40 Million Americans Live In Poverty - UN Says, Indicts Trump

UN special rapporteur Philip Alston addresses a press conference at UN headquarters in Nairobi on February 25, 2009. (Photo Credit: Tony Karumba/AFP/Getty Images)

The United Nations has said that not less than 40 million Americans live in poverty, with 18.5 million living in extreme poverty, while 5.3 million Americans live in what it calls “Third World conditions of absolute poverty.”

Some unsettling statistics about poverty from the report states:

40 million Americans live in poverty
18.5 million live in extreme poverty
5.3 million Americans live in “Third World conditions of absolute poverty.”

The indicting report states that, “In 2016, 18 per cent of children (13.3 million) were living in poverty, and children comprised 32.6 per cent of all people in poverty.”

In terms of Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development states, the U.S. has the highest youth poverty rate and the highest infant mortality rate, the report adds.

“On a given night in 2017, about 21 per cent (or 114,829) of homeless individuals were children.”

The report also focuses on the consolidation of wealth in the U.S., noting, “The share of the top one per cent of the population in the United States has grown steadily in recent years. In 2016, they owned 38.6 per cent of total wealth.”

The UN released the report last month on the state of poverty in the United States — and it specifically criticised President Donald Trump’s policies.

“For almost five decades the overall policy response has been neglectful at best,” the report states, “but the policies pursued over the past year seem deliberately designed to remove basic protections from the poorest, punish those who are not in employment and make even basic health care into a privilege to be earned rather than a right of citizenship.”

The 20-page report follows a visit to the U.S. last year by Philip Alston, the U.N. special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, to speak with local, state, and federal officials, along with members of Congress and people living in poverty.

Alston will present his findings to the U.N. Human Rights Council on June 21, which he hopes will help put a spotlight on the issue and spur a debate. In the end, however, the U.N. has “no power to force any government to do anything,” Alston told the Los Angeles Times.

The report covers income inequality, voting rights, child poverty, mass incarceration, health care, racism, and stereotypes surrounding poverty. And it finds that the U.S. is failing the poor, and in particular, focuses on last year’s Republican tax bill and other Trump administration goals, including repealing the Affordable Care Act and increasing defense spending.





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