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The working poor summary by chapter

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POVERTY& POWER THE PROBLEM OF STRUCTURAL INEQUALITY

EDWARD ROYCE

POVERTY & POW ER

R OYCE

ROW M

AN & LITTLEFIELD

ISBN-13: 978-0-7425-6443-5 ISBN-10: 0-7425-6443-6

9 780742 564435

9 0 0 0 0

SOCIOLOGY • AMERICAN STUDIES

“Poverty and Power is the single most comprehensive exploration of structural

inequality I have ever read. Brilliantly conceived, clearly written, and exhaus-

tively documented, the book systematically excoriates our prevailing belief that

poverty and inequality result from individuals’ bad decisions or bad personal

attributes. Poverty and Power will quickly become the ‘go-to book’ in under-

graduate classes, graduate seminars, and (hopefully) policy debates. The man-

uscript is spectacular. Can’t wait to use the book in class”

—Rick Eckstein, Villanova University

“Edward Royce’s Poverty and Power provides a comprehensive look at the rea-

sons why poverty persists in the United States and why it is taken for granted

by many Americans. Royce’s compelling argument identifi es the cause of pov-

erty as rooted in inequalities in power and politics and shows the inadequacies

of individualistic, cultural, and human capital theories of poverty.”

—Ellen Reese, University of California, Riverside

Poverty and Power suggests that today’s poverty results from deep-rooted dis-

parities in income, wealth, and power. The rate and severity of poverty remain

high, because millions of Americans are trapped in low-wage jobs, inadequately

served by government policy, excluded from mainstream policy debates, and

victimized by discrimination and social exclusion.

EDWARD ROYCE is associate professor of sociology at Rollins College.

For orders and information please contact the publisher Rowman & Littlefi eld Publishers, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefi eld Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200 Lanham, Maryland 20706 1-800-462-6420 www.rowmanlittlefi eld.com

PovPowerMECH.indd 1PovPowerMECH.indd 1 9/25/08 10:11:37 AM9/25/08 10:11:37 AM

Poverty and Power

Poverty and Power A Structural Perspective on American Inequality

Edward Royce

R O W M A N & L I T T L E F I E L D P U B L I S H E R S , I N C . Lanham • Boulder • New York • Toronto • Plymouth, UK

ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC.

Published in the United States of America by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706 www.rowmanlittlefield.com

Estover Road, Plymouth PL6 7PY, United Kingdom

Copyright © 2009 by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a re- trieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the pub- lisher.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Royce, Edward Cary.

Poverty and power : a structural perspective on American inequality / Edward Royce.

p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-7425-6443-5 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-7425-6443-6 (cloth : alk. paper) eISBN-13: 978-0-7425-5679-1 eISBN-10: 0-7425-6579-3

1. Poverty—United States. 2. Equality—United States. I. Title. HC110.P6R696 2009 339.4’60973—dc22

2008023463

Printed in the United States of America

�™ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992.

To my parents, Dick Royce and Phyllis Royce

Acknowledgments xi

1 Poverty as a Social Problem 1 The Problem of Poverty 2 The Individualistic Perspective and the Structural Perspective 13 Organization of the Book 15 Appendix 24

Part I: Individualistic Theories of Poverty and Inequality 27

2 The Biogenetic Theory of Poverty and Inequality 29 Our Fate Is in Our Genes 29 Genes, IQ, and Intelligence 31 Is It Better to Be Born Smart or Born Rich? 33 Genes, IQ, and Poverty 35 Conclusion 40

3 The Cultural Theory of Poverty and Inequality 47 Poverty as Deviance 47 The Origins and Development of the Cultural Theory 48 The Culture of the Poor 49 The Sources of the Cultural Deviance of the Poor 51 The Cultural Solution to the Problem of Poverty 53 Is the Cultural Theory Plausible? 55 How Well Does the Cultural Theory Know the Poor? 57 Do the Poor Differ from the Nonpoor, and If So How

and Why? 58 Conclusion 63

vii

Contents

4 The Human Capital Theory of Poverty and Inequality 71 Education Is the Key to Success 71 Acquiring Human Capital 73 Converting Human Capital 75 What You Know or Who You Are? 76 What You Know or Who You Know? 79 What You Know or Where You Work? 81 Skills Deficit or Jobs Deficit? 82 Conclusion 84

Part II: A Structural Perspective on Poverty—Four Systems 89

5 The Economic System and Poverty 91 The Economics of Poverty 91 Poverty and Economic Growth 93 Skill-Biased Technological Change 94 A Shift in the Balance of Economic Power 97 Deindustrialization 100 Globalization 103 Corporate Restructuring 107 A Shortage of Jobs 110 Conclusion 112

6 The Political System and Poverty 123 The Politics of Poverty 123 We’re Number One: The United States in Comparative

Perspective 124 The Structure of the American Political System 127 The Political Mobilization of Business 131 The Political Marginalization of the Working Class and

the Poor 132 The Synergy of Money and Power 136 Policy Consequences of the Power Shift: Robin Hood

in Reverse 139 Conclusion 146

7 The Cultural System and Poverty 157 Hearts and Minds 157 The American Dream and the Ideology of Individualism 159 Beliefs about Poverty and the Poor 161 Strong Individualism, Weak Structuralism 162 The News Media 165 The Right-Wing Ideology Machine 172 The Rightward Turn in Poverty Discourse 175 Conclusion 178

viii Contents

8 The Social System and Poverty 187 We Are Not Alone 187 Group Memberships 189 Neighborhood Effects 192 Social Networks and Social Capital 196 Conclusion 204

Part III: A Structural Perspective on Poverty—Ten Obstacles 215

9 Structural Obstacles and the Persistence of Poverty (I) 217 Racial and Ethnic Discrimination 218 Residential Segregation 222 Housing 226 Education 230 Transportation 234

10 Structural Obstacles and the Persistence of Poverty (II) 249 Sex Discrimination 249 Child Care 253 Health and Health Care 256 Retirement Insecurity 260 Legal Deprivation 264 Conclusion 268

11 Conclusion 283 Poverty and Power 283 Programs and Power 285 Movements and Power 289

Selected Bibliography 295

Index 317

About the Author 327

Contents ix

I could not have completed this book without the help I received from Doug Amy, Fran Deutsch, Eric Schutz, and Larry Van Sickle. These four friends kept me going, reading chapters as I wrote them and providing in- valuable feedback and encouragement all along the way. I am extremely grateful for all the time and effort they devoted to this project. Several other people commented on parts of the manuscript, advised me on the book proposal, and let me bounce ideas off them. For their generosity, support, and criticism, I would like to thank Wendy Brandon, Dan Czitrom, Rick Eckstein, Michele Ethier, Meryl Fingrutd, Susan Libby, Shannon Mariotti, Ellen Pader, Lisa Tillmann, Dave Walsh, and Tom Wartenberg. I would also like to thank Alan McClare and all the folks at Rowman & Littlefield.

xi

Acknowledgments

The most telling fact about poverty in the United States is how thoroughly it is ignored. The problem of poverty is rarely depicted on television shows or in the movies, receives only passing coverage from the news media, and is largely absent from the political agenda. Poverty has not always been so invisible. In the early 1960s, in the wake of the civil rights movement, politicians and the press discovered the poor, and in 1964, President Lyn- don Johnson declared an “unconditional war on poverty.”1 Martin Luther King Jr., along with other political and civil rights activists, kept the issue of poverty alive throughout most of the 1960s. Frustrated by the timidity and inadequate funding of Johnson’s antipoverty program, King put forward a more radical vision. He called upon the country to live up to its democratic ideals and moral principles: “The time has come for us to civilize ourselves by the total, direct and immediate abolition of poverty.”2

More than four decades later, not only have we failed to eradicate poverty, but the very idea of such an undertaking is barely contemplated in the mainstream public discourse. At best, poverty is considered a low-priority issue. The poor in the United States, so it is imagined, do not really have it so bad and their poverty, in any case, is due primarily to their own self-de- structive behaviors. On occasion, elected officials and political pundits do reflect on the plight of the poor, but mainly to worry about how to reduce “welfare dependency” or how members of the “underclass” might be per- suaded to conform to conventional norms.3 In 2005, Hurricane Katrina brought into public view the harsh realities of class and racial inequality in the United States, fueling speculation that a renewed war on poverty might be on the horizon, but the shocking images from New Orleans quickly faded, and the subsequent promise of “bold action” from the government

1

1 Poverty as a Social Problem

remains unfulfilled.4 After a rare and fleeting appearance center stage, poverty has once again slipped away behind the curtains.5

Why does it take a category-four hurricane to draw attention to problems of poverty and inequality? Why are these not matters of more urgent pub- lic discussion and more effective government policy? Why have we not heeded Martin Luther King’s appeal to rid our society of poverty once and for all? One reason is this: for many Americans, and most policy makers, the real problem is not poverty at all; the real problem is the poor.6 They have bad genes, poor work habits, and inadequate skills. Poverty is just a symp- tom, a regrettable by-product of individual failings. The hardships experi- enced by the poor stem from their own shortcomings, not from any dys- functions of the system, thus grand schemes to alleviate poverty are inherently misguided. It might be appropriate, according to this view, for government to lend a modest helping hand, aiding the poor in overcoming their defects, but in the end, self-improvement, not social reform, is the only credible remedy.

This book argues that we need to abandon the simplistic idea that poverty results from the moral weaknesses, bad behaviors, and inferior abil- ities of the poor. This way of thinking about poverty misrepresents the na- ture of the problem, obscuring its root causes and tragic consequences, and it constitutes a powerful barrier to a workable solution. What we need in- stead is an alternative structural perspective, what Alice O’Connor calls a “new poverty knowledge.”7 We need to recognize that the problems of poverty and inequality are inextricably bound to power-laden economic and political structures. These determine the allocation of resources and op- portunities, who gets what and how much. Theories attributing poverty to the failings of the poor neglect the big picture: the severity of the poverty problem ultimately depends on the availability of decent-paying jobs and the responsiveness of government to the needs of less-advantaged citizens.

THE PROBLEM OF POVERTY

The problem of poverty in the United States is far more serious than is com- monly imagined. Millions of Americans are denied equitable access to op- portunities for a quality education, a good job, a healthy living environ- ment, and a decent life. Poverty is hard on the poor. It is also inconsistent with the principles of equality and fairness to which most Americans sub- scribe. Can we be the kind of society we want to be while millions of Amer- icans suffer an inadequate standard of living? Indeed, one important reason for investigating poverty is precisely to determine what kind of a society we really are. To study American poverty is simultaneously to study American society.

2 Chapter 1

In the first section of this chapter, I set the stage by briefly examining sev- eral key aspects of the poverty problem in the United States.8 My objective in this discussion is to provide readers with an overview of certain disturb- ing facts about poverty and inequality and to show that poverty in the United States is a social problem deserving far more serious public atten- tion and political commitment than it currently receives. I then begin mak- ing the case for a structural perspective on poverty by comparing this ap- proach to the more conventional individualistic perspective. I conclude this chapter by explaining how this book is organized and by describing the framework I use to communicate a structural understanding of American poverty.

The Official Rate of Poverty in the United States Is Very High

The amount of poverty in the United States is substantial by any measure. In 2005, according to the calculations of the U.S. Census Bureau, nearly 37 million Americans were poor, 12.6 percent of the population. The rate of poverty is even higher for selected subgroups: 17.6 percent for children, 24.9 percent for African Americans, 34.5 percent for black children, 21.8 percent for Hispanics, 28.3 percent for Hispanic children, and 28.7 percent for female-headed households.9 Millions of other individuals and families live on the edge of poverty, barely scraping by, the American Dream well out of reach.10 Approximately 50 million people reside in households with in- comes below 125 percent of the poverty line; over 90 million, close to a third of the country, have incomes below twice the poverty line, less than $40,000 a year for a family of four.11 Many millions of Americans, these fig- ures reveal, are doing poorly in today’s economy, struggling just to eke out a living.

The Real Rate of Poverty in the United States Is Even Higher

In 2005, according to the official poverty measure, a four-person family with two children was counted as poor if its yearly pre-tax income totaled less than $19,806.12 Opinion polls show that the majority of Americans be- lieve this is not nearly enough money to make ends meet. The current poverty threshold, in the judgment of the U.S. public, is too low by several thousand dollars. To most Americans, the real poverty population is sub- stantially larger than the official poverty population.13

Many experts agree.14 As one alternative to the existing poverty measure, Heather Boushey and her colleagues estimate “basic family budgets,” ad- justed for family size and residential location. These budgets, which tabu- late the cost of essential goods and services, are designed to “determine the number of working families with incomes too low for a safe and decent

Poverty as a Social Problem 3

living standard.”15 The size of the poverty population in the United States according to this family budget measure is more than twice the official count.16 The United States has a serious poverty problem even according to the current measure, but in the assessment of the American public and many policy specialists as well, the level of real poverty is much greater than the official numbers indicate.

Poverty in the United States Is Worse than in Other Developed Countries

The rate of poverty in the United States is very high, and it looks even higher, extraordinarily so in fact, when contrasted with the rate of poverty in other industrialized countries. The United States may be falling behind on some counts, but when it comes to producing poor people, we outper- form our chief competitors by a wide margin. In the mid-1990s, the United States had the highest rate of poverty among nineteen rich nations, more than twice the average of these countries.17 In a more recent study of eight developed nations from circa 2000, using a “relative poverty line” set at 50 percent of median income, the United States once again comes out on top with a poverty rate of 17 percent, beating out our closest rivals, the United Kingdom with 12.3 percent and Canada with 11.9 percent.18 The real pur- chasing power of poor families in the United States is also lower than in other advanced economies, and the income gap between the rich and the poor is greater.19 The poor in the United States are worse off in absolute terms than are the poor in most other industrialized nations, and they are worse off relative to their fellow citizens as well.20 Based on a careful exam- ination of the cross-national data, Alberto Alesina and Edward Glaeser con- clude that, compared to the poor in European countries, the “American poor are really poor.”21

The rate of poverty among children in the United States is also particu- larly high by international standards. In the 1990s, according to Lee Rain- water and Timothy Smeeding, the United States ranked number one in child poverty among developed nations, with a rate more than twice that of most other wealthy countries.22 In a detailed comparison of the United States and Germany, they find that American children not only have a higher incidence of poverty, they are also poor for longer periods of time and more likely, if poor as children, to fall into poverty as adults.23 A 2005 UNICEF report reveals the same pattern. With the exception of Mexico, it found the United States has by far the greatest level of child poverty among fifteen industrialized countries. The number of children below a poverty line defined as 50 percent of median income exceeds 20 percent in the United States, while in seven of the fifteen countries studied fewer than 10 percent of children are poor—only 2.8 percent in Finland, 3.4 in Norway,

4 Chapter 1

and 4.2 in Sweden.24 A subsequent UNICEF “report card,” which used forty separate indicators to assess child well-being, ranked the United States and the United Kingdom last among twenty-one rich countries.25 Poverty is a common occurrence for American children, much more so than for chil- dren in other wealthy countries, and child poverty in the United States is an uncommonly harsh experience as well, with lasting social and economic consequences.

Poverty in the United States Is a Persistent Problem

Not only is there a lot of poverty in the United States today, but the rate of poverty has remained persistently high over the past three decades. The official poverty rate declined substantially during the 1960s, from 22.4 per- cent in 1959 to a historic low of 11.1 percent in 1973. The level of poverty remained relatively stable during the 1970s, increased during the 1980s, and stayed at a high level throughout most of the next decade. As the em- ployment picture improved in the late 1990s, poverty too began to decline, falling to a near-record low of 11.3 percent in 2000. Since then, however, even though the economy has recovered from the 2001 recession, the rate of poverty has once again crept upward, rising to 12.6 percent in 2005.26

While the size of the poverty population fluctuates from year to year, the longer-term trend line is sobering: despite continued economic growth and rising per capita income there has been no large or lasting reduction in the rate of poverty since the 1960s.27 It is remarkable to consider, moreover, that at no point since the government began collecting data on poverty have fewer than one in ten Americans been poor.

The Relative Deprivation and Social Exclusion of the Poor

The official poverty measure in the United States, devised in the early 1960s, is based on an “absolute” standard.28 The poverty line is set at a fixed level of income, just enough to meet basic subsistence needs, and it is ad- justed only for family size, number of children, and the rate of inflation. It is not revised to take into account changes in patterns of consumption or in customary notions about what people need to live a minimally decent life. The definition of poverty stays constant over time; the criterion for counting someone as poor is the same today as it was in the 1960s.29

While the poverty threshold remains unchanged, the standard of living for average Americans has improved over the past several decades. The gap between the income of those officially regarded as poor and the income of households at the median has widened, and so has the distance between how they live their lives. In 2005, the poverty line for a family of four was only 29 percent of median family income, down from 48 percent in 1960.30

Poverty as a Social Problem 5

The poor in the 2000s, compared to the poor in the early 1960s, can less af- ford the life of the typical American where, for example, cable television, cell phones, computers, and Internet access are the norm. The poor today are less financially able than in the past to participate as equal and full- fledged members of society. The bar has been raised for entry into the so- cial and economic mainstream, leaving poorer Americans more vulnerable to “social exclusion.”31 The deprivation endured by poor families is greater nowadays because they are worse off relative to middle-class American households than the poor of earlier decades and because they are much worse off relative to the rich.

More of Today’s Poor Are Severely Poor

The poor in the 2000s are also more deeply poor than in previous decades.32 One way to calculate the depth of poverty is to measure the “poverty gap”: how far the average poor person or poor family falls below its respective poverty threshold. Between 1959 and 1973, the average poverty gap for families declined from $7,126 to $6,373. The extremity of poverty has increased significantly since the early 1970s, however, growing even during the boom years of the late 1990s. In 2000, the income of the average poor family fell $7,732 short of the poverty line, and by 2005, the poverty gap or “income deficit” of families in poverty had risen to $8,125.33

Today’s poor are more severely poor than in the past, with a longer climb to get out of poverty.

Another way to assess the depth of poverty is to calculate the percentage of the poverty population that is very poor: those persons whose income puts them below 50 percent of the poverty threshold. Poverty has become more extreme over time according to this measure as well. The size of the very poor population, as a percentage of the total poverty population, has increased significantly, rising from less than 30 percent in the mid-1970s to more than 43 percent in 2005, with an especially rapid rise during the 1980s. In 2005, 15.9 million people had incomes less than half the poverty line.34 This is the highest level recorded since 1975, when the government first began measuring “deep poverty.”35

More of Today’s Poor Are Stuck in Poverty

Poverty has become more of a trap in recent decades, both for adults and for their children. It is more difficult today for a poor family to get out of poverty and stay out of poverty. And children born into poverty are more likely in the current era to inherit their parents’ economic status. Along with slower economic growth, the United States since the 1970s has experienced both rising inequality and declining social mobility. This combination, sig-

6 Chapter 1

nifying the emergence of a more polarized and rigid class structure, threat- ens the principle of equality of opportunity and the ideal of the American Dream.

Many people who experience a year or two of poverty never entirely es- cape it; they tend to fall back into poverty periodically throughout the course of their lives.36 Since the 1980s, poverty has become even more of an enduring condition. Low-income families today are more likely to remain low-income families and are less likely to escape poverty permanently.37 As Annette Bernhardt and her colleagues show, this is due especially to the proliferation of low-wage jobs and the conversion of low-wage work into a lifetime career. They compare two cohorts of male workers, the first tracked from 1966 to 1981 and the second from 1979 to 1994. Over these two pe- riods, they find, “wage growth has both stagnated and grown more un- equal,” “there has been a marked deterioration in upward mobility,” the percentage of workers who are stuck in low-wage jobs has more than dou- bled, and workers at the bottom of the wage distribution are especially li- able to fall into the “bad-job trap.”38 Economic mobility is harder to attain in today’s economy. A job is not enough, hard work does not necessarily pay, and few individuals are able to pull themselves up by their own boot- straps.39

There is also much less intergenerational social mobility than implied by the American Dream ideology, and some studies show declining mobility since 1980.40 Contrary to the Horatio Alger tale, it is quite rare for a poor child to become a rich adult or for a rich child to become a poor adult. The economic status of the family into which a child is born exerts a powerful influence on later life outcomes, especially at the extreme ends of the class structure. In one revealing study, Tom Hertz finds that a child born into the bottom income decile has a 31.5 percent chance of remaining in that decile as an adult and a meager 1.3 percent chance of reaching the top decile. A child born into the top decile has a 29.6 percent chance of staying in that decile and only a 1.5 percent chance of falling into the poorest decile.41 The rich and the poor have at least one thing in common: they both tend to pass along their economic standing to their children. And this is true in the United States more so than just about anywhere else in the developed world. We do indeed stand out from other countries: not because we have more mobility, but because we have less.42

The United States is unique especially in the tendency for poverty to be passed along from generation to generation. A child born into a poor fam- ily in the United States is more likely than in most other industrialized na- tions to end up poor as an adult.43 The persistence of poverty across gener- ations is particularly strong for African Americans. Hertz’s research shows more than 40 percent of black children born into the bottom income decile between 1942 and 1972 were still stuck in that decile as adults, and more

Poverty as a Social Problem 7

than 60 percent of those born into the bottom income quartile remained in that quartile as adults.44 The image of the United States as an exception among modern societies, a unique land of opportunity where, regardless of race or ethnicity, the children of the poor can rise to the top is far from true.

The Shredding of the Safety Net

In 1996, Congress overhauled the welfare system, creating the new Tem- porary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program. Since then, and de- spite a steady increase in the rate and severity of poverty in the 2000s, the number of families receiving cash welfare benefits has dropped substan- tially, to approximately 2 million, less than half the number in 1996. At the same time, because payment levels are not indexed to the rate of inflation, the real value of welfare benefits has diminished. The percentage of poor children on welfare has declined as well, from more than 50 percent in 1996 to less than a third. And the percentage of families who do not receive welfare benefits despite meeting eligibility requirements has increased from less than 20 percent in the early 1990s to more than 50 percent in 2002.45

Although low-income households may still benefit from a variety of so- cial programs, including food stamps and tax credits for low-wage workers, many of the poor, as the figures in the previous paragraph suggest, have fallen through the cracks. The reformed welfare system provides cash assis- tance to a shrinking number of families, even as the size of the needy pop- ulation continues to expand. Government policies in recent years have made life harder for low-income households in other respects as well: by el- igibility rules restricting access to unemployment insurance, by the reluc- tance of legislators to raise the federal minimum wage, by tax policies that overwhelmingly benefit the rich, and by cutbacks in funding for child care assistance, housing programs, health care, and college scholarship aid for low-income students.46 Poverty is an especially serious problem in the United States today because the poor have less recourse than in the past to government assistance and a reliable safety net.

Poverty Touches the Lives of Most Americans

In any particular year since the 1970s, somewhere between approxi- mately 11 and 15 percent of the population has been poor. This is a lot of poverty, especially for a country with such great wealth. But on the brighter side, these numbers might leave the impression that only a relatively small minority of Americans is economically vulnerable. The reality is quite the opposite, however, as the research of Mark Rank demonstrates.47 Calculat- ing the likelihood that people during their adult years will undergo a period of economic hardship, he discovers that poverty is a widespread phenome-

8 Chapter 1

non. In fact, the majority of Americans, and the majority of white Ameri- cans as well, experience at least a year of poverty during their adult lives, and about a third experience four years or more.48 The likelihood that an adult will spend at least a year in poverty, moreover, is much greater today than it was in the 1970s.49 Of course, poverty hits racial minorities harder and more frequently. Relatively few African Americans manage to stay above the poverty line over the entire course of their lives: over 90 percent endure at least one year of adult poverty. But even for non-Hispanic whites, poverty is an ordinary occurrence. Poverty in the United States is not a par- adox or an anomaly, and it is not something that happens only to inner-city minorities, teenage mothers, or other “marginalized groups.” American poverty, Rank emphasizes, is “endemic to our economic structure”; it is “as American as apple pie.”50

Living Without an Economic Cushion

In the 1990s, a number of studies, including Michael Sherraden’s Assets and the Poor, Melvin Oliver and Thomas Shapiro’s Black Wealth/White Wealth, and Dalton Conley’s Being Black, Living in the Red, drew attention to a critical limitation of most indicators of economic well-being: they con- sider income only, to the neglect of wealth.51 Income consists of a periodic stream or flow of revenue, including wage earnings, private pension bene- fits, and government transfers—welfare, unemployment, and social security payments, for example. Wealth consists of an accumulated stock or reserve of resources, including savings, home equity, business assets, stocks, bonds, and real estate.

The distribution of wealth is far more unequal than the distribution of in- come. In 1997, the richest 1 percent of American families received 16.6 per- cent of the nation’s total income, but owned 38.1 percent of the nation’s to- tal wealth. The bottom 40 percent, on the other hand, received 10.5 percent of total income and possessed a miniscule 0.2 percent of total wealth. In 1998, 18 percent of American families had zero or negative net worth, and more than 25 percent had zero or negative “financial” or “liquid” wealth (net worth minus home equity), the sort of wealth that can be readily con- verted into cash to pay for current expenses.52

Families possessing a sizeable asset cushion have something to fall back on during hard times. They also have access to capital and credit that can be invested in housing, education, retirement, and a secure economic future for themselves and their children. Assets help families to both avoid down- ward mobility and achieve upward mobility. Households are usually con- sidered “asset poor” if their wealth holdings are insufficient to cover the cost of basic needs for a period of three months.53 Such households do not have a reserve of funds they can use to pay the bills and put food on the

Poverty as a Social Problem 9

table should they experience a job loss or some other interruption in their flow of income. To get through costly emergencies and even to cover ordi- nary day-to-day expenses, they are often forced to borrow money or max out their credit cards, and are then left weighed down by exorbitant interest payments.

The level of asset poverty in the United States is substantially greater than the level of income poverty. In 2001, the rate of asset poverty reached 24.5 percent based on a measure of net worth and 37.5 percent based on a nar- rower measure of liquid assets.54 More than a third of American households do not have enough cash or near-cash resources to survive above the poverty line for three months without a paycheck. For African-American and Hispanic households, the rate of asset poverty is much higher, over 40 percent measured by net worth and over 60 percent measured by liquid wealth.55 The problem of asset poverty has worsened since the early 1980s—despite a growing economy, despite the tremendous wealth accu- mulation of the 1990s, and despite the decline in income poverty toward the end of that decade.56

Millions of American families do not make enough money to enjoy a minimally decent standard of living. An even greater number are asset poor. They live on the edge, from paycheck to paycheck, often deep in debt, and “persistently vulnerable to adversities.”57 Even if their income puts them above the poverty line, they have little or nothing in reserve to smooth out the ups and downs that have become commonplace for working families in today’s economy. And they do not have a nest egg they can draw upon to build a better future for themselves and their children.

Economic Growth Is Not the Cure for Today’s Poverty

The level of economic inequality remained stable for the first quarter cen- tury after World War II, but it has increased dramatically since the 1970s. Nowadays the rich are taking a much bigger slice of the economic pie, at the expense of everyone else, especially those toward the bottom of the income distribution. The real earnings of low-end workers declined throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, increasing only with the tightening of the labor market during the final years of that decade.58 An astonishing 99 percent of the gains from economic growth between 1979 and 1994 went to the top 5 percent of American families.59 In today’s economy, with the brief exception of the late 1990s, the benefits of increasing productivity and wealth cre- ation, rather than tricking down to the poor, gush up to the rich instead.60

Between 1979 and 2003, average after-tax income increased by only 4 per- cent for the bottom income quintile and by a whopping 129 percent for the top 1 percent of households.61 The economy expands, corporate profits grow, the rich get richer, and the poor get poorer. And things are not getting

10 Chapter 1

any better. The rate of poverty in 2005, the fourth year of economic recov- ery, was actually higher than it was during the 2001 recession.62

The past three decades teach a clear lesson: a growing economy by itself is no solution to the problem of poverty. In a context of high and rising in- equality, an expanding economy will do little to improve the well-being of the poor. A war on poverty cannot be won simply by unleashing the forces of the free market or by a policy promising to stimulate job creation through tax cuts for the rich. In the absence of more far-reaching political measures, millions of Americans will continue to be poor. Poverty is not go- ing to disappear naturally with the passage of time. An effective antipoverty program will have to address the problem directly, through a strategy com- bining economic growth with better jobs, a stronger safety net, and a more equitable distribution of the national income. As the authors of The State of Working America conclude: “To make lasting progress against poverty, it is necessary to ensure that the benefits of the growing economy are broadly shared.”63 This will require a fundamental change in political policy. Poverty demands serious attention because it is a problem that will not be resolved simply by staying the economic course.

The Conditions That Cause Poverty Harm Nearly Everyone

Median household income has grown over the past three decades, from approximately $40,000 in 1973 to $46,000 in 2005. This modest increase is explained almost entirely by the rise in the labor force participation of women, as men’s earnings have stagnated since the early 1970s.64 House- holds around the median are holding their own, maybe gaining a little ground, but only because family members are working more hours, and even then the distance between them and the rich continues to grow. Mid- dle-income Americans are trapped on a treadmill, running harder and harder just to stay in place. The cost of what Fred Block calls the big “four H’s”—housing, high-quality child care, higher education, and health insur- ance—has increased dramatically since the early 1970s, far outstripping the growth of earnings and the overall rate of inflation. As a result, millions of families, and not just those officially counted as poor, are finding it difficult to realize the American Dream.65

Many middle-income families occupy the same leaky boat as the poor, buffeted by the same economic and political forces responsible for the per- sistence of poverty. The adversities experienced by the poor, though less ex- treme in their effects, are shared by millions of Americans above the poverty line: job instability, stagnant or volatile earnings, rising personal debt, bur- densome mortgage payments, stressful family lives, inadequate health cov- erage, retirement insecurity, expensive child care, and soaring tuition costs.66 The interests of the middle class and the poor do not perfectly

Poverty as a Social Problem 11

correspond of course, especially given divisions of race and residence, and the existence of poverty may even provide benefits for the nonpoor—cheap labor and low prices, for example.67 Still, middle-class Americans ignore the poor at their peril, for the conditions that give rise to poverty cause hard- ships that touch the lives of nearly everyone other than the privileged few at the top. The problem of poverty is not just an issue for the poor; it is a problem of American society.

Persistent Poverty Undermines Social Justice

The presence of a large poverty population, especially in such a wealthy country, and the massive and still growing gap between the rich and the poor, inhabitants of two vastly different worlds, run contrary to any sensi- ble vision of social justice.68 Consider some of the signs of the times. Ap- proximately 37 million Americans languish in poverty, nearly half of them severely poor and millions more nearly poor. These people live hard lives, and many suffer genuine deprivation. In 2006, 12.6 million households, approximately 35.5 million people, had insufficient money to ensure a de- pendable supply of food for all family members; in 2007, food banks around the country were reporting high demand and “critical shortages.”69

Low-income households experience other hardships as well: substandard housing, crowded living conditions, and trouble paying utility bills.70 They lack adequate access to reliable transportation, quality child care, and regu- lar medical attention. And their jobs, if they are lucky enough to find regu- lar employment, not only fail to pay a living wage and reasonable benefits, they are often alienating and exploitive, demeaning and unhealthy. For low- income racial and ethnic minorities, matters are even worse. Several million impoverished African Americans and Latinos live in segregated, high- poverty neighborhoods and send their kids to segregated, high-poverty schools, all but guaranteeing that the disadvantages of one generation are passed along to the next.

The story is quite different on the other side of the economic ledger. The number of billionaires in the United States is at a record high, topping four hundred in 2006.71 Not only are the rich running away from the poor, but the “superrich” are running away from the “merely rich.”72 And while the federal minimum wage, finally raised 70 cents in 2007, was stuck at $5.15 an hour for more than a decade, the salaries of corporate executives con- tinue to climb. In 2006, the top CEOs of the largest U.S. corporations re- ceived an average total compensation package of nearly $11 million dollars, approximately 364 times the average worker pay, up from 42 times in 1980.73 H. Lee Scott Jr., the chief executive of Wal-Mart, raked in more than $15 million in 2005, about 850 times the pay of the average Wal-Mart “as- sociate.”74

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A society with such inequality, with so much wealth and power at the one extreme and so much poverty and hardship at the other, is neither healthy nor just. The widening economic divide in the United States is an affront to commonsense notions of fairness, erodes feelings of social solidarity, un- dermines the principle of equality of opportunity, reinforces huge and dan- gerous disparities in power, and subverts the democratic ideal of political equality. Widespread poverty amidst great wealth: what does this say about the kind of society we are and aspire to be? Poverty is a serious problem in the United States not just because it raises troubling economic questions, but because it raises troubling moral questions as well.

THE INDIVIDUALISTIC PERSPECTIVE AND THE STRUCTURAL PERSPECTIVE

To acknowledge that American poverty is a serious problem would be a sig- nificant step forward. But a contentious issue would remain: what are the causes of poverty? It is useful to address this question by examining two op- posing perspectives: the individualistic and the structural.75 The conflict be- tween these captures a familiar ideological division in the United States, one that goes to the heart of many current controversies. Is poverty caused by “lack of effort” on the part of the poor or by “circumstances beyond their control?”76 Are people poor because of their own weaknesses or because of the weaknesses of the American political economy? Do poor people bear the burden of responsibility for overcoming their hardships, or should the government do more to alleviate problems of poverty and inequality? Is poverty best combated by reforming the poor or by reforming society?

The distinction between the individualistic perspective and the structural perspective is evident in the public consciousness and the political policy arena, as well as in social science scholarship. Bradley Schiller, for example, compares the “flawed character” theory, which attributes poverty to the de- fects of the poor, and the “restricted opportunities” theory, which under- lines poor people’s lack of access to good schools and good jobs.77 Mark Rank rejects the “old paradigm” ascribing poverty to the deficiencies of the poor in favor of a “new paradigm” emphasizing lack of opportunities and an inadequate safety net.78 Within the discipline of economics, the dispute between the mainstream, “neoclassical” approach and the “political econ- omy” approach also parallels the conflict between the individualistic per- spective and the structural perspective.79 For mainstream economists, poverty is a function of supply and demand, and people are poor because they lack marketable skills. For proponents of the political economy view, poverty is a function of power, and people are poor because of inequities in government policy and labor market institutions.

Poverty as a Social Problem 13

The opposition between the individualistic perspective and the structural perspective is a recognizable feature of the public discourse on poverty. But for this distinction to be truly useful—whether the purpose is conducting research, raising public awareness, entering into political debate, or teach- ing and learning in the classroom—it needs to be formulated more explic- itly and brought more fully into play in the analysis of poverty. My ap- proach in this introductory chapter, and in the rest of the book as well, is to sharpen the contrast and underscore the differences between these two per- spectives. This strategy is intended to draw close attention to the divergence in the underlying assumptions, arguments, and implications of these op- posing views. And, as I hope to show, the added benefit of placing these two ways of thinking about poverty along side one another and explicitly reit- erating their differences is that it brings to the surface the inherent defi- ciencies of the individualistic perspective and the comparative strengths of the structural perspective.

These two perspectives propose radically dissimilar theories of poverty. For the individualistic perspective, poverty results from individual weak- nesses, failings, and inadequacies. People are poor for some combination of the following reasons: they are deficient in intelligence, competence, and ability; they are insufficiently experienced, skilled, and educated; they lack ambition, determination, and perseverance; they have poor attitudes, moti- vations, and values; they make bad choices and engage in self-destructive behaviors; and they are unable or unwilling to exert the necessary effort or take advantage of the opportunities available to them. Poverty is an indi- vidual problem, according to this perspective; it is a by-product of the char- acteristics and behaviors of the poor.

The structural perspective, on the other hand, attributes poverty to an as- sortment of economic, political, cultural, and social forces outside the im- mediate control of the individual: a shortage of jobs that pay a living wage; a corporate profit-making strategy focused on the reduction of labor costs; a governing system that caters to the concerns of the wealthy while ignoring the interests of low-income families; a political and media rhetoric that var- iously disparages the poor, treats them as objects of charity, and renders them invisible; and the persistence of discrimination, residential segrega- tion, and social isolation. Poverty is a social problem, according to this per- spective; it is a by-product of the distribution of power and the organization of society.

The individualistic perspective explains poverty mainly by reference to the choices and actions of the poor. They drop out of high school; they re- ject marriage and sexual monogamy; they have children out of wedlock; they join gangs, do drugs, and commit crimes; and they refuse to stick with a job. From the individualistic perspective, poor people are victims of their own bad decisions and lifestyle preferences. The structural perspective, on

14 Chapter 1

the other hand, explains poverty mainly by reference to the choices and ac- tions of the people who occupy positions of political and economic power. They downsize the workforce, relocate factories overseas, and impose wage and benefit reductions. They legislate cutbacks in social welfare programs, enact tax cuts for the rich, craft trade agreements that profit multinational corporations at the expense of workers, and pass laws hindering the ability of employees to form labor unions. They also spend millions of dollars to disseminate the message that that the “free market” is fair and efficient, gov- ernment programs are doomed to failure, and poverty is the fault of the poor. From the structural perspective, poor people are victims of the deci- sions and behaviors of political and economic elites.

Theories of poverty imply theories of society. And these two perspectives convey sharply conflicting images of the United States, particularly con- cerning issues of inequality. From the individualistic perspective, American society is a meritocracy. Hard work and determination pay off. Through the magic of the market, the rewards people receive correspond to their eco- nomic contribution. From the structural perspective, the distribution of earnings, income, and wealth is not so much a reflection of differences in individual ability and effort as it is an outcome of economic and political struggles, past and present, and enduring disparities in power. The individ- ualistic perspective and the structural perspective disagree about a variety of related issues as well: are current inequalities fair or unfair, is social mobil- ity extensive or limited, are opportunities for getting ahead plentiful or scarce, do individuals compete on a level or tilted playing field, does dis- crimination continue to play a significant role in explaining race and gen- der inequalities, and is the American Dream a reality or a myth? The table appended to this chapter provides a summary overview of the key differ- ences between the individualistic perspective and the structural perspective.

ORGANIZATION OF THE BOOK

This book, through a synthesis of the literature, develops a sustained cri- tique of individualistic theories of poverty and makes a case for an alterna- tive structural perspective. It is intended for classroom use, written in an ac- cessible manner, and targeted specifically to undergraduate students. The book is organized into three parts, plus this introductory chapter and a con- cluding chapter. In Part I, consisting of chapters 2 through 4, I critique in turn each of the three main individualistic theories of poverty: the bio- genetic theory, the cultural theory, and human capital theory. These theo- ries, often found in some combination, attribute poverty to the failings of the poor, though they each underline a somewhat different set of failings. In the biogenetic theory, the poor are deficient in cognitive ability; in the

Poverty as a Social Problem 15

cultural theory, they are deficient in achievement motivations; and in hu- man capital theory, they are deficient in education and skills.

My plan in each of these chapters is to highlight the key empirical claims of the theory in question, describe as clearly as possible the logic of the ar- gument, and flesh out the underlying assumptions and implications. I then identify the most serious omissions of each theory and discuss its empirical and conceptual weaknesses. Along the way, I begin making the case that we need to abandon individualistic theories in favor of a structural alternative. These three chapters constitute only an opening salvo in my critique of the individualistic perspective, as many of the criticisms presented there are ex- panded and new ones introduced in later chapters.

In Parts II and III, I use two different organizational devices, each de- signed to single out specific structural causes and render them immediately intelligible and visible. First, in what I refer to as the “systems” chapters (chapters 5 through 8), I examine separately the economic, political, cul- tural, and social forces affecting the rate and severity of poverty in society. This familiar four-systems format expressly shifts the focus from individual- level variables to larger social forces. Second, in what I refer to as the “ob- stacles” chapters (chapters 9 and 10), I devote about five pages each to ten structural obstacles or institutional problems that contribute to the adver- sity of the poor and hinder their ability to survive and overcome their poverty. This framework of four systems and ten obstacles is intended to portray poverty as both a social condition and a lived experience. In the sys- tems chapters, I conceptualize the determinants of poverty more from the top down, while in the obstacles chapters, I take a more bottom-up ap- proach, examining the day-to-day problems regularly encountered by low- income households as they endeavor to make ends meet.

The four chapters in Part II focus in turn on the economic, political, cul- tural, and social systems. Each of these systems consists of a structure of power—a hierarchical distribution of access, influence, and decision-making authority. The unequal distribution of power within these systems enables some individuals and groups more than others to shape the course of the economy (the economic system); to dictate the direction of government policy (the political system); to influence the opinions, preferences, and be- liefs of the public (the cultural system); and to control avenues of social and economic mobility (the social system). Power is always contested, however, so each of these four systems also constitutes a site of conflict—an arena within which contending groups struggle to achieve favorable outcomes and vie for access to scarce opportunities and resources. My objective in these chapters, in direct opposition to the individualistic perspective, is to demonstrate the significance of a wide range of system variables—eco- nomic, political, cultural, and social forces beyond the immediate control of the individual. These variables exert a decisive effect on the rate and

16 Chapter 1

severity of poverty, and they help to explain why some people are more vul- nerable to economic hardship than others.

I examine five structural obstacles in each of the two chapters in Part III. In chapter 9, I address problems of racial discrimination, residential segregation, housing, education, and transportation. In chapter 10, I address problems of sex discrimination, child care, health care, retirement insecurity, and legal dep- rivation. I refer to these obstacles as structural because they originate from the combined workings of the economic, political, cultural, and social systems; be- cause they are caused by social forces, arrangements, and practices outside the control of any particular individual; because they are experienced by the poor and the near poor as elements of the external social landscape, circumscribing their lives and limiting their options; and because they reflect the allocation of political and economic power and the distribution of resources and opportu- nities. Poverty is a structural problem insofar as the hardships of the poor and the persistence of their poverty can be traced back to these obstacles rather than to the failings and deficiencies of poor people themselves.

The main argument of this book is that the key to the persistence of poverty in the United States is not the intractable deviance of the poor, but the increasingly unequal distribution of power. The current problem of American poverty is the consequence of an economic, political, and cultural transformation ongoing since the 1970s, accompanied by a growing imbal- ance of power between business and labor, the haves and the have-nots. Employers have gained the upper hand in the labor market and workplace, putting a downward pressure on wages. Corporate interests have achieved a dominant position in the political arena, reinforcing the conservative tilt of government policy. And the ideology of the right has come to prevail in the public discourse, thanks especially to a compliant news media and the as- cendancy of conservative think tanks. On the other side of the class divide, working Americans and the poor have been shunted to the margins. They are trapped at the low end of the economy, competing for dead-end jobs that pay less than a living wage. They are deprived of political influence, dis- enfranchised in some cases, and otherwise denied equitable access to a sys- tem where money and connections count more than ever. And their voices are largely excluded from the mainstream political debate. Only from the standpoint of a structural perspective, I argue—bringing power, politics, conflict, and inequality into the story—can we begin to understand and ad- dress effectively the problem of poverty in the United States.

NOTES

1. Walter I. Trattner, From Poor Law to Welfare State: A History of Social Welfare in America, 6th ed. (New York: Free Press, 1999), 322. On the invisibility of the poor

Poverty as a Social Problem 17

in the immediate postwar years and their discovery in the 1960s, see Barbara Ehren- reich, Fear of Falling: The Inner Life of the Middle Class (New York: Pantheon, 1989), 17–56.

2. Martin Luther King Jr., Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? (New York: Harper & Row, 1967), 166.

3. See, for example, James Traub, “Pay for Good Behavior?” New York Times Mag- azine, October 8, 2006, 15–16.

4. The reference to “bold action” comes from a statement delivered by George W. Bush in New Orleans on September 12, 2005, about two weeks after Katrina swept through the Gulf Coast. Cited in Robert C. Lieberman, “‘The Storm Didn’t Discriminate’: Katrina and the Politics of Color Blindness,” Du Bois Review 3, no. 1 (Spring 2006): 10.

5. Neil deMause, “Katrina’s Vanishing Victims,” Extra!, July–August 2006, 17–23.

6. For a similar analysis, see Fred Block, Anna C. Korteweg, and Kerry Wood- ward, “The Compassion Gap in American Poverty Policy,” Contexts 5, no. 2 (Spring 2006): 14–20.

7. Alice O’Connor, Poverty Knowledge: Social Science, Social Policy, and the Poor in Twentieth-Century U.S. History (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2001); Al- ice O’Connor, “Poverty Research and Policy for the Post-Welfare Era,” Annual Review of Sociology 26 (2000): 547–62.

8. For more comprehensive overviews of the data on poverty and the poor, see John Iceland, Poverty in America: A Handbook, 2nd ed. (Berkeley: University of Cali- fornia Press, 2006); Bradley R. Schiller, The Economics of Poverty and Discrimination, 9th ed. (Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2004); and Garth L. Mangum, Stephen L. Mangum, and Andrew M. Sum, The Persistence of Poverty in the United States (Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003).

9. Carmen DeNavas-Walt, Bernadette D. Proctor, and Cheryl Hill Lee, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2005, U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Reports, P60-231 (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Of- fice, 2006), 46, 55–58, tables B1–B3.

10. On the concept of the American Dream, which I will discuss more fully in chapter 7, see Jennifer L. Hochschild, Facing Up to the American Dream: Race, Class, and the Soul of the Nation (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1995), 15–38; Robert Perrucci and Earl Wysong, The New Class Society: Goodbye American Dream? 3rd ed. (Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2008), 45–46.

11. DeNavas-Walt, Proctor, and Lee, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Cover- age, 17, table 6; Lawrence Mishel, Jared Bernstein, and Sylvia Allegretto, The State of Working America 2006/2007 (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2007), 284, table 6.1.

12. DeNavas-Walt, Proctor, and Lee, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Cover- age, 46, table B1.

13. For an analysis of the public’s view of poverty, with data through 1989, see Denton R. Vaughan, “Exploring the Use of the Public’s Views to Set Income Poverty Thresholds and Adjust Them over Time,” Social Security Bulletin 56, no. 2 (Summer 1993): 22–46; and for updates of Vaughan’s findings, see Iceland, Poverty in Amer- ica, 27, 33–36; Constance F. Citro and Robert T. Michael, Measuring Poverty: A New

18 Chapter 1

Approach (Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1995), 34–35, 134–40; espe- cially 138–39, table 2-4.

14. There is a voluminous body of research on definitions and measures of poverty, including many detailed critiques of the official U.S. measure. See, for ex- ample, Citro and Michael, Measuring Poverty; Patricia Ruggles, Drawing the Line: Al- ternative Poverty Measures and Their Implications for Public Policy (Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute, 1990); and Garth Mangum, Andrew Sum, and Neeta Fogg, “Poverty Ain’t What It Used to Be,” Challenge 43, no. 2 (March–April 2000): 97–130.

15. Heather Boushey et al., Hardships in America: The Real Story of Working Fami- lies (Washington, D.C.: Economic Policy Institute, 2001), 3.

16. Boushey et al., Hardships in America, 12–13, tables 2 and 3. 17. Lawrence Mishel, Jared Bernstein, and Sylvia Allegretto, The State of Working

America 2004/2005 (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2005), 407–9; Timothy M. Smeeding, Lee Rainwater, and Gary Burtless, “U.S. Poverty in a Cross-National Context,” in Understanding Poverty, ed. Sheldon H. Danziger and Robert H. Have- man (New York: Russell Sage and Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2001), 173. The poverty line for this study is set at 40 percent of “median adjusted disposable personal income.”

18. Timothy M. Smeeding, “Government Programs and Social Outcomes: Com- parison of the United States with Other Rich Nations,” in Public Policy and Income Distribution, ed. Alan J. Auerbach, David Card, and John M. Quigley (New York: Rus- sell Sage, 2006), 162, table 4.2.

19. Timothy M. Smeeding and Lee Rainwater, “Comparing Living Standards across Nations: Real Incomes at the Top, the Bottom, and the Middle,” Discussion Paper No. 120 (Social Policy Research Centre, December 2002), at www.olin .wustl.edu/macarthur/papers/smeeding-livingstandards.pdf (accessed December 27, 2007).

20. On the rate of absolute poverty in the United States compared to other de- veloped countries circa 2000, see Lyle Scruggs and James P. Allan, “The Material Consequences of Welfare States: Benefit Generosity and Absolute Poverty in 16 OECD Countries,” Comparative Political Studies 39, no. 7 (September 2006): 880–904.

21. Alberto Alesina and Edward L. Glaeser, Fighting Poverty in the U.S. and Europe: A World of Difference (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), 47.

22. Lee Rainwater and Timothy M. Smeeding, Poor Kids in a Rich Country: America’s Children in Comparative Perspective (New York: Russell Sage, 2003), 21, figure 1.1.

23. Rainwater and Smeeding, Poor Kids in a Rich Country, 57–67. 24. UNICEF, Child Poverty in Rich Countries, Report Card No. 6 (Florence, Italy:

UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, 2005), 11, figure 3. 25. UNICEF, Child Poverty in Rich Countries, Report Card No. 7 (Florence, Italy:

UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, 2007). 26. DeNavas-Walt, Proctor, and Lee, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Cover-

age, 45. 27. Mishel, Bernstein, and Allegretto, The State of Working America 2004/2005,

309, 328–29. 28. For a more detailed discussion of how the poor are counted in the United

States, see Schiller, The Economics of Poverty, 37–66.

Poverty as a Social Problem 19

29. Ruggles, Drawing the Line, 39–52. 30. Mishel, Bernstein, and Allegretto, The State of Working America 2006/2007,

282. 31. On the concept of “social exclusion” as it pertains to the problem of poverty,

see Amartya Sen, “Social Exclusion: Concept, Application, and Scrutiny,” Social De- velopment Papers No. 1 (Manila, Philippines: Asian Development Bank, June 2000), at www.adb.org/documents/books/social_exclusion/Social_exclusion.pdf (accessed December 30, 2007).

32. For a detailed look at the increasing severity of poverty in the 2000s, see Steven H. Woolf, Robert E. Johnson, and H. Jack Geiger, “The Rising Prevalence of Severe Poverty in America: A Growing Threat to Public Health,” American Journal of Preventive Medicine 31, no. 4 (2006): 332–41.

33. Mishel, Bernstein, and Allegretto, The State of Working America 2006/2007, 288, table 6.5; DeNavas-Walt, Proctor, and Lee, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage, 18, table 7.

34. Mishel, Bernstein, and Allegretto, The State of Working America 2006/2007, 289–90; DeNavas-Walt, Proctor, and Lee, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Cov- erage, 17, table 6.

35. “Downward Mobility,” New York Times, unsigned editorial, August 30, 2006. 36. Ann Huff Stevens, “Climbing Out of Poverty, Falling Back In: Measuring the

Persistence of Poverty over Multiple Spells,” Journal of Human Resources 34, no. 3 (Summer 1999): 557–88.

37. Katharine Bradbury and Jane Katz, “Are Lifetime Incomes Growing More Un- equal? Look at New Evidence on Family Income Mobility,” Regional Review Q4 2002: 3–5; Peter Gottschalk and Sheldon H. Danziger, “Family Income Mobility—How Much Is There, and Has It Changed?” in The Inequality Paradox: Growth of Income Dis- parity, ed. James A. Auerbach and Richard S. Belous (Washington, D.C.: National Policy Association, 1998), 92–111; Mary Corcoran and Jordan Matsudaira, “Is It Getting Harder to Get Ahead? Economic Attainment for Two Cohorts,” in On the Frontier of Adulthood: Theory, Research, and Public Policy, ed. Richard A. Settersten Jr., Frank F. Furstenberg Jr., and Ruben C. Rumbaut (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), 356–95.

38. Annette Bernhardt et al., Divergent Paths: Economic Mobility in the New Ameri- can Labor Market (New York: Russell Sage, 2001), 111, 171, 166.

39. Roberta Rehner Iversen and Annie Laurie Armstrong, Jobs Aren’t Enough: To- ward a New Economic Mobility for Low-Income Families (Philadelphia: Temple Univer- sity Press, 2006), 13–20.

40. Daniel Aronson and Bhashkar Mazumder, “Intergenerational Economic Mo- bility in the U.S., 1940 to 2000,” WP 2005-12 (Chicago: Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, February 2007), at www.chicagofed.org/publications/workingpapers/ wp2005_12.pdf (accessed December 30, 2007).

41. Tom Hertz, “Rags, Riches, and Race: The Intergenerational Economic Mobil- ity of Black and White Families in the United States,” in Unequal Chances: Family Background and Economic Success, ed. Samuel Bowles, Herbert Gintis, and Melissa Os- borne Groves (New York: Russell Sage, 2005), 186, table 5.10. See also Tom Hertz, Understanding Mobility in America (Washington, D.C.: Center for American Progress, April 26, 2006), 6–20 and Bhashkar Mazumder, “Fortunate Sons: New Estimates of

20 Chapter 1

Intergenerational Mobility in the United States Using Social Security Earnings Data,” Review of Economics and Statistics 87, no. 2 (May 2005): 235–55.

42. Markus Jantti et al., “American Exceptionalism in a New Light: A Compari- son of Intergenerational Earnings Mobility in the Nordic Countries, the United Kingdom, and the United States,” Discussion Paper No. 1938 (Bonn, Germany: In- stitute for the Study of Labor, 2006), 2, at http://doku.iab.de/externe/2006/ k060124f13.pdf (accessed December 30, 2007). See also Bernard Wasow, Rags to Riches? The American Dream Is Less Common in the United States than Elsewhere (New York: Century Foundation, 2004).

43. Jantti et al., “American Exceptionalism”; Miles Corak, “Do Poor Children Be- come Poor Adults? Lessons from a Cross-Country Comparison of Generational Earnings Mobility,” Research on Economic Inequality 13, no. 1 (2006): 143–88.

44. Hertz, “Rags, Riches, and Race,” 179–83. 45. Sharon Parrott and Arloc Sherman, TANF at 10: Program Results Are More

Mixed than Often Understood (Washington, D.C.: Center on Budget and Policy Prior- ities, August 17, 2006); Christopher Jencks, Joe Swingle, and Scott Winship, “Wel- fare Redux,” American Prospect March 2006, 36–40; Randy Albelda, “Welfare Reform Ten Years Later,” Dollars and Sense, January–February 2006, 6–7, 27; Robert Pear, “Despite the Sluggish Economy, Welfare Rolls Actually Shrank,” New York Times, March 22, 2004.

46. Isaac Shapiro and Sharon Parrott, Are Policies That Assist Low-Income Workers Receiving Appropriate Priority? (Washington, D.C.: Center on Budget and Policy Pri- orities, August 29, 2003); Robert Tomsho, “As Tuition Soars, Federal Aid to College Students Falls,” Wall Street Journal, October 25, 2006.

47. Mark Robert Rank, “As American as Apple Pie: Poverty and Welfare,” Contexts 2, no. 3 (Summer 2003): 41–49; Mark Robert Rank and Thomas A. Hirschl, “Rags or Riches? Estimating the Probabilities of Poverty and Affluence across the Adult American Life Span,” Social Science Quarterly 82, no. 4 (December 2001): 651–69; Mark Robert Rank, One Nation, Underprivileged: Why American Poverty Affects Us All (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004), 88–101.

48. Rank, One Nation, Underprivileged, 92–95. 49. Jacob C. Hacker, The Great Risk Shift: The Assault on American Jobs, Families,

Health Care, and Retirement—And How You Can Fight Back (Oxford: Oxford Univer- sity Press, 2006), 33.

50. Rank, One Nation, Underprivileged, 88, 107; Rank, “As American as Apple Pie.” 51. Michael Sherraden, Assets and the Poor: A New American Welfare Policy (Ar-

monk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe, 1991); Melvin L. Oliver and Thomas M. Shapiro, Black Wealth/White Wealth: A New Perspective on Racial Inequality (New York: Routledge, 1995); Dalton Conley, Being Black, Living in the Red: Race, Wealth, and Social Policy in America (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999).

52. Edward N. Wolff, “Recent Trends in Wealth Ownership, from 1983 to 1998,” in Assets for the Poor: The Benefit of Spreading Asset Ownership, ed. Thomas M. Shapiro and Edward N. Wolff (New York: Russell Sage, 2001), 40, 38, tables 2.2 and 2.1; Asena Caner and Edward N. Wolff, “Asset Poverty in the United States, 1984–1999,” Challenge 47, no. 1 (January–February 2004): 15.

53. On the concept and measurement of “asset poverty,” see Caner and Wolff, “Asset Poverty in the United States,” 5–52; Robert H. Haveman and Edward N.

Poverty as a Social Problem 21

Wolff, “The Concept and Measurement of Asset Poverty: Levels, Trends, and Com- position for the U.S., 1983–2001,” Journal of Economic Inequality 2 (2004): 145–69; Asena Caner and Edward N. Wolff, “Asset Poverty in the United States, 1984–99: Ev- idence from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics,” Review of Income and Wealth 50, no. 4 (December 2004): 493–518.

54. Haveman and Wolff, “The Concept and Measurement of Asset Poverty,” 152; see also Caner and Wolff, “Asset Poverty in the United States,” 15, table 2A.

55. Haveman and Wolff, “The Concept and Measurement of Asset Poverty,” 153. 56. Haveman and Wolff, “The Concept and Measurement of Asset Poverty,” 152,

157, 160–161, 167n17. 57. Caner and Wolff, “Asset Poverty in the United States,” 46. 58. Richard B. Freeman, “The Facts about Rising Economic Disparity,” in Auer-

bach and Belous, The Inequality Paradox, 24. 59. Freeman, “The Facts about Rising Economic Disparity,” 19–20. 60. Bernard Wasow, The New American Economy: A Rising Tide that Lifts Only

Yachts (New York: Century Foundation, 2004). 61. Isaac Shapiro and Joel Friedman, New CBO Data Indicate Growth in Long-Term

Income Inequality Continues (Washington, D.C.: Center on Budget and Policy Priori- ties, January 30, 2006).

62. Arloc Sherman and Robert Greenstein, How to Assess Today’s Income and Poverty Numbers (Washington, D.C.: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, August 29, 2006); DeNavas-Walt, Proctor, and Lee, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Cov- erage, 46, table B1.

63. Mishel, Bernstein, and Allegretto, The State of Working America 2004/2005, 345.

64. DeNavas-Walt, Proctor, and Lee, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Cover- age, 4–5, 38.

65. Block et al., “The Compassion Gap”; Fred Block, “Is the American Dream Dy- ing?” Longview Institute, 2006, www.longviewinstitute.org/research/block/amer- dream (accessed December 27, 2007).

66. On insecurity among the middle class, see Hacker, The Great Risk Shift; Eliza- beth Warren and Amelia Warren Tyagi, The Two-Income Trap: Why Middle-Class Par- ents Are Going Broke (New York: Basic Books, 2003); Barbara Ehrenreich, Bait and Switch: The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2005); and Louis Uchitelle, The Disposable American: Layoffs and Their Consequences (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006).

67. For the classic statement of this argument, see Herbert J. Gans, “The Positive Functions of Poverty,” American Journal of Sociology 78, no. 2 (September 1972): 275–89.

68. For an especially pertinent analysis of inequality, poverty, and social justice, see Brian Barry, Why Social Justice Matters (Cambridge, U.K.: Polity Press, 2005).

69. Mark Nord, Margaret Andrews, and Steven Carlson, Household Food Security in the United States, 2006, U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Report No. 49 (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, November 2007), 4–6; Katie Zezima, “Food Banks in a Squeeze, Tighten Belts,” New York Times, November 30, 2007.

22 Chapter 1

70. Tammy Ouellette et al., Measures of Material Hardship: Final Report, U.S. De- partment of Health and Human Services (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, April 2004), 55–79.

71. Holly Sklar, “Economy Booming for Billionaires,” Common Dreams News Center, September 28, 2006, www.commondreams.org/views06/0928-31.htm (ac- cessed October 10, 2007).

72. Eric Konigsberg, “A New Class War: The Haves vs. the Have Mores,” New York Times, November 19, 2006; Louis Uchitelle, “Very Rich Are Leaving the Merely Rich Behind,” New York Times, November 27, 2006.

73. Sarah Anderson et al., Executive Excess 2007 (Washington, D.C.: Institute for Policy Studies and Boston: United for a Fair Economy, 2007), 9, at www.ips-dc.org/ reports/070829-executiveexcess.pdf (accessed January 1, 2008).

74. Eduardo Porter, “If All the Slices Are Equal, Will the Pie Shrink?” New York Times, November 19, 2006.

75. For a similar distinction between views of poverty, see Leonard Beeghley, “In- dividual and Structural Explanations of Poverty,” Population Research and Policy Re- view 7, no. 3 (1988): 201–22 and D. Stanley Eitzen and Kelly Eitzen Smith, Experi- encing Poverty: Voices from the Bottom (Belmont, Calif.: Wadsworth, 2003), 15–19. Other overviews of the literature often identify a wide variety of different theories of poverty; see, for example, Harrell R. Rodgers Jr., American Poverty in a New Era of Re- form (Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe, 2000), 69–82; James Jennings, “Persistent Poverty in the United States: Review of Theories and Explanations,” in A New Introduction to Poverty: The Role of Race, Power, and Politics, ed. Louis Kushnick and James Jennings (New York: New York University Press, 1999), 13–38; William A. Kelso, Poverty and the Underclass: Changing Perceptions of the Poor in America (New York: New York Uni- versity Press, 1994); and David L. Harvey and Michael Reed, “Paradigms of Poverty: A Critical Assessment of Contemporary Perspectives,” International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society 6, no. 2 (1992): 269–97.

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