Contrary to what is probably the
speculation of the majority, the best poverty predictor in the United States
is not race but family status. According to the data of the Census Bureau, in
the United States
the different levels of poverty are best predicted by the family makeup
(Jeffrey, 2005). In other words, generally a relatively poor person belongs to
a broken family and a child growing up in financial difficulty is the one who
is raised by one parent and without the financial support of the other parent.
According to the 2004 Census Bureau,
only 6.4% of those living below poverty line belong to the married couple
families. There is not much difference between black and whites. The rest
belongs to those who live in broken families. 13.8% are those who belong to a
family where the father is present but the mother is absent; while 30.5% are
those without the father present.
Based on these data, the second
greatest predictor of poverty is the absence of the father or without the
support of the father. As in most cases, the poorest children are those
belonging to families wherein the father has left for good or is not an active
participant in the family.
The third greatest indicator of
poverty in the United States
is hours of work the parents or parent has. Whether the economy is good or bad,
generally, those belonging to poor families are the ones which only have 800
hours of work for a year. This translates to only 16 hours of work in a week
(Rector & Johnson, 2004). If the parent or parents do not work much, the
family is more likely to belong in the poor bracket.
Now if the family will have 2,000
hours of work in a given year, which is equivalent to one adult working for 40
hours in a week for the whole year, then they will be lifted to the above
poverty line bracket (Rector & Johnson, 2004).
Based on these three greatest
predictors of poverty, the way to solve the country’s poverty problem is to
strengthen the foundations of the family. By strengthening the foundations of
the family, the number of broken families and the father leaving the household
without giving any support will be reduced.
At
the same time it is important to provide jobs for the families or adults in the
household. Though welfare has its own merits, it is not enough for the
government to simply provide such support. It is important that those living in
poverty line be given jobs to support the needs of the family.
Works
Cited
Jeffrey, Terence P. 2005. “Best
Poverty Predictor: Family Status, Not Race”. Human Events.
FindArticles.com. Retrieved
09 Feb. 2008 from http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3827/is_200509/ai_n15643759
Rector, Robert E. and Johnson, Kirk
A, PhD. 2004. “Understanding Poverty in America”. The
Heritage
Foundation. Retrieved 09 Feb. 2008 from
http://www.heritage.org/Research/Welfare/bg1713.cfm
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