The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Decades of gains over US poverty at risk of being wiped out

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NEW YORK: The escalating coronaviru­s pandemic could reverse decades of gains in the fight against poverty, as US government aid for the vulnerable dries up.

In the early months of the crisis, the federal Cares Act, which gave an extra US$600 a week in unemployme­nt assistance and US$1,200 stimulus checks, helped prevent poverty from dramatical­ly deepening. But that lifeline for low-income earners is being cut off.

Unemployme­nt benefits are set to expire for millions of workers in late December and talks over a new stimulus package have stalled – just as some states reimpose job-hammering lockdowns to halt a surge in cases.

Keeping a flow of government assistance open to poorer families will be crucial to ensure that the recovery from the pandemic doesn’t further exacerbate inequality, according to James Sullivan, an economics professor at Notre Dame University in Indiana.

Economists have described this as the “K-shaped recovery”, in which wealthy Americans are seeing jobs and investment­s snap back, while the lower-income ranks lag far behind.

“The pandemic is likely resulting in many displaced workers who will need to invest in some retraining in order to find stable employment,” Sullivan said. “Those who are unable to do that are more likely to have to rely on the government safety net and they face greater risk of inter-generation­al poverty.”

The US government definition of poverty is based on the makeup of each household and it’s adjusted every year.

In 2019, a family of four making about US$26,000 annually was considered to be living below the poverty line. Before the pandemic struck, there were 34 million Americans living in poverty, or 10.5% of the population, the lowest rate in Census data going back six decades.

More-current estimates by Sullivan and Bruce Meyer, an economics professor at the University of Chicago, show that the poverty rate fell between April and June as a result of the Cares Act and then rose again as government aid began to run out and expire.

The study estimates that the poverty rate rose from 9.4% in April to 11.4% in October, with nearly 7 million people plunged into poverty since May. The increase was most pronounced among Blacks, among whom the rate rose 7.3 percentage points from May to October.

While the nation’s economic rebound is continuing, certain parts of the economy are digging out of the rut faster than others.

The unemployme­nt rate in the manufactur­ing sector, where wages average US$28.81 per hour, was 5.2% in October. Leisure and hospitalit­y, where workers make US$17.10 an hour, had an unemployme­nt rate of 16.3%.

Low-income adults were the most impacted by coronaviru­s-related job losses and pay cuts, according to a study by the Pew Research Centre. Among lower-income adults, 47% said they or someone in their household either lost a job or took a pay cut. That compares with 42% of middle-income and 32% of higher-income adults who participat­ed in the June 4-10 survey.

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