Occupy the Safety Net
December 14, 2011
This fall, as eye-popping statistics depicting the obscene wealth of the
top 1 percent were liberated from obscurity by Occupy Wall Street, some
equally revealing figures emerged showing how those on the lowest rungs
of our economy are faring. The vicious bite of the Great Recession has
left one in three Americans—100 million people—either poor or perilously
close to it, one busted car or broken leg away from falling into the
vortex of dire need whose gravitational pull is a constant feature of
their lives. These figures—drawn from the government’s new Supplemental
Poverty Measure, or SPM—provided proof of something these Americans
already knew: that the social safety net—the anti-poverty programs that
form the legacy of the New Deal and the Great Society—remains, even in
its stretched and frayed condition, their last, best defense against
what FDR called “the hazards and vicissitudes of life.”
The official definition of poverty—developed as a temporary measure by a
research analyst at the Social Security Administration named Mollie
Orshansky, and formally adopted in 1969—has little relevance to how
deprivation is experienced today.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
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