字幕列表 影片播放
-
Whatever you think poverty today looks like...
-
...it probably doesn't look much like this
-
In one of the most affluent counties in America...
-
...people are queuing for handouts...
-
...of diapers
-
We've had clients come to us that have said...
-
...I've rinsed out a diaper and I've re-used it...
-
...I've turned a diaper inside out and I've re-used it
-
Sometimes I've left my child in a diaper for far longer than I should have
-
There is no government support in America to help pay for diapers
-
And many poor families struggle to afford them
-
America is the richest big country in the world
-
Its unemployment rate couldn't be much lower
-
So why does it have so many people living in poverty?
-
In America almost 40m people are living in poverty
-
That's nearly one-eighth of the population living...
-
...on less than $26,000 a year for a family of four
-
Here's the thing though...
-
...poverty in absolute terms has actually decreased in recent years
-
But the nature of poverty is changing...
-
...and that change is making it much harder to fight
-
Poverty used to be more of an inner-city phenomenon
-
But as housing costs rocketed, poverty exploded in the suburbs
-
Now there are 3m more poor people in suburbs than cities
-
Yet suburban counties spend one-tenth as much...
-
...to support poor residents as urban counties
-
Which is why some residents of Lake County, Illinois...
-
...depend on charity handouts for diapers
-
Our schedule for the rest of the year
-
So you can come twice a month, just not twice in the same week
-
Ann Marie Mathis is a local mum
-
She set up the charity nine years ago in her basement
-
Initially she distributed second-hand children's clothes to poor families
-
But soon she found there was an overwhelming need for diapers
-
Diapers costs $70-80 a month per child
-
So that's an expense that many, many families struggle to afford
-
People are faced with you know not only diaper need...
-
...but by hunger, homelessness
-
It's very prevalent even here in what's considered a wealthier community
-
Xavier has been using the diaper pantry for the last few months
-
For her it's a lifeline
-
Our budget goes on rent and food...
-
...anything that's not covered by health insurance
-
Let me take this shirt off, you've got another one on
-
Clothing is a big thing for five kids
-
There's a programme, they help out a lot with healthy food
-
And you can get some vouchers with beans, cheese, milk
-
I cook a lot of spaghetti because it usually lasts longer
-
Poverty in America is becoming more concentrated
-
We know that the effect of being poor and living in a poor neighbourhood...
-
...is much worse than being poor and living in an integrated neighbourhood
-
Especially for children, in terms of the kind of school that they go to...
-
...or their exposure to crime
-
And it's children who are affected the most
-
One child in every six in America is poor
-
I see other families and they're out enjoying this and they're at the mall...
-
...or they're at these events
-
My kids ask and I had to keep saying I can't, we can't
-
How did it come to this?
-
To understand we need to go back to the 1960s
-
President Lyndon B. Johnson went on a poverty tour of America
-
And he was so shocked by what he saw he launched an ambitious plan
-
And this administration today, here and now...
-
...declares unconditional war on poverty in America
-
That war involved an array of programmes...
-
...designed to create a safety net...
-
...many of which still exist in some form today
-
These included expanding both the cash benefit for the elderly...
-
...called Social Security, as well as food stamps...
-
...which help poor families buy food
-
And largely they were successful
-
If we look at the data—without the safety-net programmes...
-
...roughly the same number of Americans would be as poor today...
-
...as they were in the 1960s
-
But if you include the effect of the safety-net programmes...
-
...that number comes right down
-
Elder poverty in the 1950s was a huge problem...
-
...but along the way Social Security hugely reduced...
-
...the amount of poverty among the elderly
-
Sounds good, but not if you compare America's efforts...
-
...with other wealthier countries
-
Before the benefit of safety nets is applied...
-
...America's poverty rate is comparatively low
-
But with it included, it's one of the worst performing...
-
...only slightly above Costa Rica
-
In part, that's because America's safety-net programmes...
-
...have tended to benefit the elderly more than other groups...
-
...like working-age adults and children
-
Those programmes are not doing as much as they might...
-
...in a country like Finland, for example
-
Finland has a child-poverty rate before taxes and transfers...
-
...that are on par with America
-
And after its safety net kicks in you cut that down to about 3%
-
In America you don't do that at all
-
Child poverty in America is remarkably high...
-
...for an advanced, developed democracy
-
You have to ask yourself what is the future of a society...
-
...that doesn't invest in its children?
-
The problem is food stamps, for example...
-
...can only be spent on specific things...
-
...which doesn't always include the most obvious items
-
Unlike Social Security for the elderly...
-
...whose recipients are handed cash to do as they please
-
It's lunchtime and back at the pantry it's been a very busy day
-
We've given out 5,925 diapers so far...
-
...with an hour and a half left to go
-
Since Ann Marie started the charity...
-
...she says they've given out 1.2m diapers
-
And every week more and more families are registering
-
The safety-net programmes that exist in the United States in general...
-
...do not cover diapers and that's a common misconception in the community
-
The problem is safety-net programmes are targeted...
-
...so that many people don't qualify
-
They are restrictive. There are behavioural conditions...
-
...increasingly attached to them...
-
...and all of this can lead to a bureaucratic nightmare of red tape...
-
...from which it's almost impossible to escape
-
In America there's an ongoing debate about whether...
-
...giving poor people cash leads to dependency
-
Yet the evidence from other countries...
-
...shows that cash benefits can really help dent poverty
-
Since Canada implemented a child benefit of a few hundred dollars a month...
-
...they have seen their child-poverty numbers decline by about a third
-
It's reasonable to expect that a programme of similar magnitude in America...
-
...would also generate the exact same effect
-
One candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination...
-
...has even made this a central part of his campaign
-
I'm Michael Bennet from Colorado...
-
Colorado senator, Michael Bennet, has proposed monthly cash transfers...
-
...of $300 for each American child...
-
...as part of wider proposals to help poor people
-
School kids all over this country, they're living at a time...
-
...when we have got the worst income inequality that we've had in 100 years
-
You've probably never heard of him...
-
...which tells you a lot about America's political appetite for reducing poverty
-
Poor people are much less likely to vote...
-
...so their issues are rarely vote-winners
-
If you're working two jobs...
-
...and trying to make sure your kids are walking safely to school...
-
...in a gang-infested neighbourhood...
-
...are you going to the block party for your member of Congress...
-
...and making a campaign donation so that he or she will listen to you?
-
The pantry's closing for the day
-
For the families who use it, poverty does not need to be inevitable
-
There is a way out. Other countries around the world have done it
-
It's really possible
-
Presuming you're a wealthy country with the resources...
-
...and you have a reasonably strong economy
-
The choice is a political one
-
I know that there's something better coming...
-
...and then we'll look back on it like we got through it
-
We're strong. We're going to be stronger because of it
-
I'm Anna, the director of this film
-
If you'd like to see more of the journey that brought us to the diaper journey...
-
...you can watch the story behind American poverty...
-
...by clicking on the link opposite
-
The other link will take you to some of the resources that we used...
-
...when we were researching this film...
-
...including other exclusive material
-
Don't forget to subscribe so you can see all our latest releases...
-
...and if you hit the bell button it will notify you whenever we post a new film
-
Thanks for watching