The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

MLK’s vision matters today for the 43 million living in poverty

- By Joshua F.J. Inwood Pennsylvan­ia State University The Conversati­on is an independen­t, nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinat­ed in Memphis, while fighting for a 10-cent wage increase for garbage workers. These efforts by King were part of a broader and more sustained initiative known as the Poor People’s Campaign.

King was working to broaden the scope of the civil rights movement to include poverty and the end of the war in Vietnam. King and his leadership team planned to bring thousands of poor people to Washington, D.C., where they would camp out on the National Mall until Congress passed legislatio­n to eradicate poverty.

King was convinced that for the civil rights movement to achieve its goals, poverty needed to become a central focus of the movement. He believed the poor could lead a movement that would revolution­ize society and end poverty. As King noted, “The only real revolution­ary, people say, is a man who has nothing to lose. There are millions of poor people in this country who have little, or nothing to lose.”

With over 43 million people living in poverty in the United States today, King’s ideas still hold much power.

King was convinced that for the civil rights movement to achieve its goals, poverty needed to become a central focus of the movement.

In the last three years of his life and ministry King had grown frustrated with the slow pace of reform and the lack of funding for anti-poverty programs. In 1966, for example, King moved to Chicago and lived in an urban slum to bring attention to the plight of the urban poor in northern cities.

His experience­s in the South had convinced him that eliminatio­n of poverty was important to winning the long-term battle for civil and social rights.

It was also at this time that King began to think about leading a march to Washington, D.C., to end poverty. King explained the campaign saying,:

“Then we poor people will move on Washington, determined to stay there until the legislativ­e and executive branches of the government take serious and adequate action on jobs and income.”

King was assassinat­ed before he could lead the campaign. And while the effort continued, the campaign could not meet King’s goals of poverty eliminatio­n, universal access to health care and education, and a guaranteed income that would keep people out of poverty.

At a time when millions in the U.S. are poor and disenfranc­hised, the Poor People’s campaign remains as relevant for the U.S. as it was 50 years ago. Consider the evidence:

• At least 1.5 million households in the United States with about 3 million children are surviving on cash incomes of no more than $2 per day.

• A 2017 United Nations report found infant mortality rates in the U.S. to be the highest in the developed world. Children alone comprised 32.6 percent of all people in poverty.

• The World Income Database found that the U.S. has the highest rate of inequality among all Western countries.

Making this situation worse, many of the welfare and poverty eliminatio­n programs have been cut back or eliminated.

A recent Washington Post investigat­ion found that extreme poverty has nearly doubled since major welfare reform efforts in the 1990s under then-President Bill Clinton.

At the core of King’s antipovert­y message were two key ideas. The first was a guarantee that the federal government would provide every able-bodied American with a job. The second was for the federal government to provide a national basic income that would ensure a minimum concrete sum of money for every American regardless of employment status.

In his 1967 speech at Stanford University, King argued that the time had come to “guarantee an annual minimum - and livable - income for every American family.”

The idea was to ensure every U.S. citizen would be able to live above the poverty line. King was assassinat­ed before he could present a fully developed policy proposal.

Currently, several Nordic nations, most notably Finland, are considerin­g such a proposal. Two economists, Debraj Ray and Kelle Moene have argued that a universal income has the potential to boost GDP and productivi­ty.

The premise is that if you give people who currently lack means more money to spend, they will contribute to the economy through increased consumptio­n of goods and services.

On the anniversar­y of King’s death, as Americans ponder the unfinished work of the Poor People’s Campaign, I believe a guaranteed national income is one idea that needs to be examined.

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