Los Angeles Times

A Soviet- style safety net

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Re “Obama’s safety net gains are historic,” Jan. 17

On the one hand, there are major increases in federal tax breaks and safety net programs benefiting low- and moderatein­come households. On the other hand, liberals are complainin­g that these same households are not seeing any increase in their wages.

I can’t be the only person who sees the grammarsch­ool level of thinking that seems to be the standard these days.

If the trend continues, workers will live better for a while but complain about ever lower incomes — until one day there’s no income to generate tax revenue to support the safety nets, and the whole thing collapses. ( See “Soviet Union.”)

Ray Coen

Pacific Palisades

Despite expansion of safety- net programs and certain tax breaks, lowincome Americans still have lost ground since 2009.

For example, Annie E. Casey Foundation researcher­s have found that a larger percentage of American children live in poverty today than during the Great Recession. And according to the Census Bureau, the median annual income of black Americans has decreased every year since 2009.

It looks as if most of President Obama’s “safety net” policies have done very little to add real income to the budgets of most low- income people.

The kinds of policies that will have a real impact must provide direct cash payments to people who are unemployed, underemplo­yed or who are not being paid a living wage. We need policies that guarantee workers grants that supplement their incomes up to a “living wage” level and ongoing unemployme­nt benefits when they lose their jobs and are truly looking for work but simply cannot find a job.

If political parties are not providing these kinds of policies, those parties are not really meeting the survival needs of most low- income Americans.

Reginald Clark

Montclair

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