A recent press release from a group called Wider Opportunities for Women reveals what many families struggling to make ends meet already know: many families with breadwinners employed full-time are unable to earn enough money to ensure a basic standard of living.
The study (discussed more below) highlights the troubling economic reality that many Americans face and could potentially help to de-mythologize the reasons people are pushed to file for bankruptcyprotection.
The Basic Economic Security Test
Here’s some background about the study and its findings.
- Data collected since 1995: Over the past fifteen years, WOW has gathered data from state and federal pools (including census reports) to attempt to determine how much income is required to establish economic security across the country. The study attempts to determine not what people can survive on minimally, but how much they need to earn in order to achieve stability without help from public assistance.
- Economic security numbers: The study found that a single person would need to earn $30,012 per year (about $14 per hour), a single person with two children $57,756 annually (about $27 per hour), and a family of four $67,920 per year ($16 per hour for two workers) to establish economic stability.
- Minimum wage not enough: Compare the above numbers to the federal minimum wage ($7.25 per hour) and to the income identified as poverty-level for those groups ($10,830 for an individual and $22,050 for a family of four) and it’s easy to see that current diagnostic standards for “poverty” are somewhat misleading. Sources report that more than 14 percent of Americans lived below the poverty line in 2009.
Financial Stability, Emergencies and Bankruptcy
Given these numbers, it’s no wonder that millions of Americans require help from the bankruptcy court each year. One essential part of economic stability, as the report highlights, is being able to save money for emergencies. And, on bankruptcy filing surveys, filers commonly cite as reasons they filed financial emergencies such as:
- Illness or injury that led to high medical costs and/or job loss;
- Job loss, layoff, or reduction;
- Family events such as divorce, the death of a family member and the birth or adoption of a child;
- Over-extension on credit (which can result from relying on credit to buy necessities); and
- Unexpected expenses (like a car or home repair).
Recession Hurting Many Families
The study also showed that Americans with less education have the most difficulties finding jobs with livable wages, and that more low-income families than ever have reported not being able to afford basics like food within three months of losing their income.
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