The Poverty of Poverty Statistics

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by Don Matthews
Mises.org


Some things are not as simple as they seem. Take poverty statistics, for example.

The U.S. Census Bureau recently released its "Poverty in the U.S.: 2002" report, which contains the latest official poverty statistics for the nation. The statistics, to no one’s surprise, suggest a struggling national economy

According to the report, 34.6 million Americans were in poverty in 2002, an increase of 1.7 million from 2001. That increase caused the nation’s poverty rate—the percentage of the population in poverty—to rise from 11.7 percent in 2001 to 12.1 percent in 2002.

A comparable increase occurred in the rate of poverty among families. In 2002, 7.2 million families—9.6 percent of all families—were in poverty, up from 6.8 million and 9.2 percent in 2001.

The most disturbing statistic in the annual poverty report is always the poverty rate among children. According to the 2002 report, 16.7 percent of children were poor in 2002. That rate is unchanged from 2001; however, the number of children in poverty increased to 12.1 million in 2002, up from 11.7 million in 2001.

These statistics seem simple and straightforward. But they are not.

Poverty is not a simple thing to measure. Poverty implies poor living conditions, but how are we to measure living conditions? More to the point, how does the Census Bureau measure living conditions?

It doesn’t. The Census Bureau classifies as poor any family whose income falls below a certain threshold. The income thresholds vary by family size. For example, a family of four with an income of less than $18,392 in 2002 would be classified as poor.

How are the income thresholds determined? They are based on 1955 U.S. Department of Agriculture data on food budgets designed for families under economic stress. The thresholds were first computed in 1963–64 and have been updated for inflation (using the standard Consumer Price Index, CPI-U) each year since.

Thus, the official U.S. poverty rate, this statistic that receives so much attention from government policy makers, social scientists and the media, is based not on an assessment of living conditions but on 48 year-old USDA food budget data.

Measuring family income is no simple matter, either. In fact, the Census Bureau has come up with five different definitions of family income. The poverty rate varies significantly with the definition used.

For instance, the official poverty figures—again, 34.6 million people and a poverty rate of 12.1 percent—are derived by defining family income as before-tax cash income. However, when the Census Bureau defines family income as after-tax cash income plus capital gains and the value of all noncash transfers (and adjusts the poverty thresholds using the CPI-U-X1 rather than the notoriously inaccurate CPI-U), it counts 21.5 million people as poor. That’s 13.1 million or almost 40 percent fewer than the official count. It also results in a poverty rate of not 12.1 percent, but 7.5 percent.

Finally, the official poverty statistics take no account of the goods people own or the assets they have accumulated. Which means that a person who has accumulated a million dollars worth of goods and assets but whose income, for whatever reason, falls below the income threshold for the year will be classified as poor.

An extreme case? Not so extreme. Researchers have discovered that almost one million people classified as poor own homes worth more than $150,000, while upwards of 200,000 people classified as poor own homes worth more than $300,000.

So, what is the true extent of poverty in the U.S.? We'll never know. The official measures are problematic to the point of being meaningless. But the larger lesson of the Census Bureau's difficulties in estimating poverty is that any measure of poverty is bound to be problematic to the point of being meaningless.

Of course, the purpose of poverty statistics has never been to advance our knowledge of society, but to advance the cause of government planning. So, despite their flaws, poverty statistics survive.
 

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Pretty amazing isn't it....Thats like the 9 dwarfs running president saying tax cuts are for the rich only, they can't give you a straight answer of what the income level is to be called "rich"...but I have seen some figures that a family making 50k per year qualifies as being "rich"....Thats who the dems say should be taxed more...50k or more...fxckin clueless or what?
 

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No Pat I wouldn't say 50k a year is rich, but on the other hand it's just common sense that a person earning 50k should pay more than someone earning 30k for example.
 

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My roommate makes $27k/yr., has 1 son who doesn't live with her and has 1 son who does live with her. She qualifies for government assistance which includes free cereal, eggs, milk, etc. and discounts on other food. She is eligible (and takes advantage of) other government assistance as well such as health programs so she doesn't have to have this deducted from her paycheck. If she were not receiving this assistance she could still afford these things.

Why should the taxpayers be paying for her responsibilities so she can live in a house for $700/mo. and also gamble $20 or $30 a week at the casino? She is making enough money to live comfortably in a $450/mo. apartment without assistance or a cheaper $500/mo. house than the one she is living in now.

I've often said that government assistance programs enable drug users, alcoholics, compulsive gamblers, etc. to have free money to feed their addictions. You and I are paying for this.
 

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BGO...Of course the goverment is the biggest enabler of all...Thats why generations of welfare people consider welfare the "family buisness."....rewarding failure basically.

Kaya, again if you had a clue people under 30k a year or so pay Zero taxes...what ever they pay they get back as a refund and other benifits.
 

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I'd like to know where the equal rights protection laws are when it comes to a person of ambition...In this country if you want to sit on your ass all day there are really no restrictions to that freedom...but the freedom to make money you are punished, the higher you strive to go on the economic scale the more sanctions are put on you by the goverment...where are the liberals when it comes to this type of equal protection.
 

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Pat the numbers are arbitrary to make a point, $50 to $30, $50k to $30k, $50 million to $30 million.

Some times you really have trouble with conceptual thinking.

Biggames,

I agree that some abuse government, efforts to control that must improved. On the other hand for some it is a necessity and wouldn't be eating or feeding their children without it.
 

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"...but the freedom to make money you are punished, the higher you strive to go on the economic scale the more sanctions are put on you by the goverment...where are the liberals when it comes to this type of equal protection."

It's called responsibilty, what you owe to the society that provided you the opportunity to make the money.
 

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I have to say that while the richer can pay more and almost always do pay a higher percentage of their income as tax, where is the fairness and equity in ideas like what Lieberman is passing around? I mean the guy makes it simple, we cut rates on the lower income people and jack up the rates on the people that make more, and in the end its all FAIR. WTF??? What kind of silly thinking is this? I am not rich, I wouldn't have my taxes raised, but I fear for people falling for such bogus thinking. If you like that plan, fine state it and take your chances with the voters, but don't go telling people that is FAIR. That is ridiculous class warfare, no way around it little Joe, so why not be a man and admit so much? His justification is that everyone got breaks from Bush, which isn't fair since the rich got percentage breaks just the same as the poor. How is that so unfair? I just don't get this politician speak anymore, there is nothing fair about singling out a certain class for paying more so another can pay less.
 

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Taxes



Accounts Receivable Tax

Building Permit Tax

Capital Gains Tax

CDL license Tax

Cigarette Tax

Corporate Income Tax

Court Fines (indirect taxes)

Dog License Tax

Federal Income Tax

Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA)

Fishing License Tax

Food License Tax

Fuel permit tax

Gasoline Tax (42 cents per gallon)

Hunting License Tax

Inheritance Tax Interest expense (tax on the money)

Inventory tax IRS Interest Charges (tax on top of tax)

IRS Penalties (tax on top of tax)

Liquor Tax

Local Income Tax

Luxury Taxes

Marriage License Tax

Medicare Tax

Property Tax

Real Estate Tax

Septic Permit Tax

Service Charge Taxes

Social Security Tax

Road Usage Taxes (Truckers)

Sales Taxes

Recreational Vehicle Tax

Road Toll Booth Taxes

School Tax

State Income Tax

State Unemployment Tax (SUTA)

Telephone federal excise tax

Telephone federal universal service fee tax

Telephone federal, state and local surcharge taxes

Telephone minimum usage surcharge tax

Telephone recurring and non-recurring charges tax

Telephone state and local tax

Telephone usage charge tax

Toll Bridge Taxes

Toll Tunnel Taxes

Traffic Fines (indirect taxation)

Trailer registration tax

Utility Taxes

Vehicle License Registration Tax

Vehicle Sales Tax

Watercraft registration Tax

Well Permit Tax

Workers Compensation Tax



COMMENT: Not one of these taxes existed 100 years ago and our nation was the
most prosperous in the world, had absolutely no national debt, had the
largest middle class in the world and Mom stayed home to raise the kids.

What the hell happened?
 

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I was listening to Sean Hannity on the radio the other day. He said there are few things that we do that are not touched by taxes. Can anyone think of anything we do that is not taxed?

I can think of one maybe and that is going for a walk. That is, if you don't count the sales tax I paid for my shoes to enable me to go on that walk.
 

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So we now become primitive because to avoid the sales tax we walk barefooted.......What's this place we call the land of the free coming to?
 

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Another thing that people fail to consider when lamenting poverty is how the incredible jump in the overall standard of living since the Industrial Revolution has effected everyone from the top to the bottom of the chain. Walter Williams wrote about that in Capitalist Magazine recently:

<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
There are some arguments so illogical that only an intellectual or politician can believe them. One of those arguments is: capitalism benefits the rich more than it benefits the 'common man.'

Let's look at it.

The rich have always had access to entertainment, and some times in the comfort of their palaces and mansions. The rich have never had to experience the drudgery of having to beat out carpets, iron their clothing or slave over a hot stove all day in order to have a decent dinner; they could afford to hire people. Today, the common man has the power to enjoy much of what only the rich could yesteryear. Capitalism's mass production have made radios and televisions, vacuum cleaners, wash-and-wear clothing and microwave ovens available and well within the reach of the common man; thus, sparing him of the drudgery of the past.

What about those who became wealthy making comforts available to the common man? Henry Ford benefitted immensely from mass producing automobiles but the benefit for the common man, from being able to buy a car, dwarfs anything Ford received. Individual discovers and companies who produced penicillin, polio and typhoid vaccines may have become wealthy but again it was the common man who was the major beneficiary. In more recent times, computers and software products have impacted our health, safety and life quality in a way that dwarfs the wealth received by their creators.

Here's a little test. Stand on the corner and watch people walk or drive by. Then, based on their appearances, identify which persons are wealthy. Years ago, it wouldn't have been that hard.

The ordinary person wouldn't be dressed as well, surely not wearing designer clothing, nor would they have nice looking jewellery plus, they wouldn't be driving by. Compare the income status of today's airline passengers with those of yesterday; you'll find a greater percentage of ordinary people.

That's one of the great benefits of capitalism; it has made it possible for common people to enjoy at least some of what wealthy people enjoy. You say, "Williams, common people don't have access to Rolls Royces and yachts!" You're wrong. Microsoft's Bill Gates is super-rich and can afford to ride in a Rolls Royce and go yachting sailing; so can Williams - just not as long. I can rent a Rolls or a yacht for a day, half-day or an hour.

Capitalism is relatively new in human history. Prior to capitalism, the way people amassed great wealth was by looting, plundering and enslaving their fellow man. Capitalism made it possible to become wealthy by serving your fellow man. Capitalists seek to find what people want and produce and market it as efficiently as possible. Here's a question for us: are people who by their actions create unprecedented convenience, longer life expectancy and more fun available to the ordinary person, and become wealthy in the process, deserving of all the scorn and ridicule heaped upon them by intellectuals and politicians? Are the wealthy obliged to "give something back?" For example, what more do the wealthy discoverers and producers of life-saving antibiotics owe us? They've already saved lives and made us healthier.

Despite the miracles of capitalism, it doesn't do well in popularity polls. One of the reasons is that capitalism is always evaluated against the non-existent utopias of socialism or communism. Any earthly system pales in comparison to utopias. But for the ordinary person, capitalism, with all of its warts, is superior to any system yet devised to deal with our everyday needs and desires.
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

While this is not to say that a specific poor person is in fact well off, which would be ludicrous, the fact is that despite over a century's worth of various failed Socialist schemes to attempt to construct a "safety net" for the poor, Capitalism has done so as a matter of course by increasing the basic standard of living in such a dramatic manner that some of the poorest among us live like the richest of our ancestors from not too far back into the past.


Phaedrus
 

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