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If non-cash government aid were counted in the official formula, the earned income tax credit would have lifted 5.7 million more people above the poverty threshold, while food stamps would have boosted 3.9 million people. On the other hand, those at the top saw more growth in their incomes. Johnson said the top 1 percent of wage earners had a 6 percent increase in income in the last year, while earners in the bottom 80 percent of the income distribution mostly lost ground. The top 5 percent posted a 5.3 percent in income, indicating a widening in the gap between rich and poor. In the middle portion of the income distribution, middle-class Americans with earnings between $20,000 and $62,000 received less of the nation's total income, taking in just 23.8 percent, a new low. In 1980, the share taken in by similar middle-income groups was 29 percent. The share of Americans without health coverage fell from 16.3 percent to 15.7 percent, or 48.6 million people. It was the biggest decline in the number of uninsured since 1999, helped in part by increased coverage for young adults under the new health care law that allows them to be covered under their parents' health insurance until age 26.
The number of people covered by employment-based health plans also edged up from 169.4 million to 170.1 million, the first time in 10 years that the rate of private insurance coverage did not fall. Meanwhile, government health insurance including Medicaid, Medicare and the Children's Health Insurance Program increased for the fifth consecutive year, adding coverage to more than 3 million people. Congress passed the health overhaul in 2010 to bring coverage to more people. The law is a favorite target of Republicans, including Romney, who has pledged to push a repeal if he is elected. The main provisions of the health care law don't take effect until 2014. Those with a low income include Claudia Pedroza, 39, of Lakewood, Colo., who moved her four children from Denver to outside the city five years ago in search of better schools and a bigger house. She struggled to find work busing tables at a restaurant for $4.64 an hour, bringing home just $500 a month after taxes. Her husband has a $9-an-hour construction job but has seen his hours cut to 30 hours a week because of the limp market. Waiting for free food, shampoo and toiletries in a government-service agency this summer, Pedroza said it's been a challenge to stay afloat. "I thought it was going to be easy, but it's been very hard," said Pedroza, speaking in Spanish translated by her youngest daughter, age 8. Pedroza's daughter, Karla Osorio, picked up a pint of strawberries available at the government office and excitedly put them in their bag to take home. Pedroza and her daughter had a brief conversation. "Mom says to tell you we went to Walmart ... and couldn't afford this stuff. Here, look, we have grapes and strawberries," the girl said. ___ Online: Census report:
http://www.census.gov/prod/2012pubs/
p60-243.pdf
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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