ONTD Political

The High Cost of Poverty



You have to be rich to be poor.

That's what some people who have never lived below the poverty line don't understand. Put it another way: The poorer you are, the more things cost. More in money, time, hassle, exhaustion, menace. This is a fact of life that reality television and magazines don't often explain.

So we'll explain it here. Consider this a primer on the economics of poverty.

"The poor pay more for a gallon of milk; they pay more on a capital basis for inferior housing," says Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.). "The poor and 100 million who are struggling for the middle class actually end up paying more for transportation, for housing, for health care, for mortgages. They get steered to subprime lending. . . . The poor pay more for things middle-class America takes for granted."



Poverty 101: We'll start with the basics.

Like food: You don't have a car to get to a supermarket, much less to Costco or Trader Joe's, where the middle class goes to save money. You don't have three hours to take the bus. So you buy groceries at the corner store, where a gallon of milk costs an extra dollar.

A loaf of bread there costs you $2.99 for white. For wheat, it's $3.79. The clerk behind the counter tells you the gallon of leaking milk in the bottom of the back cooler is $4.99. She holds up four fingers to clarify. The milk is beneath the shelf that holds beef bologna for $3.79. A pound of butter sells for $4.49. In the back of the store are fruits and vegetables. The green peppers are shriveled, the bananas are more brown than yellow, the oranges are picked over.

(At a Safeway on Bradley Boulevard in Bethesda, the wheat bread costs $1.19, and white bread is on sale for $1. A gallon of milk costs $3.49 -- $2.99 if you buy two gallons. A pound of butter is $2.49. Beef bologna is on sale, two packages for $5.)

Prices in urban corner stores are almost always higher, economists say. And sometimes, prices in supermarkets in poorer neighborhoods are higher. Many of these stores charge more because the cost of doing business in some neighborhoods is higher. "First, they are probably paying more on goods because they don't get the low wholesale price that bigger stores get," says Bradley R. Schiller, a professor emeritus at American University and the author of "The Economics of Poverty and Discrimination."

"The real estate is higher. The fact that volume is low means fewer sales per worker. They make fewer dollars of revenue per square foot of space. They don't end up making more money. Every corner grocery store wishes they had profits their customers think they have."

According to the Census Bureau, more than 37 million people in the country live below the poverty line. The poor know these facts of life. These facts become their lives.

When you are poor, you don't have the luxury of throwing a load into the washing machine and then taking your morning jog while it cycles. You wait until Monday afternoon, when the laundromat is most likely to be empty, and you put all of that laundry from four kids into four heaps, bundle it in sheets, load a cart and drag it to the corner.

"If I had my choice, I would have a washer and a dryer," says Nya Oti, 37, a food-service worker who lives in Brightwood. She stands on her toes to reach the top of a washer in the laundromat on Georgia Avenue NW and pours in detergent. The four loads of laundry will take her about two hours. A soap opera is playing loudly on the television hanging from the ceiling. A man comes in talking to himself. He drags his loads of dirty sheets and mattress pads and dumps them one by one into the machines next to Oti.

She does not seem to notice. She is talking about other costs of poverty. "My car broke down this weekend, and it took a lot of time getting on the bus, standing on the bus stop. It was a waste of a whole lot of times. Waiting. The transfer to the different bus."

When she has her car, she drives to Maryland, where she shops for her groceries at Shoppers Food Warehouse or Save-A-Lot, where she says some items are cheaper and some are higher. "They have a way of getting you in there on a bargain. You go in for something cheap, but something else is more expensive." She buys bags of oranges or apples, but not the organic kind. "Organic is too much," she says.

"When you are poor, you substitute time for money," says Randy Albelda, an economics professor at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. "You have to work a lot of hours and still not make a lot of money. You get squeezed, and your money is squeezed."

The poor pay more in hassle: the calls from the bill collectors, the landlord, the utility company. So they spend money to avoid the hassle. The poor pay for caller identification because it gives them peace of mind to weed out calls from bill collectors.

The rich have direct deposit for their paychecks. The poor have check-cashing and payday loan joints, which cost time and money. Payday advance companies say they are providing an essential service to people who most need them. Their critics say they are preying on people who are the most "economically vulnerable."

"As you've seen with the financial services industry, if people can cut a profit, they do it," Blumenauer says. "The poor pay more for financial services. A lot of people who are 'unbanked' pay $3 for a money order to pay their electric bill. They pay a 2 percent check-cashing fee because they don't have bank services. The reasons? Part of it is lack of education. But part of it is because people target them. There is evidence that credit-card mills have recently started trolling for the poor. They are targeting the recently bankrupt."

Outside the ACE check-cashing office on Georgia Avenue in Petworth, Harrison Blakeney, 67, explains a hard financial lesson of poverty. He uses the check-cashing store to pay his telephone bill. The store charges 10 percent to take Blakeney's money and send the payment to the phone company. That 10 percent becomes what it costs him to get his payment to the telephone company on time. Ten percent is more than the cost of a stamp. But, Blakeney says: "I don't have time to mail it. You come here and get it done. Then you don't get charged with the late fee."

Blakeney, a retired auto mechanic who now lives on a fixed income, says: "We could send the payment ahead of time but sometimes you don't have money ahead of time. That's why you pay extra money to get them to send it."

Blakeney, wearing a purple jacket, leans on his cane. He has no criticism for the check-cashing place. "That's how they make their money," he says. "I don't care about the charge."

Just then, Lenwood Brooks walks out of the check-cashing place. He is angry about how much it just cost him to cash a check. "They charged me $15 to cash a $300 check," he says.

You ask him why he didn't just go to a bank. But his story is as complicated as the various reasons people find themselves in poverty and in need of a check-cashing joint. He says he lost his driver's license and now his regular bank "won't recognize me as a human. That's why I had to come here. It's a rip-off, but it's like a convenience store. You pay for the convenience."

Then there's credit. The poor don't have it. What they had was a place like First Cash Advance in D.C.'s Manor Park neighborhood, where a neon sign once flashed "PAYDAY ADVANCE." Through the bulletproof glass, a cashier in white eyeliner and long white nails explained what you needed to get an advance on your paycheck -- a pay stub, a legitimate ID, a checkbook. This meant you're doing well enough to have a checking account, but you're still poor.

And if you qualify, the fee for borrowing $300 is $46.50.

That was not for a year -- it's for seven days, although the terms can vary. How much interest will this payday loan cost you? In simple terms, the company is charging a $15.50 fee for every $100 that you borrow. On your $300 payday loan -- borrowed for a term of seven days -- the effective annual percentage rate is 806 percent.

The cashier says that what you do is write First Cash Advance a check for $345.50 plus another $1 fee, and it will give you $300 in cash upfront. It holds the check until you get paid. Then you bring in $346.50 and it returns your check. Or it cashes the check and keeps your $346.50, or you have the option of extending the loan with additional fees. You'll be out $46.50, which you'd rather have for the late fee on the rent you didn't pay on time. Or the gas bill you swear you paid last month but the gas company swears it never got.

But now the payday advance place has closed, shuttered by metal doors. A sign in the front door says the business has moved. After the D.C. government passed a law requiring payday lenders to abide by a 24-percent limit on the annual percentage rate charged on a loan, many such stores in the District closed. Now advocates for the poor say they are concerned about other businesses that prey on poor people by extending loans in exchange for car titles. If a person does not pay back the loan, then the business becomes the owner of the car.

All these costs can lead the poor to a collective depression. Douglas J. Besharov, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, says: "There are social costs of being poor, though it is not clear where the cause and effect is. We know for a fact that on certain measures, people who are poor are often more depressed than people who are not. I don't know if poverty made them depressed or the depression made them poor. I think the cause and effect is an open question. Some people are so depressed they are not functional. 'I live in a crummy neighborhood. My kids go to a crummy school.' That is not the kind of scenario that would make them happy." Another effect of all this, he says: "Would you want to hire someone like that?"

The poor suspect that prices are higher where they live, even the prices in major supermarkets. The suspicions sometimes spill over into frustration.

On a hot spring afternoon, Jacob Carter finds himself standing in a checkout line at the Giant on Alabama Avenue SE. Before the cashier finishes ringing up his items, he puts $43 on the conveyor belt. But his bill comes to $52.07. He has no more money, so he tells the clerk to start removing items.

The clerk suggests that he use his "bonus card" for savings.

Carter tells the clerk he has no such card.

He puts back the liter of soda. Puts back the paper towels. Sets aside $9 worth of hot fried chicken wings. He returns $13 worth of groceries. "Y'all got some high prices in this [expletive]," he says, standing in Aisle 4, blue shirt over work clothes.

The clerk suggests that he take his cash off the conveyor belt, because if she moves the belt the money will be carried into the machinery. Then the money will be gone.

Carter, a building engineer, snatches up the money, then gives it to the clerk. His final bill is $39.07.

He looks at the receipt and then announces without the slightest indication as to why: "Just give me all my [expletive] money back. It's too high in this [expletive]." The clerk calls the supervisor, who comes over. The supervisor doesn't argue with Carter. She just starts the process of giving him a refund.

"I want my money back. This [expletive] is too high. My grandmother told me about this store."

The supervisor returns $39.07 in cash. "Sir," she says, "have a blessed day."

The food in this supermarket might be cheaper than the goods at a corner store. But Carter still feels frustrated by what he thinks is a mark-up on prices in supermarkets in poor neighborhoods. Carter walks out.

The poor pay in other ways, ways you might never imagine. Jeanette Reed, who is retired and lives on a fixed income, sold her blood when she needed money. "I had no other source to get money," she says. "I went to the blood bank. And they gave me $30.

"I needed the money. I didn't have the money and no source of getting money. No gas. No food. I have to go to a center that gives out boxes of food once a month. They give you cereal or vouchers for $10. They give you canned tuna and macaroni and cheese. Crackers and soup. They give you commodities like day-old bread."


The poor know the special economics of their housing, too.

"You pay rent that might be more than a mortgage," Reed says. "But you don't have the credit or the down payment to buy a house. Apartments are not going down. They are going up. They say houses are better, cheaper. But how are you going to get in a house if you don't have any money for a down payment?"

There is also an economic cost to living in low-income neighborhoods.

"The cheaper housing is in more-dangerous areas," says Reed, who lives in Southeast Washington. "I moved out of my old apartment. I hate that area. They be walking up and down the street. Couldn't take the dog out at night because strangers walking up and down the street. They will knock on your door. Either they rob you, kill or ask for money. If you're not there, they will steal air conditioners and copper. They will sell your copper [pipes] for money."

And then there is the particular unpleasantness when you make too much money to fall below the poverty line, but not enough to move up, up and away from it.

For our final guest lecturer on poverty we take you to the Thrift Store on Georgia Avenue and Marie Nicholas, 35, in an orange shirt, purple pants and thick black eyeliner. She is what economists call the working poor.

She is picking through the racks. The store is busy with customers on a Monday afternoon. There is the shrill sound of hangers sliding across racks under fluorescent lights. An old confirmation dress hangs from the ceiling. It has faded to yellow. It's not far from the used silver pumps, size 9 1/2 , nearly new, on sale for $9.99.

"People working who don't make a lot of money go to the system for help, and they deny them," Nicholas says. "They say I make too much. It almost helps if you don't work."

She says she makes $15 an hour working as a certified nursing assistant. She pays $850 for rent for a one-bedroom that she shares with her boyfriend and child. She went looking for a two-bedroom unit recently and found it would cost her $1,400. She pays $300 a month for child care for her 11-year-old son, who is developmentally delayed. She tried to put him in a subsidized child-care facility, but was told she makes too much money. "My son was not chosen for Head Start because I wasn't in a shelter or on welfare. People's kids who do go don't do nothing but sit at home."

Money and time. "I ride the bus to get to work," Nicholas says. It takes an hour. "If I could drive, it would take me 10 minutes. I have to catch two buses." She gets to the bus stop at 6:30 a.m. The bus is supposed to come every 10 or 15 minutes. Sometimes, she says, it comes every 30 minutes.

What could you accomplish with the lost 20 minutes standing there in the rain? Waiting. That's another cost of poverty. You wait in lines. You wait at bus stops. You wait on the bus as it makes it way up Georgia Avenue, hitting every stop. No sense in trying to hurry when you are poor.

When you are poor, you wait.

Source.

Those prices at the stores are insane but I've seen similar things at the corner stores near me. I'm lucky I'm within walking distance of a Save-A-Lot and an Aldi's.
apocalypsos 19th-May-2009 12:46 am (UTC)
God, I wish there was a bus I could wait for. I moved back from the Washington, DC area to my teeny hometown in PA and now that I have no job -- thanks, shiny economy! -- leaving town is a luxury.

Also, those prices sound a smidge higher than my local grocery store, but not by much. Luckily, we've got a Dollar General in town now so as long as I don't mind avoiding brand names, I'm fed just fine.
granting 19th-May-2009 03:16 am (UTC)
out of curiousity, what teeny hometown?
missmurchison 19th-May-2009 12:48 am (UTC)
Terry Pratchett's character Sam Vimes has a boots theory of economics.

The reason the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money.

Take boots, for example. He earned thirty-eight dollars a month plus allowances. A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. Those were the kind of boots Vimes always bought, and wore until the soles were so thin that he could tell where he was in the city on a foggy night by the feel of the cobbles.

But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that'd still be keeping his feet dry in ten years' time, while a poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet.
leprofessional 19th-May-2009 12:51 am (UTC)
Brilliant thanks for sharing.
escherichiacola 19th-May-2009 12:51 am (UTC)
This is why the rich complaining about progressive income tax and paying more is bullshit.
volksjager 19th-May-2009 01:00 am (UTC)
Wow, I guess life is unfair or something...
styropor 19th-May-2009 01:04 am (UTC)
She buys bags of oranges or apples, but not the organic kind. "Organic is too much," she says.

It says a lot about the author (or their audience) when not buying ~*organic*~ is intended to tug at the heart strings. For fuck's sake.

The clerk suggests that he use his "bonus card" for savings. Carter tells the clerk he has no such card.

So sign up for one! THEY'RE FREE.

I also wonder if there's any research to back up regular grocery store prices in poor areas being higher. Of course corner stores are higher - that's how corner stores work no matter where you are. I've shopped in plenty of grocery stores (Acme, Giant, Shoprite, Winn Dixie, etc) in poor and decent neighborhoods and never noticed a difference in prices, though.
germli 19th-May-2009 01:15 am (UTC)
Interesting article.

"My son was not chosen for Head Start because I wasn't in a shelter or on welfare. People's kids who do go don't do nothing but sit at home."
Ngl this part made me go ugh. A lot of these people do work ma'am but instead of making $15 an hour they're struggling with minimum wage. When folks (don't care who says it) imply those on welfare/food stamps sit on their ass all day... :(
bellichka 19th-May-2009 01:26 am (UTC)
Notice that a specific location isn't given for the pricier items, just the cheaper ones. Perhaps I'm a bit naive, or perhaps I'm just accustomed to my Wegmans, but those prices are insane, and I have never encountered anything like them outside of NYC. Even in DC you could easily pay $1.60 to take the metro to this lovely, cheap, upper-class Bethesda store, and save yourself $10 or $20.

One of those savings cards at the grocer's is FREE. A checking or savings account is FREE, and all you have to do is find one that doesn't have a fee or doesn't require a minimum balance (I have one that has no fee or min bal, so don't tell me it can't be done). Why would you pay somebody TEN PERCENT of your check to cash it for you and mail the payment out? Because you "don't have time"? SERIOUSLY?

Some of these things sound more like issues related to stupidity rather than poverty. BUT, I admittedly skimmed, so feel free to prove me wrong.
hourglasscreate 19th-May-2009 01:29 am (UTC)
I'm surprised that this is surprising.

I live near DC. The green line of the Metro was the last line to go in. That's the line that goes to the poor black part of the city (and suburbs). You know, the people who need public transportation most.

The rich neighborhoods had it at least 10 years prior to the poor people. You know, the people who need it least.
jehscribbler 19th-May-2009 04:01 am (UTC)
Yes! We have lived on the South side of Chicago since the 70's, and the bus & train service is much worse, there are fewer grocery stores, even in Hyde Park-Kenwood,(the President's neighborhood) because we are surrounded by the poorer minority neighborhoods. The city didn't provide services, the big name stores wouldn't locate to the area, and things are more expensive for all services. The South side is starting to get more and better services and stores, because the black and white middle class families have begun to move back to the Bronzeville-No.Kenwood-Woodlawn area. But this is only within the past 10 years. As long as the area was mostly poor public housing areas and lower income blue collar neighborhoods it remained underserved and ignored.
I was in college in the 60's at Purdue, and took a community nutrition course in which we had to do research into the grocery options for inner city residents. I went down to one of the neighborhoods near downtown Indpls, walked into a small corner grocery which turned out to be owned by the father of a grade school classmate of mine! The prices there were, just as those in this article, higher for the same brands than those at the stores near my home in a suburban city area of Indpls. My friend's Dad explained it, as they did in the article above, as a function of being a small independent store that couldn't bargain for lower 'volume' prices like the chains do. (I grew up in a working class-blue collar, marginal white collar job neighborhood, where they also lived, so I don't think he was making a killing on his prices. Small merchants are at a disadvantage in the market place, just like their poor customers.)
mercifulsky 19th-May-2009 01:35 am (UTC)
I hate living off ramen. :(
styropor 19th-May-2009 01:53 am (UTC)
Don't assume that everyone who doesn't fall to their knees and weep over this article is naive/middle class. I was raised below the poverty line & the rest of my entire family still lives below it.
zarak 19th-May-2009 02:02 am (UTC)
As bad as poverty is right now, it's only going to get worse when the dollar collapses and the resulting inflation that's been building up for years now hits us like a blow-off mountaintop. The skyrocketing consumer prices and interest rates to come after that will make this current recession--or even that of the '30s--seem enviable by comparison.
syndicalist 19th-May-2009 03:25 am (UTC)
How do you know this?
iamcheryltweedy 19th-May-2009 02:02 am (UTC)
~WELFARE QUEENS~*~
iamcheryltweedy 19th-May-2009 02:03 am (UTC)
anyways, thank you for posting this. I could feel my chest constricting as I read it, ngl, ugh.
zaure 19th-May-2009 02:20 am (UTC)
My mom sold her plasma for us to eat when we were little. She weighed 85 pounds, so she'd weigh down her pockets so that they wouldn't know. Of course she always got sick afterwards because then they'd take too much. She worked for the Red Cross too, so it's not like she didn't know.

I tried to sell myself this year, but I can't. Even weighing myself down, my blood pressure's too low, and I have no idea how to trick that.
orwhoeveriam 19th-May-2009 04:40 am (UTC)
Run around a bit before you go in? Being well hydrated helps too. (My blood pressure is always boarderline low when I try to donate blood.)
ygrii_blop 19th-May-2009 03:00 am (UTC)
If the poor can't afford the prices in their neighborhoods, they should move to better neighborhoods where the prices are better.
syndicalist 19th-May-2009 03:24 am (UTC)
Wow, I bet they never thought of that! All those "better neighborhoods" where prices are lower...!
syndicalist 19th-May-2009 03:23 am (UTC)
Thank you for posting this; I have seen similar reports before.

I think this adds more weight to the evidence that the poor are poor because in the US we have a system that basically works to redistriute income upwards to the wealthy.

It's also sort of like what Elizabeth Warren said out our "Tricks and Traps" economy - corporations largely work to trick folks into getting into loans, payment plans, debt, ongoing services, etc., then "trap" them in it by burying them down month after month.
reticent_lass 19th-May-2009 05:34 am (UTC)
*SAVES*

If I didn't belong to a well-off family, I'd be fucked. Public transport is awful in this town, sprawl is rampant, sidewalks are often nonexistent, and you can walk for miles without hitting a store selling actual food.
sabzi_nic 19th-May-2009 06:48 am (UTC)
I have and continue to experience a lot of what this article talks about.

:/

It's seriously depressing....
evilgmbethy 19th-May-2009 06:52 am (UTC)
Parts of this are good, parts are just confusing.

I make less money than that nursing assistant above. Direct deposit is only for rich people? Since when? If you have a checking account to go get a payday advance, you can have direct deposit.

What they don't address is that the people who need to live in the city, within walking/easy public transport distance of places like grocery stores, usually end up way in the sticks or the suburbs. I know it's like that in Portland. I live in the city, but I pay more rent than I would if I wanted to live out in the boonies of Fairview. I do this because I don't have a car and it would be so hard to get around the suburbs to shop, go to work, etc without a car. So the people who can't afford to live in the city are the ones who need to live in the city the most. I can only manage because I got roommates off craigslist. Yeah, so comforting to have to find roommates off craigslist. There's always that chance you'll end up moving in with a psycho, but hey! Gotta do what ya gotta do.

Also, what this article doesn't address is how incredible impossible it can be to even get a lease for an apartment. It is nigh impossible to get an apartment if you don't make a lot of money and don't have great credit, which, surprise surprise, pretty much describes every poor person. There's a really desperate feeling when you think you finally found a place to live that is within your means, but you realize that you're never going to make it past the application process because of that eviction you had five years ago when times were really rough. So then it's back to craigslist and hoping you don't run into a psychopath. Which has happened to me. I had to abandoned most of my belongings because one of my old landlords who lived upstairs turned out to be criminally crazy. Which is just going to happen once in a while when your only source of housing is fucking craigslist.
celtic_thistle 19th-May-2009 05:35 pm (UTC)
This sort of thing makes me very, very angry. WHY is this still happening in the "best" and richest country in the world?! My bf and I are poor. We can barely afford to feed our cats and pay the rent. He's a very smart, skilled man but he's working for barely minimum wage. We have nothing. It infuriates me.
automaticdoor 20th-May-2009 06:31 pm (UTC)
Thank you for sharing this! Privileged DC student here, but...

Don't even get me started on DC public transit for anywhere that's not NW. I wish this article were more in depth though. I also wish the grocery stores would make it more obvious that it's totally free to get a Safeway/Giant card.

Also I made a documentary thesis about inequality in Mount Pleasant that you might want to see? It's not nearly as harsh as I wanted to be though, long story reasons. http://vimeo.com/4516706 /self-promo
danceprincess20 26th-May-2009 05:15 am (UTC)
I'm kind of late to this post but I just got back from a semester in DC and, though I don't know a ton about Mt. Pleasant I am so excited to watch your video! I had a few co-workers who either lived in or used to live in Mt. Pleasant so I've heard a good bit about it. Thanks for posting! :)
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