If you are poor, chances are it is your own fault. At least that's what Americans thought in 2001. In a National Public Radio poll from that year, about half of those surveyed said the poor are not doing enough to pull themselves out of poverty.
Now, one would think that since the recent economic crisis  predictably has led to increased poverty people would start blaming  circumstances more than the poor. This has not been the case in the  United Kingdom. A recently published survey shows  that Brits over time have become more likely to blame poor people  themselves for their financial trouble. From 1986 to 2009, the  proportion of people who attribute poverty to  laziness and lack of willpower has grown to a little under 30 percent,  with the proportion blaming "injustice in our society" conversely  falling.
People's attitudes towards poverty to some extent determine  sentiments about health care, welfare benefits, and other collective  interventions. Not surprisingly, the UK study found that more and more  Brits believe government benefits are too high.
In the United States, the picture is, perhaps surprisingly, a bit more nuanced. The 2001 NPR poll  shows that attitudes about welfare at that time were determined by the  income of the person asked. Those who made more than twice the poverty  level were almost twice as likely as those closer to being poor to say  that welfare recipients had easy lives and could do very well without  the benefits if only they tried.
This difference is significant. Since household income has been declining over  time (and proportionally fewer individuals earn more than twice the  poverty level), the silver lining of the 2008 crisis might be that more  Americans start seeing poverty for what it is: not something anyone  "deserves." This could even help bring about more coherent anti-poverty  policies when politicians, many of whom seem to want to appeal to the  "poor people are lazy" sentiment as a way to obtain votes, realize their  constituents understand reality better than they do.
And poverty is, in fact, becoming reality for more and more people in the United States.
In 2010 more people were recorded as living in poverty than in any of  the previous 52 years for which rates have been published: 46.9 million (representing 15 percent of the population). About 17.2 million  households were registered as food insecure for that same year, meaning  they didn't have consistent dependable access to enough food. This,  again, is the highest number ever recorded in the United States. Even percentage-wise, poverty rates in 2010 were the highest they had been since 1993.
And poverty is not just something people "are," something that might  be inconvenient and often frustrating (though it surely is both of those  things in copious amounts).
Poverty is a very real obstacle to exercising human rights, bringing  with it substandard housing, under-resourced schooling, lack of health  care, and at times unsafe neighbourhoods, as well as many other  disadvantages. Children are  particularly affected, since years of poorer quality education and  potentially unhealthy living has consequences that to some extent  continue even after a family pulls out of poverty -- which only some  ever do.
And not only is poverty an obstacle to exercising rights. It is also,  in many cases, caused by rights violations. Four million more women than men live in poverty, and both African-Americans and Hispanics are over-represented amongst the poor. In 2010, women earned 77 cents to every dollar earned by men. For black women that figure is 68 cents, for Hispanic women 59. Unemployment rates fluctuate enormously according to sex, race, and marital status. Women constitute 65 percent of all part-time workers.
To be sure, everyone is ultimately responsible for how they deal with  their circumstances, and some individuals pull out of poverty despite  multiple odds stacked against them. But many more do not. This is not  because poverty is inevitable. It is because it generally requires  support for health care, education, housing, anti-discrimination  initiatives, and other interventions at least partially sponsored by the  government. Without addressing the growing poverty in the United States  through collective action based on human rights, chances are that if you are poor you will stay poor. Through little fault of your own.
Published first at RHRealityCheck.org.

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