This past week the 2003 report on the poverty rate for the United States came out. The poverty rate grew slightly for the third straight year from its its all time low in 2000 (right when the stock bubble about about to burst). It is now back to where it was during most of the 90s -- 12.5%.
In addition to the link below, you can also find out more on this from the US census bureau: http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty.html
The problem with the poverty rate is that it seems politicized. I mean who exactly decides what poverty is? In the United States, you are living in poverty if your household income is $9,573. That seems pretty high as that would mean I spent quite a bit of my time in "poverty" in college. Sure didn't seem like that.
But it gets better, you see, that amount only counts as cash income. If you receive help and aid that isn't actual cash (or on the books) then it doesn't get counted as part of this. So someone receiving credits, scholarships, grants, etc. will not get counted here. And obviously unreported income (tips, gifts, etc.) won't be counted here either.
When I was in college, I lived with 4 women in a house. The rent was roughly $500 per month so that left $100 per person per month. Add $20 per person for utilities, $80 per month for food and you had the basics for $200 per month per person. That's $2,400. Still, you have insurance, gas, and other necesities but there's a big gulf between $2,400 and $9,573.
The problem people in the United States have is that we have ridiculous expectations on lifestyle. On $9,573 you might have a tough time having your own apartment (even though roughly 40% of people who live in "poverty" own a home according to the bureau). But you're not starving. You might (gasp) have to have roommates.
Getting back to the politicizinig of this issue, the problem is that this number grows each year and it's not merely adjusted for inflation. And the term "poverty" is thrown to represent something it's not. I don't know about you, but when I think of poverty I think of people who are barely getting by. Can't afford food. Worried about having shelter. Can't get clothing (and remember, donated goods don't count as income so you can't affect the poverty rate by donating clothes and other goods).
Even compared to first world countries, what we consider poverty seems a bit absurd. For instance, Australians, on average, make only 73% as much as the average American. So if you're making $24k per year here in the US, the Australian equivalent of you is making only $17k. Taking this to its logical conclusion, the Australian equivalent of someone working full time at $8 per hour would be essentially living in poverty by our standards. And that's ridiculous.
It's not that there aren't people who are really poor. It's just that becuase of politics, the tools for actually measuring and finding these people are woefully inadequate.
What we need is for the government or some agency to sit down and figure out how much it costs to live in a given country. That is, how much food, rent, clothing, car insurance, heat, electricity cost. Then draw the line there and anyone below that is living in poverty.
Then we need to figure out why they're in poverty and see what we can do to help them -- if we can.