Tag Archive | "recession"

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Seniors Hit Hard By Economic Insecurity


LA Beez, News Report, Mike Santos

Jan is a stately, elderly woman of 65 who had it good not too long ago. She had a lucrative income, some of which she invested in a lovely two bedroom home in a good neighborhood. She did everything by the book to ensure her retirement.

Jan now lives in a group home, sharing a room with eight other women. She subsists on a measly $100 per month—all that’s left for her after Social Security and Medicare are put towards the costs of her housing and care. She says that’s far from enough to cover her daily subsistence and medical needs that are not covered by Medicare.

But that’s all Jan has these days because the preparations she made over the course of decades have been wiped out in the country’s worst economic downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

“I would like to know what you are doing about it,” Jan says angrily at a recent forum hosted by the Greenlining Institute, a non-profit national policy, organizing, and leadership institute working for racial and economic justice. The conference aimed to address the growing economic crisis facing the elderly folks such as Jan.

“I did everything right,” Jan told the attendees at the forum. “I prepared for my future and this is where I ended up.”

Jan is not alone in her dilemma.

In a Health Policy Research Brief prepared by INSIGHT Center for Community Development—a national research, consulting, and legal organization dedicated to building economic health in vulnerable communities—there are nearly half a million elders in California alone who cannot make ends meet.

More than one-fourth of Californians aged 65 and older live alone, and half of them had incomes below the Elder Index, which measures how much income is needed for a retired, elderly adult to meet their basic needs, including housing, food, out-of-pocket medical expenses, transportation and other necessary spending.

In Los Angeles County, the Elder Index is pegged at $23,000 per year, and more than 312,000 elders are trying to survive below that income level.

The California Elder Economic Security Standard Index (Elder Index) is a new tool that quantifies how much income is needed for a senior with a given living arrangement and geographic location to adequately meet his or her basic needs living in the community. It is the only elder-specific financial measure of its kind, and based on credible, publicly available sources for all 58 California counties. It was calculated using actual cost data (housing, food, health care, transportation, and other basic expenses) for older adults living alone and for couples.

“Economic insecurity for the elderly is caused mostly by the high cost of basic necessities and inadequate income prompting them to make untenable choices detrimental to them,” said Dr. Brad Bagasao, who serves as program development director for the Filipino-American Service Group, Inc. (FASGI), non-profit organization that is located in the Historic Filipinotown district of Los Angeles and focused on promoting the physical health and mental wellbeing of underserved low-income seniors.

Elders of all ethnicities are struggling to meet the high costs of living in Los Angeles, but elders of color—who typically earn less than white people throughout their working lives and who often don’t have pensions and 401Ks to supplement their Social Security income—have been hit particularly hard.

“It doesn’t help that California’s financial deficit is forcing Sacramento to cut off essential programs for the elderly,” said Laura Trejo, general manager of the Los Angeles City Department of Aging, an agency that’s expected to see budget cuts.

Elders also face the risks of financial abuse, an increasing trend, with seniors being lured into investments or agreements that are unsuitable or outright frauds, according to Assemblymember Mike Eng.

Eng, a Democrat who represents the 49th District, told the crowd at the forum about his own experience regarding the economic vulnerability of the elderly, combining a cautionary tale with a call for steps to increase the ability of seniors to spot a scam.

“My mother was somehow approached by someone who convinced her, due to her financial insecurity, to sign a power of attorney which basically put all her financial assets in the power of one person who apparently refuses to disclose what the plans will be and where the assets are,” Eng said. “It is this lack of economic literacy which many people are preying on.”

Miko Santos is an editor at Asian Journal.
AJPress photo by Miko Santos.

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Report: Job Loss May Level Off


MILWAUKEE – U.S. employers plan to keep their staffing levels relatively stable during the third quarter of 2009, according to a national report.

Of the more than 28,000 employerssurveyed about their hiring plans for the third quarter of 2009, 15 percent anticipate an increase in their staff levels, while 13 percent expect a decrease in their payrolls. Sixty-seven percent of employers surveyed expect no change in their July – September hiring plans, and 5 percent of employers indicated they were undecided about their hiring intentions, the according to the quarterly report conducted  by Manpower Inc.

“While the numbers may not be as optimistic as we would like, it is positive to see no further deterioration, “said Jeffrey A. Joerres, chairman and CEO of Manpower Inc.

According to Jonas Prising, president of the Americas for Manpower Inc., the data shows continued hesitancy among employers who are watching with “guarded optimism, hoping a few quarters of stability will be the precursor to the recovery.”

The national survey data shows employers in seven of the 13 sectors surveyed expect hiring to remain relatively stable in the next quarter as compared to the previous quarter.

Employers in Construction and Wholesale & Retail Trade anticipate moderate increases, while Non-Durable Goods Manufacturing and Leisure & Hospitality employers expect a slight increase in hiring activity compared to the second quarter.

Employers in two sectors surveyed, Education & Health Services and Government, anticipate a slight decrease in hiring compared to three months ago. Employers in Durable Goods Manufacturing; Transportation & Utilities; Information; Financial Activities; Professional & Business Services; and Other Services sector employers will keep hiring levels relatively stable for the third quarter.

The West has a weaker Outlook compared to the previous quarter, while all regions have a weaker Outlook compared to one year ago at this time. Employer optimism about hiring is relatively stable in the South, Northeast and Midwest.

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Report: Recession Hits Blacks, Latinos, Immigrants Harder


WASHINGTON, D.C. — The current recession is having an especially severe impact on employment prospects for immigrant Hispanics, according to an analysis of the latest Census Bureau data by the Pew Hispanic Center, a project of the Pew Research Center.

The unemployment rate has increased more and the share of the working-age population that is employed has fallen more for immigrant Hispanics than for other racial and ethnic groups in the first year of the recession. Trends in other indicators during the one-year old recession, such as the change in labor force participation or the growth in the number of unemployed persons, also reveal a more severe impact on foreign-born Latinos.

Native-born Hispanics and blacks in the labor market have also felt strong negative effects from the recession. However, changes in the employment rate and other indicators of labor market activity during the recession have been less severe for them than for foreign-born Hispanics.

The report is based on an analysis of the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Census Bureau.

Estimates are presented for the fourth quarters of 2007 and 2008 encompassing the first year of the ongoing recession.

The report, Unemployment Rises Sharply Among Latino Immigrants in 2008, authored by Rakesh Kochhar, Associate Director for Research, is available at the Pew Hispanic Center’s website, www.pewhispanic.org.

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