Jim Hightower: Poverty’s New Home
Its been nearly 50 years since poverty in America was a front-burner issue on our nations political agenda and its time to move it up again.
Even as those at the top of our society have grown fabulously richer in the past decade, those in the economic middle have seen incomes stagnate and fall, opportunities decline, and poverty become not about someone else, but about them. Numbers that were not even imaginable half a century ago are now our cold reality 50 million poor people, 51 million more who are near poor, almost one-in-four children under five years old living in poverty, and no sign of this mass decline decelerating.
The face of American poverty, however, has changed somewhat. In the sixties, the poor had largely been born into it and were out of most peoples sight tucked away in backwater rural counties and isolated urban ghettos. This kind of poverty persists, but todays big jump in numbers comes from families that have been knocked down from a middle-class life dismayed to find themselves among the long-term unemployed, grabbing at temporary low-paying jobs, and buying meager groceries with food stamps.
These are the new poor, but they also constitute a new demographic phenomenon: The suburban poor. Once the secure base of the middle-class, suburbs have become the fastest-growing home of American poverty. Since 2000, the number of suburban poor has surged by 64 percent, twice the rate of urban poor. By 2011, Americas suburbs held three million more poor people than were in our core cities.
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