"The Census Bureau's annual report on income, poverty and health insurance
in the United States is not alarming -- but neither is it cheering, or even reassuring.
Rather, the numbers underscore the lagging and uneven nature of the economic recovery
since the 2001 recession. According to the new data, 4 million more people were living in
poverty in 2004 than in 2001, and 4.6 million more people lacked health insurance."
THE POVERTY level edged up last year, to 12.7 percent -- the
fourth straight annual increase. Overall median income remained flat at $44,389, down 3.8
percent from its peak in 1999. This is a robust economic recovery?
The Census Bureau's annual report on income, poverty and health insurance in the United
States is not alarming -- but neither is it cheering, or even reassuring. Rather, the
numbers underscore the lagging and uneven nature of the economic recovery since the 2001
recession. According to the new data, 4 million more people were living in poverty in 2004
than in 2001, and 4.6 million more people lacked health insurance.
Administration officials counsel patience, pointing to the downturn of the 1990s, when
it took several years for the poverty rate to start to fall. "The last, lonely
trailing indicator of the business cycle," Commerce Department official Elizabeth
Anderson said of the poverty rate.
This has about it more than a whiff of wishful thinking. For one thing, the increase
in poverty between 2003 and 2004 is in fact out of the ordinary; such a rise hasn't
happened between the second and third years of an economic recovery since the federal
government began collecting poverty data in 1960. For another, the poverty rate may be a
lagging indicator, but in this case it's not lonely: See, for example, the median income
of working-age households, which declined 1.2 percent.
Another ominous signal involves health insurance coverage. Although the percentage of
people with coverage remained unchanged from 2003 to 2004, that masked a shift from
employer-provided insurance to government coverage. The percentage of people with
employer-based health insurance fell for the fourth year in a row. Most of this slack has
been taken up by Medicaid, the shared federal-state health program for the poor and
disabled. But with state budgets under increasing strain from Medicaid costs and with
Congress poised to make cuts in the program, it's not at all certain that states will be
willing or able to maintain coverage for working Americans hovering at the edge of
poverty.
In the wake of this data and the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina, Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) was wise to postpone this week's planned vote to
repeal the estate tax. Lawmakers need to remember in the weeks to come that this is an
economic recovery that continues to leave too many Americans behind.