economic survival

2011-Apr-03, Sunday 08:28 pm
mellowtigger: (Terry 2010)
[personal profile] mellowtigger
self-sufficient in 2010I've wondered for a few years why the federal government continues to use a standard that seems increasingly out of touch with reality. If the federal poverty level (FPL) guidelines were realistic, then states wouldn't need to include multipliers (1.5x FPL, 1.75x FPL, etc.) in order to determine eligibility for various kinds of assistance.

Someone has finally published their own study of what it takes to be "self-sufficient" in today's economy. That's what FPL should mean, but it doesn't any more. I'm unfamiliar with the organization that published the report, but a brief look at their final numbers doesn't reveal to me anything unreasonable. Here's the address of the report: http://www.wowonline.org/documents/BESTIndexforTheUnitedStates2010.pdf

The New York Times seems to agree, as they published their own article about the study, including the image shown on the right.  They quote a vice president from a food bank in New York as estimating that 1/3 of their customers are working but just not earning enough wages to get by.  I tend to agree.  I earned $20,415 in wages during 2010.  (I know only because I filled out my tax forms recently.)  That puts me halfway between FPL and "self-sufficiency".

Like many Americans, I make it from day to day simply by removing frivolous expenditures like health care, savings, and college classes.  (Economic trouble?  What economic trouble?  I don't see any economic trouble.)  I could do better in the financial sense by working more hours, and I have been working 40 hours each week during the last 4 months.  I know from experience ("pre-autism-diagnosis years"), however, that the cost to my mental health outweighs any calculated benefits.  My long term survival odds improve somewhere in the 20-to-32 hours per week range.

Date: 2011-Apr-04, Monday 09:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pi3832.livejournal.com
One of the things that led me to turn in my Sam's Club card was listening to the mentally-challenged woman checking me out tell some story about taking the bus to her second job. The story itself was some small-talk nothingness, but the context got to me. Why does this woman need to have two jobs? Why does she have to take the bus? Why is taking the bus such a shitty mode of transport in NOLA? Why are so many of the cashiers at Sam's Club handicapped?

Circumstances led me, last week, to end up shopping in a WalMart. It was a sobering look at the the reality of America. There's some website out there about "the people of Walmart" that holds up other people for ridicule. I've never liked the very idea, because, well, "they is us."

America is WalMart. WalMart is America. The sooner we all accept that grim reality, the sooner the Revolution will come.
Edited Date: 2011-Apr-04, Monday 11:44 pm (UTC)

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