A MINORITY VIEW
BY WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2007, AND
THEREAFTER
Are the Poor Getting Poorer?
People who want more government income redistribution programs
often sell their agenda with the lament, "The poor are getting poorer and
the rich are getting richer," but how about some evidence and you decide?
I think the rich are getting richer, and so are the poor.
According to the most recent census, about 35 million Americans
live in poverty. Heritage Foundation scholar Robert Rector, using several
government reports, gives us some insights about these people in his paper:
"Understanding Poverty and Economic Inequality in the United States"
[http://www.heritage.org/Research/Welfare/bg1796.cfm].
In 1971, only about 32 percent of all Americans enjoyed air
conditioning in their homes. By 2001, 76 percent of poor people had air
conditioning. In 1971, only 43 percent of Americans owned a color television;
in 2001, 97 percent of poor people owned at least one. In 1971, 1 percent of American
homes had a microwave oven; in 2001, 73 percent of poor people had one.
Forty-six percent of poor households own their homes. Only about 6 percent of
poor households are overcrowded. The average poor American has more living
space than the average non-poor individual living in Paris, London, Vienna,
Athens and other European cities.
Nearly three-quarters of poor households own a car; 30 percent own
two or more cars. Seventy-eight percent of the poor have a VCR or DVD player;
62 percent have cable or satellite TV reception; and one-third have an
automatic dishwasher.
For the most part, long-term poverty today is self-inflicted. To
see this, let's examine some numbers from the Census Bureau's 2004 Current
Population Survey. There's one segment of the black population that suffers
only a 9.9 percent poverty rate, and only 13.7 percent of their
under-5-year-olds are poor. There's another segment of the black population
that suffers a 39.5 percent poverty rate, and 58.1 percent of its
under-5-year-olds are poor.
Among whites, one population segment suffers a 6 percent poverty
rate, and only 9.9 percent of its under-5-year-olds are poor. Another segment
of the white population suffers a 26.4 percent poverty rate, and 52 percent of
its under-5-year-olds are poor.
What do you think distinguishes the high and low poverty
populations? The only statistical distinction between both the black and white
populations is marriage. There is far less poverty in married-couple families,
where presumably at least one of the spouses is employed. Fully 85 percent of
black children living in poverty reside in a female-headed household.
Poverty is not static for people willing to work. A University of
Michigan study shows that only 5 percent of those in the bottom fifth of the
income distribution in 1975 remained there in 1991. What happened to them? They
moved up to the top three-fifths of the income distribution -- middle class or
higher. Moreover, three out of 10 of the lowest income earners in 1975 moved
all the way into the top fifth of income earners by 1991. Those who were poor
in 1975 had an inflation-adjusted average income gain of $27,745 by 1991. Those
workers who were in the top fifth of income earners in 1975 were better off in
1991 by an average of only $4,354. The bottom line is, the richer are getting
richer and the poor are getting richer.
Poverty in the United States, in an absolute sense, has virtually
disappeared. Today, there's nothing remotely resembling poverty of yesteryear.
However, if poverty is defined in the relative sense, the lowest fifth of
income-earners, "poverty" will always be with us. No matter how
poverty is defined, if I were an unborn spirit, condemned to a life of poverty,
but God allowed me to choose which nation I wanted to be poor in, I'd choose
the United States. Our poor must be the envy of the world's poor.
Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason
University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by
other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT
2007 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.