Washington,
Jan 25 : The number of U.S. families struggling with poverty despite
parents being employed continued to grow in 2011 as more people returned to work
but mostly at lower-paying service jobs, an analysis released shows.
More
working parents have taken jobs as cashiers, maids, waiters and other low-wage
jobs in fast growing sectors that offer fewer hours and benefits, according to
The Working Poor Project, a privately funded effort aimed at improving economic
security for low-income families.
The result is 200,000 more such working
families - the so-called "working poor" - emerged in 2011 than in 2010,
according to the report, based on analysis of the most recent U.S. Census Bureau
data.
About 10.4 million such families - or 47.5 million Americans - now
live near poverty, defined as earning less than 200 percent of the official
poverty rate, which is $22,811 for a family of four.
Overall, nearly
one-third of working families now struggle, up from 31 percent in 2010 and 28
percent in 2007, when the recession began, according to the
analysis.
"Although many people are returning to work, they are often
taking jobs with lower wages and less job security, compared with the
middle-class jobs they held before the economic downturn," the report
said.
"This means that nearly a third of all working families ... may not
have enough money to meet basic needs."
The findings come three years
after the nation's recession officially ended in the second half of
2009.
Brandon Roberts, co-author of the report, said the results were
somewhat of a surprise after Census officials last year said the U.S. poverty
rate had stabilized.
"As the economy has improved one would expect that
the benefits of that improvement would to some extent tie to these low-income
families, and we'd see a decrease or at least a stabilization in the numbers,"
said Roberts, whose project is funded by four groups, including the Annie E.
Casey Foundation and the Ford Foundation, and focuses on state
policies.
"But the reality, the data show that the benefits of - even
though it's modest economic growth - it's not going to these low-income
families," he added.
The group's analysis adds to the body of data
focused on the slipping U.S. middle class even as there are signs of the
nation's economy slowly coming back to life with improvements in the housing
sector and lower unemployment rate.
For some Americans, the comeback has
yet to begin.
Data showed that the top 20 percent of Americans received
48 percent of all income while those in the bottom 20 percent got less than 5
percent, the report said.
The analysis also found regional
differences.
States in the South, such as Georgia and South Carolina, and
those in the West, such as Arizona and Nevada, had the greatest increase in the
number of working poor. The increase was slower in the Mid-Atlantic and
Northeast.
"It's important to draw attention to the fact that there are
real families behind those statistics," said Alan Essig, who heads the Georgia
Budget and Policy Institute, adding that his state is still struggling with
housing and unemployment.
The effect of near poverty on the growing
number of U.S. children living in such families - an increase of 2.5 million
youths over five years - is also a concern.
In 2011, roughly 23.5
million, or 37 percent, of U.S. children lived in working poor families compared
with about 21 million, or 33 percent, in 2007, the report said.
Part of
the problem is that more parents are working in service-sector jobs that require
long hours at night and on weekends and so face child-care difficulties, along
with low wages and involuntary part-time status, the analysis
showed.
About 25 percent of low-income parents work in one of eight jobs:
cashiers, cooks, health aides, janitors, maids, retail clerks, waiters and
waitresses, and drivers, it said.
Such jobs often pay minimum wage, which
can vary state-by-state, although the U.S. federal minimum wage standard has
stood at $7.25 an hour since 2010.
"Any little thing - a child getting
sick, a car breaking down ... those are quite significant events for these
working families," Roberts said.
Focusing on state policies to boost
education and jobs training for their parents could help, the report concluded.
Others have also pointed to other options such as greater access to paid sick
leave and increased minimum wages.
"Folks in our state are working hard,
but for many families, working hard just isn't enough. Things need to change,"
said F. Scott McCown of the Texas-based Center for Public Policy
Priorities.
Roberts said some federal policies in the recent agreement
averting the so-called fiscal cliff were good news. The law that avoided higher
taxes and across-the-board cuts kept two key tax credits and extended
unemployment benefits.
He said the recent agreement to avoid higher U.S.
taxes and across-the-board cuts helped by keeping two key tax credits and
unemployment benefits. But those policies were in place in 2011, when Census
gathered its data.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Number of working poor families grows as wealth gap widens
Number of working poor families grows as wealth gap widens
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