U.S. government aid helped reduce poverty in 2020, Census data shows
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[September 15, 2021] By
Jonnelle Marte
(Reuters) -Direct cash payments to
households and generous unemployment benefits helped to keep millions of
Americans out of poverty after the coronavirus pandemic severely
disrupted the U.S. economy and pushed people out of work, according to a
government survey released on Tuesday.
The stimulus payments the federal government sent out to most U.S.
households in the middle of the pandemic helped to lift 11.7 million
people out of poverty last year, the U.S. Census Bureau said. Support
offered through jobless benefits, which were enhanced with federal
funds, also helped as unemployment soared because of the crisis, the
report showed.
"I think this really shows the importance of the social safety net,”
said Liana Fox, chief of the Census Bureau's poverty statistics branch.
The poverty rate dropped to 9.1% in 2020 from 11.8% in 2019, according
to a measure that takes into account government support offered through
programs such as food assistance and the stimulus checks.
In contrast, the official U.S. poverty rate, which does not include the
stimulus checks or some other government programs, rose to 11.4% from
10.5% in 2019, the first increase after five years of declines. And real
median household income, a measure that includes unemployment benefits
but not the pandemic relief checks, decreased to about $67,500 in 2020,
down 2.9% from 2019.
SOME GOVERNMENT BENEFITS ENDING
The report comes days after enhanced unemployment benefits expired
https://www.reuters.com/business/us-unemployment-benefits-end-firms-hope-wave-applicants-2021-09-03
across the country, a shift that threatens to slow economic growth after
leaving millions of job seekers with smaller payouts or no benefits at
all.
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A Quitman County Sheriff’s Department officer distributes food boxes
at an aid site in Marks, Mississippi, U.S., May 24, 2021.
REUTERS/Rory Doyle
Some businesses and lawmakers hoped reducing benefits would lead to an uptick in
job applicants, but economists say obstacles securing childcare https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-childcare-short-supply-burned-out-workers-quit-new-hires-hard-find-2021-09-01
and fears of the virus may still be keeping some people out of work.
President Joe Biden and other Democrats are pushing for more investments in
programs that could subsidize childcare costs, permanently expand tax credits
for parents and provide other support to households. But some of those efforts
could face resistance from Republicans who say the support is needed less as the
economy rebounds.
The Census report illustrated the economic effects of the pandemic, which
disproportionately affected women, minorities and low-wage workers.
The total number of people who worked at all in 2020 decreased by about 3
million from 2019. The number of people who worked full-time for the entire year
dropped by 13.7 million, the largest annual decrease since the Census began
tracking that figure in 1967.
Earnings for working women dropped by 1.2% in 2020 from the year before, while
men did not see a statistically significant change in income. And households in
every region except the Northeast saw notable declines in real median income
from 2019, with the Midwest experiencing the biggest drop.
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte and Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Andrea Ricci and
Jonathan Oatis)
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