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  • - For the next 15 minutes,

  • I'd like for us to consider three things.

  • First, what was the theory of poverty that guided

  • the War on Poverty?

  • That is, how did they think about who is poor,

  • why they were poor, and what could be done about it?

  • Second, how's our thinking about these issues

  • changed after 50 years now of

  • research and on-the-ground interventions?

  • And third, what are the implications of that

  • for how we think about moving forward?

  • With some particular attention to how AmeriCorps VISTA,

  • VISTAs themselves, and the agencies they support

  • might think about a new anti-poverty agenda

  • for the next years and decades.

  • In the War on Poverty era, it seems to me,

  • poverty was typically understood to be a thing that happens

  • to other people.

  • President Johnson described people living in poverty as,

  • "isolated from the mainstream of American life

  • and alienated from its values."

  • People living in poverty were them, not us,

  • and poverty itself was understood to be an anomaly,

  • an aberration, a deviation from the norm.

  • As a consequence, part of the mission of the Great Society

  • was to try to incorporate them

  • into mainstream institutions and culture

  • through education, job training, housing,

  • medical care, and so on.

  • But we now know, that poverty is not something

  • experienced by a small minority of people.

  • Let me explain.

  • Here's the official data.

  • It shows a poverty rate of 14.5 percent in 2013.

  • That's about 46 million Americans living at or

  • below the poverty line.

  • If we look at the Census Bureau supplemental

  • poverty measure, it shows a poverty rate really of about

  • 15.5 percent in 2013,

  • 49 million Americans.

  • Either way, these measures are only telling us

  • how many people ended up with net income that falls

  • below the poverty line over the course of the entire year.

  • But we now know that people slip in and out of poverty

  • over the course of that year.

  • People may be poor one month

  • and not poor the next.

  • So if we step back and ask, how many people experience

  • a spell of poverty over a four year period,

  • we find that 35 percent, more than one-third of Americans

  • will be poor at least once for two months or more.

  • That's Lesson One.

  • Since VISTA's founding, we've learned that poverty

  • is wide-spread.

  • It's a much more common experience

  • than we thought it was then.

  • Poverty's not something that happens to them,

  • it's something that will happen to lots of us.

  • That's important I think in part, because perhaps,

  • if people cannot be mobilized to fight poverty

  • for altruistic reasons,

  • maybe they might be mobilized for selfish ones.

  • It's also a way to highlight one of the virtues of

  • VISTA's key program features.

  • Because VISTA's earn a poverty-level stipend,

  • perhaps it's easier for them to think of people struggling

  • to get by with limited resources as us, not them.

  • Poverty is also a different kind

  • of problem than we thought it was then.

  • While 35 percent of all Americans will experience poverty

  • at least once over the course of a four year period,

  • fewer than three percent of us will be consistently poor

  • over that four year period.

  • Long-term, persistent poverty is real

  • and we must address it,

  • but that's not what most poverty looks like.

  • In some ways, perhaps we've been focusing

  • on the wrong problem.

  • That points us to Lesson Two.

  • Given how many people have an experience of poverty,

  • how many people are perched on the edge of it,

  • and slip in and out of it, perhaps instead of

  • talking about poverty, we should be talking about insecurity

  • as the problem of this age.

  • More and more Americans live precarious economic lives,

  • and are utterly unprepared for an emergency that suddenly

  • increases their expenses or reduces their income.

  • What are we doing to deal with that?

  • And how do remedies directed at insecurity

  • differ from our traditional remedies directed at poverty?

  • Lesson Three is this.

  • Childhood is profoundly important

  • even more so than we thought in the 1960s.

  • And the stakes are especially critical

  • for very young children.

  • Stress has physiological consequences,

  • and poverty is exceedingly stressful,

  • especially for children.

  • Combine that with inadequate pre-natal care

  • and childhood nutrition, and you get irreversible,

  • long-term cognitive, social, emotional, and health deficits.

  • Being in poverty as a child,

  • is associated with lower achievement later in school,

  • reduced earnings in adulthood,

  • higher rates of unintended pregnancy,

  • higher rates of incarceration,

  • and higher rates of things like cardiovascular disease,

  • disability, and mental illness.

  • So, if you want to reduce the number of adults

  • who are poor tomorrow, reduce the number of children

  • who are poor today.

  • And remember, single largest group of Americans

  • living in poverty, are children.

  • Lesson Four.

  • The Kennedy Administration started paying attention

  • to poverty, thanks in part to Bobby's visits

  • to poor African-American communities to Appalachia

  • and to Native American reservations.

  • Poverty was not and is not a problem only of those

  • particular places and people,

  • but there is still an important lesson here.

  • Where you are born has a lot to do with the kinds of

  • opportunities you'll have or not have.

  • This reaffirms the importance of place-based policies

  • and community-specific initiatives.

  • One of the most striking modern developments,

  • is the rise of poverty in the suburbs.

  • This is especially important given how much

  • of our social service infrastructure was built to

  • deal with poverty in the cities.

  • It's another way in which poverty may be a different kind

  • of problem than we thought it was,

  • and perhaps, an especially useful lesson for VISTA.

  • Lesson Five is that race is

  • alas, as important now as it was in the 1960s.

  • We have clearly made progress in reducing African-American

  • poverty from its radically high mid-20th Century levels,

  • but it is still three times the rate

  • that it is for white Americans.

  • And African-Americans still fare worse

  • across a range of measures, whether we're talking about

  • income, wages, wealth, mobility, education,

  • access to health care, life expectancy or infant mortality.

  • I noted earlier that 35 percent of all Americans

  • will experience poverty over a four year period.

  • It's 49 percent for African-Americans

  • and it's 53 percent for Hispanic-Americans.

  • We've got to better reckon with the ways

  • in which disadvantages accumulate.

  • And with the fact that our unique historical legacies

  • may well mean that poverty for different groups

  • has different roots,

  • and may therefore require different remedies.

  • I've noted the continued importance of paying attention to

  • children in poverty.

  • But children, can also exacerbate the poverty of adults

  • given that they are inevitably dependent,

  • and their care requires time,

  • and it requires money.

  • This is a much more acute problem than it was

  • 50 year ago, simply because there are so many more women

  • in the labor force.

  • And because we still live in a world in which women

  • do the overwhelming majority of all unpaid care work,

  • it is their earnings that suffer most.

  • This is in part why female-headed families continue to be

  • so much poorer than two-parent families.

  • Something the Johnson Administration worried about

  • even then.

  • But the problem is actually worse now.

  • And this need not be the case.

  • We know this, because as you can see here in the blue lines,

  • there are many nations with higher out of wedlock

  • birth rates than in the United States.

  • But every single one of those countries,

  • with more lone parents,

  • nonetheless, winds up with

  • lower rates of childhood poverty than we do.

  • That's the red lines.

  • If you're working at the community or agency level

  • with poor women with children,

  • who may be caring for sick or aging family members,

  • remember, you've go to foreground the problem of,

  • who cares for those who are providing care?

  • What we've also learned,

  • is not just that some people cannot work

  • because they cannot solve the care-giving puzzle,

  • others cannot work because, for a variety of reasons,

  • illness, injury, mental illness, physical or developmental

  • disability, they are not well-suited to the

  • modern labor market.

  • The result is much higher rates of poverty for them.

  • We saw earlier that few poor people are consistently poor

  • over a four year period, maybe three percent

  • of the population.

  • Well two-thirds of that group have one or more disability.

  • Lesson Seven is that disability must be foregrounded

  • in our thinking about poverty much more than it has been.

  • But even those who are able to work and do,

  • may still be poor, nonetheless.

  • 32 percent of all women who work,

  • and 24 percent of all men who work,

  • work in jobs that pay wages so low that

  • even if they work full time all year round,

  • they will still be poor.

  • It's something we've been seeing for decades in

  • soup kitchens and food pantries around the country.

  • The growing numbers of people who work full time

  • and yet cannot earn enough to put food on the table.

  • The problem is particularly acute for people of color.

  • 42 percent of Hispanic-Americans and 36 percent of

  • African-Americans, work in poverty-wage jobs.

  • No matter how many hours or how many weeks they work,

  • they cannot escape poverty with wages alone.

  • Which means, either labor markets need to change,

  • or the policies and programs

  • that support working people must.

  • Medicare and Medicaid point us to Lesson Nine,

  • showing us that access to health care reduces poverty.

  • The Affordable Care Act is giving us additional evidence

  • of this, especially its expansion of Medicaid

  • in those states that have chosen to take part.

  • We could reduce poverty even more by

  • adding dental coverage and mental health coverage,

  • problems that are especially severe

  • among poor and low income populations.

  • On the micro level, you can help people in your communities

  • get coverage, access care,

  • and deal with small medical issues

  • before they become larger ones.

  • If people are less sick, they will be less poor.

  • And of course, if people are less poor to begin with,

  • they're less likely to get sick,

  • and less likely to remain sick for long periods of time.

  • Here's Lesson Ten.

  • Mass incarceration is a post War on Poverty phenomenon.

  • And its effects are disproportionately concentrated

  • in low income communities of color,

  • and among African-American men especially.

  • And anti-poverty programs have got to take seriously

  • the prison and the universe of people affected by it,

  • if they are serious about improving well-being.

  • Whatever else it is,

  • the American Criminal Justice System is a massive engine

  • for making people sick, angry, and poor.

  • Lesson Eleven is that we've got to start talking

  • about climate change as a poverty problem.

  • Hurricane Katrina was the canary in the coal mine here.

  • What are we doing to help poor places and the people

  • in them prepare for this new,

  • 21st Century poverty problem?

  • We've got to because they will be affected first,

  • and they'll be hit the hardest.

  • Now it's not all bad news.

  • Thanks to Social Security,

  • we now know that we can reduce poverty a lot,

  • and rather easily.

  • Here we've done it by sending money regularly

  • to older Americans.

  • The earned income tax credit in SNAP

  • have taught us the same lesson.

  • Cash and near cash benefits can have significant

  • anti-poverty effects.

  • More local programs can learn this lesson

  • and trust the research that shows

  • that unconditional cash grants may be the single most

  • effective intervention that's available to us.

  • But this, among other things,

  • requires trusting poor people to know

  • what's best for themselves.

  • But that's a lesson consonant with VISTA's committment

  • to low income people's self determination

  • and having a voice in service delivery.

  • Finally, let's dispense with the notion that

  • the War on Poverty failed.

  • It did a lot, even if it could've done more.

  • There were real successes to the War on Poverty.

  • How do we know this?

  • Take a look.

  • That green line shows us the pre-transfer poverty rate,

  • that's how much poverty has been created

  • by the economy without counting the effects

  • of anit-poverty policies and programs.

  • Notice that the economy is producing

  • about the same amount of poverty today

  • as it was 50 years ago.

  • That black line shows us, using the supplemental measure,

  • how much actual poverty remains

  • once we count the effects of anti-poverty programs.

  • Over the War on Poverty period, we've brought poverty down

  • from 26 percent to 16 percent.

  • Now that's not nearly enough, I'd argue,

  • but it's not nothing either.

  • These are not the only important lesssons

  • that we might take a away from the last 50 years of course,

  • but I'm hoping they might be one place from which

  • we can start to think about what we should be doing

  • now to solve today's poverty and inequality.

  • Remember, not all past solutions will be the best ones

  • moving forward.

  • We can't build 21st Century anti-poverty programs

  • on 20th Century notions of the roots of need.

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you to AmeriCorps VISTA,

  • and here's to the next 50 years of service.

- For the next 15 minutes,

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