The poor in America in free-fall - capitalism is failing !
The level of income inequality stretches much higher in the United
States than in the other developed countries of Europe and North
America. Now a report from the International Labour Organization (ILO) shows that U.S. inequality has literally gone off the chart.
Income inequality in the United States is soaring so high, in fact, that the
authors of the ILO’s new 2013 World of Work report couldn’t even place
the United States on the same graph with the other 25 developed
countries their new study examines.
Download 'The World of Work' Report from the ILO http://t.co/nBKBY17DM9
Income inequality reflects the sum total of all the differences between
the incomes enjoyed by different households in a country. Differences
between rich and poor households, rich and middle-income households,
middle-income and poor households all enter into total income
inequality.
Researchers usually measure income inequality using
a statistic called the Gini coefficient. The Gini coefficient runs from
a minimum of 0 (perfect equality in incomes across all households) to
100 (one rich household gets all the income for an entire country).
More than 46.1 Million Americans in Poverty, inequality in 'freefall' view chart on U.S. poverty.
In 1967, 14.5 percent of Americans were poor, living on less than
$17,400 for a family of three. In 2010, the last year for which data
is available, that percentage is 15.2—some 46.1 million Americans in
poverty. The chart includes data on those in “deep poverty,” defined as a
family of three living on less than $8,700 per year. In 2010, 6.8
percent of the U.S. population was deeply poor—20.5 million people—and
you know a lot of them are children
The ILO report places the US Gini coefficient at 47.7, or almost half
way toward the extreme where one rich household gets everything and
everyone else gets nothing.
By comparison, the levels of inequality in the other 25 developed countries studied all fall in a band between 20 and 35.
Even worse, in America inequality is not only high but rising. The
Unites States is one of only three developed countries where income
inequality rose during the recession of 2008-2009, then continued rising
through the lacklustre recovery of 2010-2011.
The other two:
Denmark and France. Both these countries had much lower levels of
inequality to start with. By 2011, Denmark’s inequality had risen into
the high 20s and France’s inequality into the low 30s.
In the United States inequality sat at 46.3 before the recession, moved to 47.0 in 2010, and rose further to 47.7 in 2011.
Rising inequality has hit the American middle class particularly hard.
But America’s middle class decline began well before the recession hit
in 2008. Every year fewer and fewer Americans qualify as middle class,
and those who do have lower and lower incomes.
The share of
U.S. adults living in middle-income households, the new ILO report
notes, dropped from 61 to 51 percent between 1970 and 2010, and the
median incomes of these households fell 5 percent.
Where has
the middle class held its own in recent decades? Well, in Denmark and
France, among other countries. The country with the largest middle class
according to the ILO’s calculations is Norway, where about 70 percent
of the population rate as middle class.
In the United States today only about 52 percent of the population can claim middle class status.
The World of Work report concludes that the middle class in the United
States and around the world is suffering from “long-term unemployment,
weakening job quality, and workers dropping out of the labour market
altogether.” Things have been bad for a long time, but the recession has
made them far worse.
The ILO, founded in 1946, now operates a
specialist agency of the United Nations. The world’s employers and
workers are equally represented on its governing board, alongside the
representatives of 28 governments, including the United States
government.
Different international organisations use different
data sources for comparing inequality levels across countries. The ILO
World of Work report uses raw data from the Census Bureau for the United
States and from Eurostat for European countries.
The empirical evidence says that we can reduce inequality and bolster
the middle class by putting people back to work. But that will take
government action, that will mean looking at whether capitalism is compatible with peoples demands.
copy to: ALF-CIO, IBEW Local 1249 IBEW LOCAL 104 Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA) American CP USA Peoples World EAPN - European Anti Poverty Network The Irish National Organisation of the Unemployed .
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It’s the unemployed who are the forgotten victims & who seem to be demonised, patronised & blamed for unemployment within the wider media. In 1995 Labour shadow ministers did give clear indications, if elected, they would tackle some of the worse parts of JSA. They gave assurances & intention to make “speedy and far reaching reforms to eliminate the worse excesses” Not scrapping the "Job Seekers Allowance" is Labours’ Betrayal!
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Monday, 10 June 2013
More than 46.1 Million Americans in Poverty, inequality in 'freefall' - capitalism failing !
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This is cool!
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