But that's not the end of the bad news. For the first time, a majority of those receiving food stamps are people between the age of 18 and 59 -- commonly called working age adults. In the past, the majority of those on food stamps were elderly people and children under 18. This shows just how bad our economy still is. Those working age adults aren't receiving food stamps because they are lazy, but because there is either no job for them to fill or the job they have does not pay enough to lift them out of poverty. Don't let this new statistic fool you though, since the number of children in food stamp families has not decreased (with more than 70% of food stamp households having at least one child).
And this situation may not improve much in the future. While the official unemployment rate is creeping down slowly, that is not because of substantial job creation. It is because millions have given up trying to find work, and are no longer being counted by the government as being unemployed (even though they would love to find a decent job).
And it is also because most of the few jobs being created are minimum wage (or near minimum wage) jobs -- jobs that serve only to keep a worker in poverty. In fact, the number of those working but still receiving food stamps has risen from 7% in 1980 to 17% currently -- and it is expected to continue to grow (because in just a few years, around 2020, it is expected that 25% of American jobs will be low-wage jobs).
In the past, education could be counted on to lift a person out of poverty. But that is starting to disappear also. An Associated Press study shows that high school grads getting food stamps has increased from 28% in 1980 to 37% in 2013. Other education levels are also rising among food stamp recipients -- with those having some college rising from 7% to 28%, and those having a college degree rising from 3% to 7%.
Taken together, those measures would cut food stamp rolls (and the rolls of other poverty programs), and create more taxpayers (which would help reduce our deficit and debt). The problem is that the Republicans, who control the House of Representatives, oppose all of those ideas -- and they would block them (as they have been doing for years now). The only thing they want to do is funnel more money to those who don't need it -- the rich and the corporations.
This is why the 2014 election is so important. We must vote the Republicans out of power, so we can return to a saner and fairer economy.