Photo Credit: Nation Books
September 4, 2013
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The following are excerpts from Sasha Abramsky's new book The American Way of Poverty: How the Other Half Still Lives (Nation Books, 2013):
In
the fall of 2011, with hunger rearing up across America, the large
freezer bins at the Port Carbon Food Pantry (PCFP), in the small,
gritty, Appalachian town of Pottsville, Pennsylvania, were empty. The
shelves next to the freezers were also largely barren. A few boxes of
egg noodles provided about the only sign that this was a place in the
business of giving out food to those who could no longer afford to buy
it. An adjacent room was doing slightly better, displaying stacks of
canned fruit, canned corn, beans, and bags of pasta. But, taken as a
whole, these were slim pickings. Clients who walked or drove up the
hill, the remnants of an unseasonably early snow storm still on the
ground, from the center of town to the two-story building were eligible
for six to ten days of food, but that food was all they’d be able to get
from the pantry for the next two months.
Three years earlier,
explained PCFP’s coordinator, Ginny Wallace, the rooms were filled to
bursting with food. Then the economy tanked; demand for the free food
soared; and at the same time, locals’ ability to donate to the pantry
crumbled.
Pottsville, and neighboring communities such as
Mechanicsville and Schuylkill, made up a bleak region even in the good
times. A onetime coal mining hub, it was a center of labor militancy in
the early years of the twentieth century. But in recent decades most of
the mines had closed down; many of the jobs that replaced the unionized
mine work were low-paying, service-sector ones that provided few
benefits. Add into the mix rising unemployment and home foreclosures,
and an already precarious situation suddenly got a whole lot worse. “The
need has increased and the surplus food given has decreased,” Wallace
explained, holding open the lids of the large freezers to emphasize
their emptiness. “The only thing in here is frost building up. Three
years ago, we used to have to turn down deliveries.”
Many of the
men and women who were helped by food pantries such as this were elderly
people on fixed incomes who increasingly found they couldn’t stretch
meager monthly checks to pay all their bills, buy all their medicines,
and also feed themselves. People such as 86-year-old widow Mary, a
onetime factory worker and bookkeeper of Polish immigrant stock, whose
$592 Social Security check didn’t come close to covering all her costs.
“I manage,” she said flintily. “You’ve got to know how to manage. And if
you’re a boozer and a smoker, then you don’t manage. I live according
to my means. That’s what life is all about.” Yet despite her pride,
Mary, who picked up some additional money helping to care for a
102-year-old woman nearby, recently had had to turn to the pantry for
help. “Every time you go to the store or turn around,” she explained,
“the bills are higher.”
Other pantry clients were younger,
families whose breadwinners lost their jobs during the recession that
followed the financial collapse of 2008. Take 53-year-old Luann Prokop,
an accountant who was laid off when the local manufacturing company she
worked for could no longer stay afloat as an independent business and
was taken over, and restructured, by a multinational corporation. “I had
to apply for food stamps. Money was really tight. By the grace of God I
was able to hold onto my house, but I did have to apply for two
deferments during the two years I was on unemployment. I became more
introverted, especially after getting rejected [from jobs she’d applied
for] over and over and over again. I had a good, solid background; I
have fabulous references. I couldn’t understand why. It was a difficult,
dark period.”
Having burned through her savings, her retirement
accounts, and her unemployment benefits, and having fallen far behind on
her mortgage, Luann realized that unless she started using the food
pantry she and her two teenage children would literally go without
meals. Then, adjusting her expectations ever downward, she took an
accounting job at the center that housed the pantry. She was bringing in
about $20,000 per year, whereas a few years earlier she had earned
$60,000—not enough to live well, but too much to qualify for many
government benefits.
Now, I shop in
thrift stores. I live paycheck to paycheck. I make sure my children have
necessities before I buy for myself. Fortunately, I don’t have a car
payment, but my car is on its last lap. I’m barely holding onto the
house. I’m on assistance for electricity—a state program, which allows
me to keep my lights on. I don’t know how I’m going to make it through
the winter with heating. I saved up money for oil, but it’s a fraction
of what I’m going to need to get through the winter. I don’t get food
stamps. I’m strictly on my own. Last year it was really, really
rough—coming up with the money to heat the house. I had to defer my
mortgage for three months; they added the interest I would have paid
onto my new payments.
When she ran out of food, Luann improvised.
“Chicken bouillon plus rice tastes like chicken rice soup,” she said,
and shrugged. “Of course, there’s no chicken in it.”
And then
there were the pantry denizens escaping domestic violence who had run up
against draconian cuts to the shelter system. One client, Wallace
recalled, was a woman in her late forties, about to enter a shelter. “We
got a request to provide her food because she has to bring her own food
to the shelter. The programs that assist the working poor and the poor
are in dire straits.”
***
Variations
on the stories from Appalachian Pennsylvania could be encountered in
cities and regions across America. After all, an economic free-fall of
the kind that the United States underwent after the housing market
collapse and then the broader financial meltdown leaves carnage in its
wake. For those born into poverty, the hardship is magnified. For
millions of others who thought of themselves as upwardly mobile, with
middle-class aspirations and middle-class spending patterns, the crisis
flung them down the economic ladder, replacing a precarious fiscal
stability with a continuous struggle to survive.
In the
working-class, immigrant community of Pomona, a few miles east of
downtown Los Angeles, in fall 2008 five eleventh-grade and ten
twelfth-grade students in Village Academy teacher Michael Steinman’s
English classes began compiling their stories of poverty for a video
project. “I was aware of the economy, but I wasn’t personally affected
too terribly,” Steinman explained. “But when I asked my students how
things were going, in my AP class—we were studying
The Great Gatsbyat
the time—every single student had been affected. I wanted them to give
testimony to what they had witnessed and they were going through. The
concept of the American Dream has either evaporated or gone away. Daily,
I work with kids who are very much stressed. They hide it well; there’s
a certain amount of shame that they carry about being poor or
struggling. But I do know they’re going through circumstances that
definitely impact their studies and their ability to think about the
future and be positive.” The video footage that they created and put up
on YouTube went viral in January 2009. Barack Obama’s presidential
transition team was shown the video. A couple of months later when he
visited Southern California, the newly inaugurated president held a
rally in a lot adjacent to the buildings that housed the experimental
school—whose student body is overwhelmingly made up of young people from
ethnic minority backgrounds, and one ranked by
U.S. News & World Reportas one of California’s best educational establishments. Obama also invited Steinman and his students to the White House.
Yet
for all the hoopla around their project, nearly a full presidential
cycle later, conditions for many of the students at the Village Academy
high school remained appalling. Large numbers of the kids lived with
parents who had lost their jobs during the recession and either failed
to find new employment or were working long hours at jobs that paid only
minimum wage. Many had lost homes to foreclosure—either because of
variable-rate, subprime mortgages or because of unemployment—or, behind
on mortgage or rent payments, lived in constant fear of losing their
homes to the banks or to landlords. Almost all of Steinman’s students
qualified for free school breakfasts and lunches—and, for many of these
kids, these were the only hot meals they ate. Evenings and weekends,
they either went without or grabbed some dry cereal to stanch their
hunger. Several honors students at the high-performing school, who
should have been applying to college, were instead thinking of quitting
education and getting dead-end work just to help their families pay the
bills.
“Sometimes I cry,” Oliver Lopez explained as he described
his family’s struggles—his mother out of work, his father working two
part-time minimum-wage jobs, he and his three younger brothers living
from meal to meal. “I see how hard my father works; and I’m 18 years old
and just come to school. I don’t do nothing. Sometimes we don’t even
have food to eat.”
One of Oliver’s classmates described how he,
his mother, his two sisters, his grandmother, two uncles, an aunt, and
her daughter all lived in a one-bedroom apartment, most of them sleeping
on the floor, until they fell behind on their rent and were evicted in
early 2010. The family had split up, with groups of two or three going
off to stay with different relatives. The young man was living with his
mother, who in a good week was earning $300 as a housecleaner, and his
two younger sisters in a single room in a friend’s house. During
mealtimes, the mother would eat leftovers off of his and his sisters’
barely filled plates. “I’m depressed. I spend most of my time crying
alone. My mom tells me I should get a job. She gets mad at me. She works
from 6 A.M. to 5 P.M. I’m actually out trying to find a job. But
there’s nothing.”
***
We will get far
further in understanding twenty-first century American poverty if we
consider how entrenched the new plutocracy, and its economic agenda, has
become than if we look solely for explanations regarding the purported
intellectual, economic, and cultural inadequacies of the poor. It is,
after all, surely no coincidence that the United States, the country
with the wealthiest elite in the Western world, and an economy that has
averaged 2.2 percent productivity gains each year since 1947, also has
vastly higher poverty rates than its peer nations.
Shortly after
the financial crisis hit, the OECD published a table on income
distribution: Even after government benefits were factored in, more than
11 percent of the American population had incomes of only 40 percent of
the median income in the country. In Great Britain, that number was
only a little above 6 percent; Germany’s number was a little more than 4
percent. In Sweden it was 3.8 percent; and in the Netherlands, 2.7
percent. Even Greece and Ireland, two countries tottering toward
bankruptcy, had a far lower percentage of their populations living
significantly below the poverty line than did the United States.
“What’s
most striking in the past few years is the absolute absence of
discussion of poverty on the public agenda,” noted University of
California at Santa Barbara historian Alice O’Connor, who has built her
career studying Americans’ shifting attitudes toward poverty over the
centuries. “It’s just not there. The great shift is that we’ve come to
accept very high levels of poverty as either inevitable or the way
things should be.” For O’Connor, the callous approach to poverty wasn’t
unprecedented in American history, but it
wassomething that
found equivalents only distantly back in time. “You’d have to cycle back
to the Gilded Age,” in the latter decades of the nineteenth century,
“to find a similarly untroubled acceptance of mass poverty,” she
believed. These days, said O’Connor, politics has become increasingly
reliant on big-dollar contributors, and in so becoming has lost touch
with the expectations of the vast majority of Americans who cannot
afford to buy access to the political process. “The narrow politics of
winning elections,” she averred, “has less and less to do with
connecting with what people really care about, and more to do with
raising money and buying media and these kinds of things.”
Increasingly, however, large numbers of Americans
doseem
to be troubled by the political elite’s acceptance of wholesale poverty
as a normal part of contemporary life. Members of the overwhelming
majority—the much-touted 99 percent—who haven’t benefited from this epic
economic change are realizing the plutocratic implications of this
shift. “We’re all out here and we all get it,” said 26-year-old Thomas
Reges, one of the Occupy D.C. protesters camped out in the capital’s
MacPherson Square, in October 2011. “We’re all angry. We all know
something is wrong, and we’re trying to make it better.”
That month, at the height of the Occupy Wall Street protests, an NBC/
Wall Street Journalpoll
found 37 percent of Americans supported the protests, and only 18
percent opposed them, with the remaining 45 percent presumably neutral. A
couple of weeks later, a CBS News/
New York Timespoll found
that 43 percent of Americans sympathized with the protests. Other polls
during this period found that more than six out of every ten Americans
believed the economic system was rigged in favor of the wealthy;
three-quarters felt that things were getting better for Wall Street CEOs
but not for ordinary middle-class Americans, and a majority of the
population believed that economic inequality was a bigger problem than
government overregulation. Sizeable majorities also supported the notion
that the administration should pursue policies intended to reduce
economic inequality. This was subsequently reinforced by exit polling on
November 6, 2012, showing that most voters favored raising taxes on the
wealthy to help deal with the country’s burgeoning deficits.
When
the American Bankers Association held its annual conference in Chicago
in 2009, several thousand protesters descended on the event. Three years
later, groups such as National People’s Action, run by a longtime
organizer named George Goehl, trained large numbers of people in what
they termed “economic civil disobedience”: Protesters would attend
shareholder meetings and demand that their economic grievances be heard;
often, they engaged in sitdown protests and sometimes blockades.
For
many of the protesters, the economic crisis, and the ways in which
large banks treated small borrowers, had catalyzed a political response
that they didn’t know they previously had in them.
Barb Kalbach,
for example, was a retired farmer who, in the years following the 2008
collapse, joined an activist group called Iowa Citizens for Community
Improvement, began devoting much of her time to protesting economic
injustice, and ultimately embarked on campaigns of civil disobedience
aimed at putting a spotlight on corporate malfeasance around mortgage
foreclosures and other themes. “We ask to meet people like Jamie Dimon
[CEO of JPMorgan Chase],” Kalbach explained. “They ignore us, like we
are riffraff. That’s when we go forward; we go to their places. I call
it ‘Going to see the person who doesn’t want to see you.’” An unlikely
direct-action advocate, the elderly farmer had had enough. In all good
conscience, she felt she simply couldn’t do nothing. Her aim, she
declared, was to shine light, and now to get corporations to change
their tactics.
We’re trying to get the
lawmakers to see that what’s happened out in America isn’t right, that
corporations can’t walk all over people. It’s like a pie, and they’re
pulling all the money they can out of the pie. The homes were a pie,
pensions and 401(k)s, that was a pie. They robbed us, and then they took
a taxpayers’ bailout. Money and power and wealth is being pulled out of
America into fewer and fewer hands. It’s the same way with wages and
salaries and benefits—it’s a part of a pie.
Ai-jen Poo, director
of the National Domestic Workers Alliance, began organizing low-paid,
often undocumented domestic workers in the late 1990s, shortly after
graduating from Columbia University. For years, she said, they were
considered “shadows,” an out-of-sight, out-of-mind pool of caregivers
who cleaned up other people’s messes, changed other people’s soiled
bedclothes, and administered other people’s medications. In recent
years, however, more and more of the people she encountered were finding
that their working conditions resembled those of the domestic workers.
“Increasingly, the conditions that define the lives of domestic
workers—like instability, low wages, low benefits—these are conditions
increasingly defining the reality for most American workers. We’re in
the same boat more than ever.”
Yet, while more people
weremaking
these connections, this hadn’t yet translated into mass political
movements. Occupy Wall Street garnered much public sympathy, but most
people sympathized from the sidelines. They didn’t have the time and
energy to engage in the sort of all-in protests that came to define the
Occupy movement—at least in part because so many people were working
such long hours just to keep their families afloat—they didn’t like the
confrontational tactics and scruffy style of the Occupiers, or they
didn’t feel that camping out in parks and outside of city halls would
actually change a whole lot in their lives. And despite the opinion poll
data showing that Americans were becoming increasingly uneasy about the
degree of inequality seen in the country, on the whole that unease was
more about the shrinking middle class than it was about the conditions
of those at the very bottom of the economy. In fact, politically the
country as a whole remained remarkably tolerant of the continued
existence of mass poverty and, at the same time, remarkably reluctant to
embrace policies that might change this dynamic significantly.
“There
are essentially two stories over the last forty years,” Georgetown Law
School’s Peter Edelman explained. “The positive story is there would be
forty million more people who are poor if we didn’t have the public
policies we have—including Social Security, the Earned Income Tax
Credit, food stamps, and Medicare and Medicaid. They have helped quite
measurably in keeping poverty from being even higher than it is. So it
isn’t that we’ve been unwilling as a country to take steps to alleviate
poverty.” But, Edelman continued, there’s a second, less savory story
that runs parallel to the first. “Over the last forty years, we’ve
increasingly become a low-wage economy. People in the bottom 20 percent
are worse off than they were forty years ago. Income distribution has
deteriorated. The gaps between the rich and poor have widened
spectacularly.”
Another way to look at this is to consider that,
to a point, America has worked out how to ameliorate some of the
consequences of profound economic hardship—albeit reluctantly and with
an increasing number of gaps. Yet it is failing, in ever greater
degrees, to prevent that hardship from arising in the first place—in
changing power relationships in the workplace, the broader economy, and
the political process, so as to stop tens of millions of Americans from
experiencing desperate insecurity on a daily basis.
From THE
AMERICAN WAY OF POVERTY: How the Other Half Still Lives, by Sasha
Abramsky. Reprinted with permission from Nation Books.
This is no longer the story of how the "other half" lives but how most of us must live if we care to survive to another day.
ReplyDeleteAnother way to look at this is to consider that, to a point, America has worked out how to ameliorate some of the consequences of profound economic hardship—albeit reluctantly and with an increasing number of gaps. Yet it is failing, in ever greater degrees, to prevent that hardship from arising in the first place—in changing power relationships in the workplace, the broader economy, and the political process, so as to stop tens of millions of Americans from experiencing desperate insecurity on a daily basis.