Record di 49 milioni americani affamati nel 2008

Usa, società, classi

Wsws 091118
Record di 49 milioni americani affamati nel 2008
Barry Grey

– Mentre usciva il rapporto sulla fame negli USA, il presidente Obama stava impegnandosi con il governo cinese (che detiene $800 MD di buoni del Tesoro USA) a tagliare i costi per la sanità e ad imporre tagli a programmi sociali, come Medicare e Medicaid e Previdenza sociale.

–  Il rapporto annuale del ministero americano per l’Agricoltura per il 2008 rileva che 49,1 mn. di americani (quasi il 15% contro l’11% del 2007), in 17 mn. di famiglie, non sono stati in grado di procurarsi un’alimentazione sufficiente;

o   il 5,7% di questo 15% (6,7 mn. di famiglie) hanno sperimentato “bassissima sicurezza alimentare”, per mancanza di denaro, contro il 4,1% del 2007.

o   L’insicurezza alimentare è aumentata dal 1999 al 2007, durante gli anni del boom di Wall Street.

o   Rilevata anche l’inadeguatezza del programma alimentare governativo: poco più della metà di coloro che hanno avuto scarsità di alimentazione avevano partecipato nel mese precedente ad uno dei maggiori programmi governativi (tessere alimentari, pranzi scolastici con sussidio, o per donne sole con figli, o per bambini).

o   Nel 2008 più di 1/3 delle madri sole ha riferito di aver lottato per avere del cibo, più di 1 su 7 ha dichiarato che qualche membro della famiglia ha patito la fame; gli afro-americani e gli ispanici con problemi di alimentazione sono stati più del doppio dei bianchi; l’insicurezza alimentare è maggiore nel Sud USA.

– Rilevata dal governo USA una forte crescita della “insicurezza alimentare” e della “scarsissima sicurezza alimentare” (fame), con i maggiori livelli dal 1995.

– 16,4% degli americani patiscono di insicurezza alimentare, di questi 12,1 mn. di adulti e 5,2 mn. di bambini fanno parte di famiglie con bassissima sicurezza alimentare.

– Secondo il rapporto del ministero Agricoltura USA, quasi 17 mn. di bambini, più di 1/5, vivevano nel 2008 in famiglie con scarsità di cibo, contro i 12 mn. del 2007; il numero dei bambini cge hanno patito la fame è salito a quasi 1,1 mn. dai 700mila precedenti.

– La maggior parte delle famiglie con scarsità di cibo hanno almeno un adulto che lavora a tempo pieno, risultato dell’attacco del padronato a posti di lavoro e salari e orari, che ha utilizzato la crisi finanziaria per attuare una riduzione permanente del tenore di vita della classe lavoratrice e intensificarne lo sfruttamento.

– Dai dati del ministero Agricoltura, solo la metà delle famiglie con scarsità di alimentazione ha redditi inferiori o uguali al livello ufficiale di povertà, la maggior parte delle altre sopravvive con un po’ meno del doppio di questo livello,

o   a dimostrazione che il livello di povertà ufficiale è calcolato in modo appositamente improprio, dato che esclude decine di milioni di persone che vivono in povertà.

o   Il livello reale di povertà negli USA è dunque circa il doppio delle stime ufficiali per il 2008, pari al 13,2%, già di per sé +12,5% sul 2007, in cifre assolute 39,8 mn. nel 2008 contro i 37,3 mn. del 2007.

o   Il valore reale di coloro che vivono in povertà è verosimilmente tra i 70 e gli 80 mn., almeno ¼ della popolazione USA.

– L’Ufficio di Statistica USA sulla popolazione ha comunicato a settembre che il reddito medio reale delle famiglie negli USA è diminuito del 3,6% tra il 2007 e 2008, tendenza accelerata nel 2009.

– La disoccupazione ufficiale a dic. 2008 era del 7,2%, ad ott. 2009 al 10,2%.

– Riferendosi al rapporto ministeriale, Obama ha sottolineato non la tragedia umana dietro a questi dati, ma le conseguenze che ne derivano per «la nostra futura competitività come nazione», cioè la competitività globale del capitalismo americano.

– L’Amministrazione Obama ha deciso ad ottobre di investire $85 mn. per il mantenimento dei programmi per il pasto scolastico durante le vacanze estive,

una goccia rispetto alle migliaia di miliardi di $ (stimati da un’agenzia governativa in $23 700 MD) messi a disposizione dal governo per il salvataggio delle banche, e rispetto alle decine di migliaia di miliardi stanziati per i buoni da erogare a dicembre ai dirigenti bancari.

Wsws 091118

World Socialist Web Site

wsws.org

Published by the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI)

A record 49 million Americans faced hunger in 2008
By Barry Grey
17 November 2009

–   A yearly survey on hunger released Monday by the United States Department of Agriculture reported that a record 49.1 million Americans in 17 million households lacked dependable access to adequate food in 2008.

–   The government reported a sharp rise both in what it calls “food insecurity” and “very low food security,” i.e., outright hunger, noting that the rates recorded last year in both categories were the highest since the Agriculture Department began its annual surveys in 1995.

–   Those suffering food insecurity in 2008 made up 16.4 percent of the US population. Of these, 12.1 million adults and 5.2 million children lived in households with very low food security.

–   The report’s chief author, Mark Nord, pointed out that most families with a scarcity of food contain at least one adult with a full-time job. This is a reflection of the assault on both jobs and wages carried out by the American corporate elite in response to the financial crisis. Since the beginning of the financial crisis in the summer of 2007, big business has sought to place the burden of the financial breakdown on the working class, a process that has accelerated under the Obama administration.

–   Corporations, taking their lead from the Obama administration’s assault on auto workers at General Motors and Chrysler, have been systematically shedding jobs and slashing wages, benefits and work hours, utilizing the crisis precipitated by Wall Street to effect a permanent reduction in working class living standards and an intensification of the rate of exploitation of labor.

The result is a social catastrophe with no parallel since the Great Depression.

–   The Agriculture Department report pointed out that just half of the households in which food is scarce have incomes at or below the official poverty level, while most of the rest survive on something less than twice that level.

–   This only demonstrates the fraudulent nature of the official poverty level, which excludes tens of millions who live in poverty.

–   The real poverty level in the US is likely double the official estimate for 2008 of 13.2 percent, itself an increase from 12.5 percent in 2007. According to the US Census Bureau, there were 39.8 million people in the US in poverty in 2008, up from 37.3 million the previous year. The real figure is likely in the range of 70 million to 80 million, at least a quarter of the population.

–   The US Census Bureau announced last September that real median household income in the United States fell 3.6 percent between 2007 and 2008. That trend has undoubtedly accelerated this year.

–   The official jobless rate in December of 2008 was 7.2 percent. The rate for October of this year was 10.2 percent. This means the hunger epidemic reported on Monday significantly underestimates the current situation.

–   President Obama on Monday issued a perfunctory statement in response to the Agriculture Department report. Released from Beijing, where Obama is meeting with Chinese leaders, the statement called the report “unsettling.” It referred to “many communities across our nation where food stamp applications are surging and food pantry shelves are emptying.”

–   Obama focused his concern to the impact of growing hunger on children, noting that “there were more than 500,000 families in which a child experienced hunger multiple times over the course of the year.” He said nothing about adults who are suffering from inadequate nutrition.

–   In fact, the Agriculture Department report stated that nearly 17 million children—more than one in five across the US—were living in households where food ran short, up from slightly more than 12 million the year before. The report also noted than the number of children who experienced outright hunger rose from about 700,000 to nearly 1.1 million.

–   Obama placed the greatest emphasis not on the human tragedy of such levels of hunger, but rather on its implications for “our future competitiveness as a nation,” i.e., the global competitive position of American capitalism.

He made a pro forma reference to restoring “job growth,” and touted his administration’s sponsorship of a measure signed into law last month that “invests $85 million in new strategies to prevent children from experiencing hunger in the summer.” This paltry allocation goes toward maintaining school lunch programs during the summer vacation.

–   It is a drop in the bucket compared to the trillions of dollars—estimated by one government agency at up to $23.7 trillion—which the government has made available to bail out the banks. And it pales in comparison to the tens of billions of dollars in bonuses that will be handed out to bank executives next month.

–   Obama concluded his brief remarks by reiterating that providing children with the “healthy meals they need to grow and succeed” is necessary to “keep America competitive in the decades to come.”

–   The Agriculture Department reported that among people of all ages, nearly 15 percent (17 million households) last year did not consistently have adequate food, compared with 11 percent in 2007. This is the greatest decline in access to food during a single year in the history of the annual survey.

–   Of this 15 percent, 5.7 percent (6.7 million households) experienced “very low food security”—meaning food intake of one or more family members was reduced and their eating patterns were disrupted at times during the year because the household lacked money. The figure for this category was up from 4.1 percent in 2007.

–   The report also noted that food insecurity had increased from 1999 to 2007, that is, during the bumper years on Wall Street before rampant speculation and fraud precipitated the near-meltdown of the US and world financial system.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack in a briefing to reporters said, “It’s no secret. Poverty, unemployment, these are all factors.” He acknowledged that “there could be additional increases” in the figures for 2009, due out a year from now.

–   The report indicated the inadequacy of existing government food programs. Just more than half of those surveyed who reported they had experienced food shortages said they had, in the previous month, participated in one of the government’s largest anti-hunger programs and nutrition programs—food stamps, subsidized school lunches, or WIC, the nutrition program for women with babies or young children.

–   In 2008, people in 4.8 million households used private food pantries, up from 3.9 million in 2007, an increase of 23 percent. Some 625,000 households resorted to soup kitchens, nearly 90,000 more than the previous year.

–   Food shortages are particularly common among women raising children alone.Last year, more than one in three single mothers reported struggling to provide food and more than one in seven said someone in their home had gone hungry. The report also found that African-Americans and Hispanics were more than twice as likely to report that food in their home was inadequate.

On average, households reporting food scarcity had the problem seven months out of the year, while about one-fourth said the problem occurred almost every month. Among the questions asked in the survey were whether, in the past year, food sometimes ran out before they had money to buy more, whether they could not afford to eat nutritionally balanced meals, and whether adults in their family at times reduced the size of their meals, or skipped them, because of a lack of money.

Regionally, food insecurity was most prevalent in the South. Rates increased significantly in 13 states, with the largest increases in Nevada and West Virginia.

Monday’s report underscores the refusal of the Obama administration to take any serious measures to deal with the jobs crisis and the growth of poverty. As the report was released, Obama was reassuring the Chinese government, which holds some $800 billion in US Treasury notes, that his administration would protect Beijing’s dollar assets and make good on its pledge to slash health care costs and impose major cuts in social programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.

Growing hunger is one of the costs being borne by the American people for the single-minded determination of the Obama administration, Congress and both big business parties to empty the public treasury and slash working class living standards in order to protect the wealth of the American financial aristocracy.

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