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Liz's avatar

A recent article by Matt Browning in Jacobin gave me a new perspective on poverty, its causes and how need for aid can be anticipated and targeted: “Poverty hits people as they move in and out of different life stages and events: job loss, disability, divorce, having children, family deaths. When they do, they will often dip into poverty — if the welfare state is not there for them.”

This made me understand poverty in a new way, not as a monolithic problem, but as a circumstance-correlated one. Caregivers, especially of older people, are one category that this certainly applies to.

https://jacobin.com/2025/08/welfare-state-poverty-aging-disability-unemployment?utm_campaign=as-npt105112517

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Liz's avatar

Great information here:

“the bulk of the new work requirements fall on one group of people: adults below retirement age, without diagnosed disabilities, and without young children in the home.”

And who are they? 14 percent are caregivers. I see these people in my community. Also interesting was that “childless adults represented 29 percent of EITC filers, but received only 4 percent of benefits. The average benefit was only $295 a year, less than one-tenth of what families with children received.” Wow.

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