Lots of American kids still in poverty
A government report card on child well-being out today will show that we haven't made any progress lowering the child poverty rate in the U.S. Jeremy Hobson has details.
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Doug Krizner: The government’s releasing a report card today on the well-being of the nation’s children. It’ll look at everything from poverty and hunger to education and health. Jeremy Hobson has more.
Jeremy Hobson: Children account for about a quarter of the U.S. population — 74 million Americans. And 12 million of those kids are classified as “food insecure.”
At last count, about the same number were living in poverty. That means less than $20,000 a year for a family of four.
Julia Isaacs: We have not made the progress in lowering the child poverty rate that I think we would like to be making.
That’s Julia Isaacs, who focuses on child and family policy at the Brookings Institution. She says these numbers have long-term implications.
Isaacs: Thirty years from now, you know these children will be the workers, the citizens. And if children are not living in conditions where they can flourish and do well, it won’t be good for the country.
While things aren’t getting much worse, they don’t seem to be getting better either. Isaacs points out many of the numbers have remained flat for years.
In Washington, I’m Jeremy Hobson for Marketplace.