By Bill Knight

A large and growing number of Amer­icans are poor or at risk of becoming poor as a conse­quence of the Great Recession, and many will struggle during a recovery, according to a white paper released last week by the national broad­caster whose Monday appearance at the 20th Annual Martin Luther King luncheon in Peoria was canceled after some people complained that he’d crit­i­cized Pres­ident Obama.

Tavis Smiley, the radio and TV talk-show host who said Obama has not done enough about poverty issues, said he was removed as the event’s speaker because he tries to hold the pres­ident accountable.

I don’t see my role as one of crit­i­cizing the pres­ident,” he said last week on Fox News. “I see my role as one of holding the pres­ident – this and every other pres­ident – accountable.

So often the political right – and I am no defender of the political right – … gets accused of playing the game of political correctness,” he added. “What this under­scores is that those on the left, the Democrats, can play that game of political correctness as well.”

Last summer, Smiley and author Cornel West of Princeton University went on a 16-city Poverty Tour to high­light economic disparity. The white paper, “At Risk: America’s Poor During and After the Great Recession,” was prepared by the Indiana University School of Public and Envi­ron­mental Affairs at Smiley’s request to support Poverty Tour assertions.

Many of the ‘new poor’ are the former middle class,” Smiley said. “Poor people are not moochers and welfare queens, as some would like you to believe. Our neighbors, colleagues and families are all strug­gling. It’s a problem all of us need to solve together, right now.”

In connection with the white paper, Smiley last Thursday moderated a discussion at George Wash­ington University in Wash­ington, D.C., “Remaking America: From Poverty to Pros­perity,” spon­sored by the W.K. Kellogg Foun­dation. Broadcast live on C-SPAN and rebroadcast this week on PBS, plus Public Radio Inter­na­tional, people who looked forward to hearing Smiley in down­state Illinois at least can go online to watch or listen to the two and a half hour discussion (http://www.pbs.org/wnet/tavissmiley/, http://www.tavissmileyradio.com/ [audio], http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/303663–1 [video]).

The panelists are impressive, including West; personal finance expert Suze Orman; Oscar-winning film­maker Michael Moore; author Barbara Ehren­reich (“Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America”); urban revi­tal­ization strategist Majora Carter; economic devel­opment expert Roger A. Clay Jr.; and Vicki B. Escarra, CEO of Feeding America. They addressed problems noted in Indiana University’s paper, which explores how the recession affected the size and compo­sition of America’s poor, examines the perfor­mance of safety-net programs, and high­lights the impact of policies adopted to cushion the recession’s impact.

The paper’s key findings include:

* Poverty has increased signif­i­cantly. Some 46.2 million Amer­icans lived below the official poverty level in 2010, about 15.1 percent of the popu­lation. That number grew by 27 percent since 2006, while the popu­lation increased by 3.3 percent.

* Increases in poverty were greatest among Hispanics and African-Americans, children, house­holds headed by women, and working-age adults, espe­cially people between ages 18 and 34. One in five U.S. kids lives in poverty, and almost half of them (9.3 percent) live in extreme poverty. Plus, 19 million Amer­icans now live in extreme poverty, meaning their family income is less than half of the poverty line (about $11,000 a year for a family of four).

* Those without health insurance increased 9.5 percent, to 50.7 million, in 2008.

* About 16 million low-income house­holds paid more for rent and util­ities than the government says are affordable, or lived in over­crowded or substandard housing. Fore­closure affected nearly half a million more homes in 2009 than in 2008, a 21 percent jump. The nation’s homeless popu­lation increased by about 20,000 people from 2008 to 2009 (3 percent).

* Safety-net programs had mixed success. Programs such as Medicaid, food stamps an Unem­ployment Insurance responded robustly, but programs that depend on discre­tionary spending were less effective.

*The economic decline’s impact would have been worse if not for 2009’s stimulus package, but most of those funds have now been spent. With the stimulus ending and state tax collec­tions lagging, states face growing problems. Some are cutting spending on programs such as Medicaid.

* Federal deficits are creating pres­sures to cut spending, which may adversely affect the poor.

Promoting sustained economic growth while at the same time protecting the well-being of the poor, the near poor and the new poor is the central chal­lenge for the leaders of the United States,” says the paper.

It would have been nice to hear that first-hand.

The paper itself is available online.

Bill Knight

Bill Knight is an award-winning jour­nalist, professor and deputy director of the jour­nalism program at Western Illinois University.

BillKnight@GalesburgPlanet.com

EmailFacebookShare

Related posts:

  1. CBPP: Without the remaining safety net more than 1 in 4 Amer­icans would be in poverty
  2. CBPP: Dimen­sions of poverty deepen
  3. ProP­ublica: Our sput­tering economy by the numbers: Poverty edition
  4. Nation’s finances result from choices
  5. The most important 2012 election issues are… unlikely to be discussed by any candidate