Census: Middle class shrinks to an all-time low
By Carol Morello
The vise on the middle class tightened last year, driving down its
share of the income pie as the number of Americans in poverty leveled
off and the most affluent households saw their portion grow, new census data released Wednesday showed.
Income inequality increased by 1.6 percent, the Census Bureau said
in its annual report on poverty, income and health insurance. This was
the biggest one-year increase in almost two decades and suggested that a
trend in place since the late 1970s was picking up steam.
As a
snapshot of a nation recovering from one of its worst recessions ever,
the census report had both shadows and highlights. Median household
income declined $777, to $50,054 before taxes. But the poverty rate,
which many experts had predicted would rise to rates unseen in nearly
half a century, inched down a hair to 15 percent, a decline of about
100,000 people. And fewer Americans were without health insurance,
largely because of a provision in the 2010 health-care law allowing
young adults to stay on their parents’ policies.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
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