep skepticism for the flawed
official poverty statistics. My students and I have scrutinized
the official statistics and concluded that the entire annual
ritual of announcing and discussing them is profoundly dishonest.
This dishonesty is not because U.S. poverty is insignificant.
While 12.7 percent of the U.S., or nearly 37 million people,
are "officially" poor," better estimates put
those numbers closer to 18 percent, or 50 million people.
As part of my seminar, I explain that U.S. poverty is nearly
twice that of Canada and the U.K and about three times that
of many European countries. My students are surprised to
learn that the richest country in the world has the most
poverty of any industrialized democracy.
The dishonesty is not the fault of government statisticians
like Molly Orshansky, who unwittingly constructed the formula
for the official measure in 1963. With data from 1955, Orshansky
multiplied the Department of Agriculture's "low-cost
food budget" by three, assuming food amounted to one-third
of a family's expenses. She developed this poverty line purely
for research purposes, never intended it to form a basis
for formulating policy, and quickly repudiated it.
President Lyndon B. Johnson's administration substituted
the "economy food plan," which was about 25 percent
lower, and made it the official measure. The line was purposely
set low, so that the administration could "win" the
War on Poverty. The measure neglects taxes and government
assistance, has been adjusted only for inflation, and, as
a result, ignores the enormous changes in families since
1955. For one thing, food only amounts to about one-sixth
of a family's budget today. For another, the official poverty
line underestimates the cost of necessities like health care
and health insurance, child care, housing, and transportation--some
of which have risen in real cost (after inflation) much faster
than food.
The Census Bureau, aware of these problems, presents alternatives
and pushes Congress to revise the official measure. Unfortunately,
it has never been revised--though one such attempt occurred
in an episode of The West Wing.
In my seminar, students learn that most international poverty
researchers use a relative measure--a person is poor relative
to the living standards and customs of a time and place.
A student in my class may raise the argument that has been
brought up again and again in debates about poverty: "The
U.S. poor are rich compared with people in developing countries."
But the American poor don't live in developing countries.
Heck, if one plays with comparisons to previous centuries
or Africa, it is easy to say that there are no poor people
in the U.S. The poor are poor relative to what it takes to
make ends meet and participate as citizens in contemporary
U.S. communities. I try to help my students understand this
point by referencing Michael Harrington, who wrote, "To
have one bowl of rice in a society where all other people
have half a bowl may well be a sign of achievement and intelligence....
To have five bowls of rice in a society where the majority
have a decent, balanced diet is a tragedy."
As part of my seminar, I teach students how to construct
state-of-the-art poverty measures, which embrace relative
poverty. First, we estimate the median income after considering
all taxes and assistance. Then, we define poverty as living
in a household with less than 50 percent of that median.
With this measure, the Luxembourg Income Study, the most
sophisticated international poverty research outfit, estimates
that 17 percent of the U.S. would have been poor in 2000--not
the official 11.3 percent.
To see how this affects policy, the students examine the
debate surrounding President George W. Bush's push to privatize
Social Security. They analyze data from the Luxembourg Income
Study and reconsider the rhetoric that "the U.S. has
conquered elderly poverty." Sure, the elderly live more
securely than in the 1960s, and Social Security certainly
has reduced elderly poverty. But, according to the Luxembourg
Income Study, 24.7 percent of the elderly were poor in 2000,
not the official 9.9 percent.
The dishonesty of official poverty is not entirely the responsibility
of politicians. Although many are guilty of an unwillingness
to revise the official measure, I've never heard any politician
intentionally misrepresent poverty statistics. In contrast
to budget debates, for example, political commentary on poverty
statistics seems quaintly sincere.
The dishonesty is really the fault of us, the American people.
Only on rare occasions, as in the weeks following the devastation
from Hurricane Katrina, do we even bother to acknowledge
the poor. Most of the time, we contentedly believe that only
a few people are poor, and those undeserving poor have themselves
to blame.
This, of course, is a lie. But when we are told a lie many,
many times, and obvious evidence, if we bothered to look
at it, shows it is false, we are equally responsible for
perpetuating the dishonesty.
Brady is an assistant professor of sociology.
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