The theme at the Democratic Convention in Denver yesterday was While the 2007 numbers don’t even include the devastation wrought by Robert Greenstein, Executive Director of the Center for Budget andPolicy Priorities “We have the biggest gap between the rich and everybody else since theGreat Depression,” Jared Bernstein, Director of the Living Standards program at theEconomic Policy Institute, agreed with Sanders. He The Bush administration will tout 2007 as the first decline in number ofuninsured during its tenure. But Greenstein pointed out that privatecoverage continued to erode and “the improvement in health care coveragein 2007 was due to more Americans obtaining coverage through governmenthealth insurance programs, principally Medicare and Medicaid.” Surely,that’s not what the Bush Administration was gunning for. In fact,Greenstein said the Congressional Budget Office estimated that four millionmore children would be insured had President Bush not twice vetoedexpansion of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). Inall, nearly As for poverty, it’s first worth noting that the standard of measurementis woefully inadequate. The The Food Research and Action Center (FRAC) – a national non-profitworking to address hunger and poverty – There seems to be little disagreement about that.
“The data for 2007 are of particular concern given that the economy isnow in a slowdown, and poverty is almost certainly higher now–andincomes lower–than in 2007,” Greenstein said. “The 2007 levels… arelikely to constitute a high-water mark for the next few years.”
“When the data become available for 2008, the picture will undoubtedlygrow more grim,” So where should an Obama Administration and Democratic Congress settheir sights?
Greenstein said the next President and Congress should set a nationalgoal to reduce poverty and act on it. Other organizations have pushedhard on this too. The Association of Community Organizations for ReformNow (ACORN), the Center for American Progress Action Fund, the Coalitionon Human Needs, and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights aretogether cooperating on the FRAC President Jim Weill focused on a second stimulus package and theneed to boost food stamps as a record number of people turn to them.”We will hear a lot this fall from Presidential and Congressionalcandidates about their vision for America’s economic future. Areinvigorated fight against hunger and poverty must be an essential partof this vision,” he said.
When it comes to vision on These recent figures show there is a powerful need for Obama andDemocrats to put poverty back on the national radar. The grim stats onthe ground and the lives intertwined with them demand a Unless (and until) we tackle the gap between the very rich and the restof America–including the growing number of people falling into poverty–it will be increasingly difficult to confront the major challenges ofour time.
The truth is, lifting the boats at the bottom has historically been goodfor all Americans.
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