For quite some time the dominant American narrative has focused on strong and growing economy, low unemployment, and significant returns in the stock markets. This is part of the story, but certainly not the whole story. As we start 2020, I've been thinking quite a bit about the nearly 1 in 2 (44%) American workers who are working low wage jobs. Meet the Low Wage Workfoce "Meet the Low Wage Workforce" is the title of a 67 page report written by Martha Ross and Nicole Read More …
poverty
Poverty: Appropriately Covered? (#1115)
A few days ago Margaret Sullivan, public editor at the New York Times, wrote an intriguing post about how well the Times and other newspapers cover poverty in the United States. Her questions include: But is it enough? Is it the right kind of coverage? Where are the gaps, and what is the big picture?" Sullivan provides a troubling statistic about the state of poverty coverage (at least on the front-pages of newspapers): The Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Read More …
Ministering to Mature Adults (#0902)
Richard H. Gentzler Jr., director of the Center on Aging & Older Adult Ministries at the General Board of Discipleship of the United Methodist Church, recently presented a new comprehensive plan for "Older Adult Ministries." Citing the rising numbers of American adults aged 65 or better, Gentzler's plan focuses on "leadership training and resourcing" in three key areas: The “new seniors”: how to minister to Baby Boomers, who are now joining the ranks of older adulthood. By Read More …
Poverty Reality Check (#0674)
Sid Mohn is president of Heartland Alliance, the premier anti-poverty organization in Chicago and the Midwest. He recently wrote a Huffington Post article, "8 Facts About Poverty that will Blow Your Mind," based on a TEDx speech on the same topic. Mohn's facts follow in abbreviated form: Our kids are poor. At some point in their lives, half of all U.S. children will be on food stamps. Our adults are poor. Half of American adults will Read More …
Helping the Poor (#0629)
Bruce Wydick, professor of economics at the University of San Francisco and visiting professor at the University of California - Berkeley, wrote the cover story for the February 2012 edition of Christianity Today. In this piece, he ranked the effectiveness of the most popular ways Christians seek to overcome global poverty. Rather than taking on the task himself, he recruited sixteen researchers to respond to a survey he developed. Each respondent ranked each option Read More …
1 in 2 Americans = Low Income (#0581)
Over the last few days I have encountered many people talking about the same data but using very different language to do so. Some examples of what I have encountered include: 50% of Americans are now living in poverty The middle class is on its collective deathbed - people are now either wealthy or in poverty Half of the country receives food stamps or some other form of government assistance While each of these statements is false, many who proudly make the claims do so Read More …
Economic Well Being: A Generational Concern (#0545)
The Pew Research Center recently published an article exploring the increasing gap in economic well-being between the young (those households headed by someone under age 35) and the old (those households headed by someone over age 65) during the last twenty-five years. The data shows the following shifts: Median net worth grew by 42% for the older cohort while falling by 68% for the younger cohort Median adjusted household income grew by 109% for the older cohort while rising by only Read More …