We need to know and care and transform the roots of poverty.
Another world is possible. Tag. we are all it! - Molly
by Susan Caminiti
While
families across the country gather around the dinner table during this holiday
season, there is a different, far less cheery scenario playing out for millions
of other Americans. They're the ones who go hungry, and for whom food — and
enough of it — is a daily struggle. According to Feeding America, more than 42 million people
now suffer from hunger throughout the nation.
In the midst
of a recovering economy, low unemployment and nearly nonexistent inflation, the
fact remains that nearly 1 in 7 Americans still goes to bed hungry each night.
According to recent statistics released by the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
15.8 million U.S. households — that's 12.7 percent of the total — didn't have
enough food to eat at some point last year, the latest period for which numbers
are available.
That's
a tick down from the 14 percent of households that didn't have adequate food
(or what the USDA defines as "food insecure") in 2014, but the
numbers are still higher than where they were just a decade ago. Adding to the
crisis is the fact that by the end of this year, up to 1 million Americans will
have lost food-stamp benefits because of changes in the law that affect
eligibility.
Statistics
tell the story. Last year the government doled out $74 billion in
food-assistance benefits — about double the level of 2008. According to
experts, hunger remains a persistent problem because millions of Americans are
struggling financially as the result of the crash, and many remain unemployed.
A whopping 95 million
Americans are now not in the workforce, according to the
November jobs report. While many are retirees, a skills gap and other factors
are exacerbating the trend.
As a
result, food banks, soup kitchens, churches and other emergency food providers
across the country say they're seeing greater demand than ever. Perhaps more
disturbing: An increasing number of working-poor families and the elderly are
using these emergency services.
"There's
still this idea that food banks and soup kitchens are only for the homeless,
and that simply is not the case," said Margarette Purvis, president and
CEO of the Food Bank for New York City, one of the largest and most active food
banks in the country. "In fact, many people are pretty much relying on
these resources so that they don't wind up homeless."
Among
the most vulnerable in this climate are children. According to the Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan research group that focuses on
reducing poverty, 20 million children in the United States (nearly 1 in 4) will
have received Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits — better known as
food stamps — in 2016. With access to the food these benefits provide, experts
say these children are more likely to do better in school, have better health
and do better economically as adults than children that live in chronically
food-insecure households.
Please continue this article and view video here: http://www.cnbc.com/2016/12/13/americas-dirty-little-secret-42-million-are-suffering-from-hunger.html?__source=Facebook
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