Wednesday, November 9, 2011

The bleak face of U.S. poverty No matter how you slice it, the new census numbers show the last decade has been a disaster By Andrew Leonard / Salon

Monday, Nov 7, 2011 5:00 PM 22:50:44 PST

The bleak face of U.S. poverty

No matter how you slice it, the new census numbers show the last decade has been a disaster

america poverty
“Bleak Portrait of Poverty Is Off the Mark, Experts Say,” blared the Friday headline in the New York Times. The traditional strategy for measuring poverty, we were told, did not include the benefits of federal programs like food stamps and tax credits that were helping to keep Americans above the poverty line. A new, “supplemental measure” from the U.S. Census that took such factors into account would reveal that many Americans thought to be living below the poverty line were actually above it — “as much as half of the reported rise in poverty since 2006 disappears,” declared the Times.
I discussed the likely political implications of this rejiggering in my last post. But on Monday the census unveiled its report, and a first look at the numbers suggests that the Times’ preview was a bit off-base. According to the census’s new interpretation of the numbers, the total number of people living in poverty America is higher than the traditional approach indicates.
Andrew Leonard
Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21. More Andrew Leonard

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