Five
Misconceptions About Our Tattered Safety Net
Mitt Romney said he
wasn't concerned about the very poor, because they have a safety net. This is
typical of the widespread ignorance about inequality in our country. Struggling
Americans want jobs, not handouts, and for the most part they've paid for their
"safety net." The real problem is at the other end of the wealth gap.
How many people know that
out of 150 countries, we have the 4th-highest wealth disparity? Only Zimbabwe,
Namibia, and Switzerland are worse.
It's not just economic
inequality that's plaguing our country. It's lack of opportunity. It's a
dismissal of poor people as lazy, or as threats to society. More than any other
issue over the next four years, we need to address the growing divide in our
nation, to tone down our winner-take-all philosophy, to provide job
opportunities for people who want to contribute to society.
Here are some of the
common misconceptions:
1. Americans believe that
the poorest 40 percent own about 10% of the wealth.
Most people greatly
underestimate the level of inequality in our country, guessing that the poorest
40 percent own about 10% of the wealth, when in reality they own much less than
1% of the wealth. Out of every dollar, they own a third of a penny.
Factor in race, and it
gets worse. Much of minority wealth exists in home values. But housing crashed,
while the financial wealth owned almost entirely (93% of it) by the richest
quintile of Americans has rebounded to lofty pre-recession levels.
As a result, for every
dollar of NON-HOME wealth owned by white families, people of color have only
one cent. Median wealth for a single white woman is over $40,000. For black and
Hispanic women it is a little over $100.
2. Entitlements are the
problem
No, they're not. The
evidence is overwhelming. Social Security is a popular and well-run program. As
summarized by Bernie Sanders, "Social Security, which is funded by the
payroll tax, has not contributed one nickel to the deficit and, according to
its trustees, can pay 100 percent of all benefits owed to every eligible
American for the next 21 years." Dean Baker calls it "perhaps the
greatest success story of any program in US history."
Medicare, which is
largely without the profit motive and the competing sources of billing, is
efficiently run, for all eligible Americans. According to the Council for
Affordable Health Insurance, medical administrative costs as a percentage of
claims are about three times higher for private insurance than for Medicare.
And it's just as popular as Social Security.
3. Welfare benefits are a
drag on the economy
Critics bemoan the
amounts of aid being lavished on lower-income Americans, making dubious claims
about thousands of dollars going to every poor family.
But despite an
ever-growing need for jobs and basic living necessities, federal spending on
poverty programs is a small part of the budget, and it's been that way for
almost 50 years, increasing from 0.8 percent of GDP in 1962 to 1.2 percent of
GDP in 2007.
Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families (TANF) has dropped significantly over the past 15 years, leaving
benefit levels far below the poverty line for most families. Ninety percent of
the available benefits go to the elderly, the disabled, or working households.
For each family, current
federal budgets pay about $400 per month for food, housing, and traditional
'welfare' programs. Food stamp recipients get $4.30 a day.
4. The American Dream is
still alive -- if you just work hard
The Horatio Alger tale
has been a popular one for conservatives, but the OECD, the Economic Policy
Institute, and the National Journal all came to the same conclusion: the future
earnings of a child in the U.S. is closely correlated to the earnings of his or
her parents. This lack of mobility is more prevalent in the U.S. than in almost
all other OECD countries.
Only 4 percent of those
raised in the bottom quintile make it to the top quintile as adults. Only about
20 percent even make it to the top half.
A big part of the problem
is the severe degree of poverty for our nation's children. According to UNICEF,
among industrialized countries only Romania has a higher child poverty rate
than the United States. Just in the last ten years the number of impoverished
American children increased by 30 percent.
Not unexpectedly, it's
much worse for minorities. While 12 percent of white children live in poverty,
35 percent of Hispanic children and 39% of black children start their lives in
conditions that make simple survival more important than the American Dream. 80
percent of black children who started in or near the top half of U.S. income
levels experienced downward mobility later in life.
5. Prison puts away the
bad guys
Despite a falling violent
crime rate in the U.S., there are now, as noted by Adam Gopnik, "more
people under 'correctional supervision' in America -- more than six million --
than were in the Gulag Archipelago under Stalin at its height."
Incredibly, almost half
of the inmates in federal prisons were jailed for drug offenses. Between 1980
and 2003, the number of drug offenders in prison or jail increased by 1100%
from 41,100 in 1980 to 493,800 in 2003.
Outrageously, African
Americans constituted 53.5 percent of all persons who entered prison because of
a drug conviction. In the nation's largest cities, drug arrests for African
Americans rose at three times the rate for whites from 1980 to 2003.
In Washington, D.C., it
is estimated that three out of four young black men will serve time in prison.
In New York, with 50,000 marijuana arrests per year, 90% are black or Latino.
In Seattle, the 8% black population accounts for 60 percent of the arrests.
Over the last ten years Colorado police have arrested Latinos at 1.5 times the
rate of whites, and blacks at over 3 times the rate of whites. Newly passed
marijuana laws reflect the beginnings of a backlash.
Perversely, this is all
happening as studies by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration find that both black and Hispanic adolescents use drugs LESS
than the general population, and as a study by the National Institute of Health
shows that the prevalence of marijuana use in colleges and universities was
highest for white students.
The Greatest
Misconception: The rich are being "soaked"
Redistribution has not
spread the wealth, it has concentrated the wealth. Conservative estimates say
the richest 1% have doubled their share of America's income in 30 years. It's
worse. From 1980 to 2006, the richest 1% actually TRIPLED their share of
after-tax income.
The real problem is tax
avoidance: lost revenue from tax expenditures (deferrals and deductions),
corporate tax avoidance, and tax haven losses could pay off the entire deficit.
But the very rich refuse to pay. They have their own safety net in the House of
Representatives.
http://www.nationofchange.org/five-misconceptions-about-our-tattered-safety-net-1352698629
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