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NPR/Kaiser/Kennedy School Poll
Poverty in America

Americans arent thinking a lot about the poor these
days. A new survey by NPR, the Kaiser Family Foundation, and Harvard
Universitys Kennedy School of Government found that only about one in 10
Americans names poverty, welfare, or something similar as one of the two top
issues government should address. Nevertheless, when they are asked about it
directly, most Americans think that poverty is still a problem in this
country, even in these generally prosperous times. In fact, a majority of
Americans think poverty is not just a problem but a big problem, and another
third say its somewhat of a problem. Despite that characterization,
however, Americans are divided on why poverty is a problem and on what
should be done about it, the survey found.
Here are some of the key findings:
Americans perceive the federal governments definition
of poverty as being too low. The government says
that a family of four with an income higher than $17,029 is not poor.
However, more than three in five Americans (64%) say that a family of four
with an income of $20,000 is poor, and two in five (42%) say a family of
four earning $25,000 is poor.
More important, perhaps, is the way low-income respondents
themselves described their lives. Not surprisingly, people living below the
official poverty level reported the most serious problems - in such areas as
having enough money for rent, transportation, or food. But people with
incomes between the poverty level and twice the poverty level also reported
serious problems in these areas. For instance, about 40% of the people in
that group say they or someone in their immediate family fell behind in
their utility payments or couldnt pay for medical care in the last year;
and more than a third say that at some point they had too little money to
buy enough food. By contrast, only 17% of those making more than twice the
poverty level reported not being able to afford enough food.
Americans are divided over the causes of poverty.
About
half the public says the poor are not doing enough to help themselves out of
poverty, and the other half says that circumstances beyond their control
cause them to be poor. Low-income Americans that is, those making less
than twice the federal poverty level, or about $34,000 per year for a family
of four are only slightly more likely than other Americans to feel it is
due to circumstances. But when asked about specific causes of poverty,
low-income Americans are significantly more likely than other Americans to
name drug abuse, medical bills, too few jobs (or too many being part-time or
low-wage), too many single-parent families, and too many immigrants. When
asked what is the No. 1 cause of poverty, low-income Americans are much more
likely to name drug abuse, and the poorest Americans those living below
the federal poverty level are nearly twice as likely as middle- and
upper-income Americans to rank drug abuse so high. The non-poor are more
likely to say that the No. 1 cause of poverty is poor-quality public
schools, but, as noted in the chart below, both groups are equally likely to
name schools as a major cause.
Is (ITEM) a major cause of poverty, a minor cause of poverty, or not a
cause at all?
(Percentage saying major cause)
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200%+
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<200%
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Drug abuse
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68
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75
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Medical bills
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54
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69
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Too many jobs being part-time or low-wage
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50
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64
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Too many single-parent families
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52
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61
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A shortage of jobs
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27
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52
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Too many immigrants
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27
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39
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The welfare system
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47
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45
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Poor people lacking motivation
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51
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56
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A decline in moral values
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56
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58
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Poor quality public schools
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47
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46
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"200%" references poverty level, so 200%+ means those making more
than twice the poverty level, and <200% means those making less than
twice the poverty level. There is no statistically significant difference in
the items shaded gray.
Americans are also divided over welfare.
Asked
about welfare, Americans divide almost evenly in their views on how much
welfare recipients really need help from the government. However, in this
regard there are significant differences between the perceptions of
low-income Americans and those with higher incomes. For instance, about half
of Americans making more than twice the poverty level say that most welfare
recipients could get along without assistance if they tried, and half say
they could not. Similarly, about half say poor people today have easy lives
because they get government benefits without doing anything in return; By
contrast, only about a third of low-income Americans say the poor have it
easy, and about four in 10 say welfare recipients could get along without
it.
Although these are significant differences in attitudes
between low-income Americans and those with higher incomes, it is
interesting to note the high percentage of low-income people who think that
the poor have easy lives (35%) or that welfare recipients dont really
need the help (39%) or who express similar views of the poor in other
questions. The poor may generally not be as likely to hold such views as the
non-poor, but a substantial number of them agree with those who are better
off.
Americans who know about the new welfare law like the way
it is working. The survey found similar results in
its examination of the new welfare law. About half of Americans know of the
new laws existence. Among them, 61% say they think the new law is working
well. And the most important reason they give for why it is working well is
that it requires people to go to work. Americans appear to value work so
strongly that they support welfare reform even if it leads to jobs that keep
people in poverty. The vast majority of those who know there has been a
major change in the welfare laws (73%) believes that people who have left
the welfare rolls are still poor, despite having found jobs. (Although
low-income Americans who know about the new welfare law are less likely to
say that the law is working well or that the main reason it is working well
is that it requires people to go to work, still a majority agrees with those
in higher income brackets on both counts.)
Americans are unsure about the effectiveness of government
programs for the poor. Although Americans (at
least those who know the law exists) generally approve of the new welfare
law, they express some ambivalence about government programs aimed at
helping the poor. For instance, about half believe that government programs
arent having much impact one way or the other on the condition of poor
people (low-income people dont differ from others on this). On the other
hand, people want the government to try especially when it comes to
programs designed to help people who are trying to help themselves. Large
majorities support expanding job-training programs (94%), improving public
schools in low-income areas (94%), increasing tax credits for low-income
workers (80%), and expanding subsidized day care (85%) and subsidized
housing (75%). Support, while still high, drops off when it comes to
programs that provide cash or cash-like benefits; 54% support increasing
cash assistance for families and 61% support making food stamps more
available. Support for all these measures declines considerably when
Americans are asked whether they would be willing to have their taxes raised
to pay for them, but about three in five Americans (56%) are willing to
accept a tax increase.
Familiarity with poverty doesnt breed sympathy.
People
with friends or family who are poor but are not poor themselves are not
particularly sympathetic to the poor. For instance, 37% of people who are
not poor and do not have any friends or family who are poor say that poor
people have hard lives because government benefits dont go far enough to
help them live decently; approximately the same percentage of people with
friends or family who are poor (39%) say the same thing. This contrasts
starkly with low-income people themselves; 54% of them say that the poor
lead hard lives.
Americans believe that poor people work, but that their
jobs dont necessarily pull them out of poverty. More
than 60% of Americans say they think that most poor people work. This is an
increase from the 49% who held this view in 1994. In fact, most low-income
people report that they do work; excluding students and retirees,
about 65% of low-income people work (53% of those making less than the
poverty level, and 71% of those making between the poverty level and twice
the poverty level). More than two-thirds of Americans (69%) say there are
jobs available for anyone who is willing to work. Although this perception
is strongest among people with incomes more than twice the federal poverty
level (72% say there are jobs available), it is still high among those with
low incomes (62%).
However, Americans also say that the jobs available to
low-income people arent very good ones. About three out of five (59%) of
those who say there are jobs available for most welfare recipients who want
to work also say that the jobs they can get do not pay enough to support a
family. About the same proportion of low-income (62%) and non-low income
(59%) Americans hold this view.
Democrats and Republicans express substantially different
opinions about poverty. The survey reveals deep
political divisions in the country on the subject of poverty. In question
after question especially those having to do with attitudes about
poverty or welfare the public was split about 50-50. But when the
responses were separated by political party, 55%-65% of Democrats were on
one side, and 55%-65% of Republicans were on the other side. Nevertheless,
there is strong support even among Republicans for programs that help people
who are trying to help themselves (though support is not as strong as it is
among Democrats). However, when it comes to paying for the programs,
Republicans are much less likely to want to raise taxes. Forty-three percent
of Republicans say they would be willing to raise taxes, while 53% say they
would not; 67% of Democrats are willing to raise taxes, and only 31% are
not.
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Total
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Democrat
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Republican
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Independent
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Which is the bigger cause of poverty today that people are
not doing enough to help themselves out of poverty, or that
circumstances beyond their control cause them to be poor?
|
|
|
|
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People not doing enough
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48
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37
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63
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48
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Circumstances
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45
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57
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31
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46
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If the government were willing to spend whatever it thought was
necessary to eliminate poverty in the United States, do you think
that this is something that could be accomplished, or not?
|
|
|
|
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Yes
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47
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56
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34
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47
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No
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49
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40
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61
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50
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Which of the following statements comes closer to your own views:
Poor people today have it easy because they can get government
benefits without doing anything in return, or poor people have hard
lives because government benefits dont go far enough to help them
live decently?
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|
|
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Easy
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46
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38
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60
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45
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Hard
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43
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55
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28
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45
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Do you think that most welfare recipients today really want to
work or not?
|
|
|
|
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Work
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47
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55
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37
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48
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Not work
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44
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38
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55
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41
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In most questions, Independents hover right around 50%.
This is because nearly all Independents say they "lean" toward one
party or the other about half leaning toward the Democrats, and half
leaning toward the Republicans and their views generally coincide with
the party toward which they lean.
Black and white Americans are divided over the magnitude
of the poverty problem, the causes of poverty, perceptions of the poor, and
welfare. Blacks (72%) are more likely than whites
(52%) to rate poverty a big problem; to say outside circumstances are the
main cause of poverty (57% to 44%); to say that poor people have hard lives
(59% to 39%); to say it is harder today than it was ten years ago to get out
of poverty through hard work (58% to 48%); to say that the government could
eliminate poverty (67% to 40%); and to say that most welfare recipients
really want to work (54% to 45%). Whites (49%) are more likely than blacks
(36%) to say poor people are not doing enough to help themselves out of
poverty; to say that poor people have it easy (49% to 31%); to say the
government cannot eliminate poverty (56% to 31%); and to say that welfare
encourages women to have more children than they would otherwise (60% to
48%). These divisions generally hold across income lines.
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Methodology
The NPR/Kaiser/Kennedy School Survey about Poverty in America is
part of an ongoing project of National Public Radio, the Henry J.
Kaiser Family Foundation, and Harvard University's Kennedy School of
Government. Representatives of the three sponsors worked together to
develop the survey questionnaire and to analyze the results, with
NPR maintaining sole editorial control over its broadcasts on the
surveys. The project team includes:
From NPR: Marcus D. Rosenbaum, Senior Editor/Special
Projects.
From the Kaiser Family Foundation: Drew Altman, President and
Chief Executive Officer; Mollyann Brodie, Vice President, Director
of Public Opinion and Media Research; and Anne E. Steffenson,
Research Associate.
From the Kennedy School: Robert J.
Blendon, a Harvard
University professor who holds joint appointments in the School of
Public Health and the Kennedy School of Government; Stephen R.
Pelletier, Research Coordinator for the Harvard Opinion Research
Program; and John M. Benson, Managing Director of the Harvard
Opinion Research Program.
The results of this project are based on a nationwide telephone
survey conducted in English and Spanish between January 4 and
February 27, 2001, among a random representative sample of 1,952
respondents 18 years of age and older. There was an oversample of
546 respondents who were identified as having an income of less than
200% of the federal poverty level. Overall the sample included 294
respondents having an income of less than 100% of the federal
poverty level, 613 having an income of between 100% and 200% of the
federal poverty level, and 1,045 with an income above 200% of the
federal poverty level. The results for all groups are weighted to
reflect the actual distribution in the nation. The field work was
conducted by ICR/International Communications Research. The
margin of sampling error is plus or minus 2.2 percentage points for
total respondents, plus or minus 7.5 percentage points for those
with an income of less than 100% of the federal poverty level, plus
or minus 5.4 percentage points for those with an income of between
100% and 200% of the federal poverty level, and plus or minus 2.6
percentage points for those with an income above 200% of the federal
poverty level. For results based on subsets of respondents the
margin of error is higher.
When interpreting the data, keep in mind that because this was a
telephone survey, it under-represents groups less likely to have
telephones, such as people with very low incomes.
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