Times-Herald

Census report shows relief programs staved off hardship in Covid crash

-

WASHINGTON (AP) — Massive government relief passed in response to the Covid19 pandemic moved millions of Americans out of poverty last year, even as the official poverty rate increased slightly, the Census Bureau reported Tuesday.

The official poverty measure showed an increase of 1 percentage point in 2020, with 11.4% of Americans living in poverty, or more than 37 million people. It was the first increase in poverty after five consecutiv­e annual declines.

But the Census Bureau's supplement­al measure of poverty, which takes into account government benefit programs and stimulus payments, showed that the share of people in poverty dropped significan­tly after the aid was factored in.

The decline in the supplement­al poverty measure was 2.6 percentage points below the pre-pandemic level in 2019. Stimulus payments moved 11.7 million people out of poverty, while expanded unemployme­nt benefits kept 5.5 million from falling into poverty. Social Security continued to be the nation's most effective antipovert­y program.

"This really highlights the importance of our social safety net," said Liana Fox, chief of the Census' poverty statistics bureau.

That finding is likely to resonate in a divided Congress, where President Joe Biden's $3.5 trillion "Build Back Better" plan faces uncertain prospects. Two anchors of last year's Covid response — enhanced unemployme­nt benefits and a federal eviction moratorium — have expired, adding to concerns.

The Census reports released Tuesday cover income, poverty and health insurance, and amount

(Continued from Page 1) to an annual check-up on the economic status of average Americans. The reports are based on extensive surveys and analysis.

During last year's epic economic collapse, employers shed 22.4 million jobs in March and April, the sharpest decline since records began in the 1940s. Weekly applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt benefits topped 6 million in a single week in April, by far the highest on record. Since then, the economy has recovered three-quarters of those lost jobs, but the U.S. still has 5.3 million fewer positions than before the pandemic.

A basic barometer of the economic health of the middle class registered the shock.

The median — or midpoint — household income decreased by 2.9% to $67,521 in 2020. The median is a statistica­l dividing line, with half of American households having lower incomes and the other half, higher. It was the first statistica­lly significan­t drop in that measure in nearly a decade.

Driving the erosion, the report found that the number of people with earnings from work fell by about 3 million as the number of full-time year-round workers contracted by some 13.7 million.

But below those toplines there was a story a story of haves and have-nots.

People who held on to steady year-round jobs saw an increase in economic well-being, with their median earnings rising 6.9% after adjusting for inflation. People on the lower rungs of the job market, those with part-time jobs or trying to stay afloat in the gig economy, lost ground as median earnings decreased 1.2% for workers overall.

Despite widespread concerns that the pandemic would make millions more Americans uninsured, health coverage held its own in 2020, the Census found. More than 91% of Americans had insurance, but 28 million were uninsured.

But Larry Levitt of the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation said the numbers point to some glaring exceptions. For example, 38% of poor working age adults in the dozen states that have not expanded Medicaid were uninsured. Biden's budget bill would provide a workaround for more than 2 million caught in that coverage gap.

"It would be hard to find a group that struggles more to get access to affordable health care," Levitt said.

Congress passed five bipartisan COVID-19 response bills last year, totaling close to $3.5 trillion and signed into law by then-President Donald Trump. This year Democrats pushed through President Joe Biden's nearly $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan on party-line votes. Its effects are not reflected in the Census report.

Though some of the federal aid last year was delayed for reasons from wrangling over costs to problems with distributi­on, on the whole it insulated American families from economic disaster that would have compounded the public health crisis. Some groups were left out, such as people not legally authorized to be in the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States