Census on Obama’s 1st Term: Real Median Income Down $2,627; People in Poverty Up 6,667,000; Record 46,496,000 Now Poor
By Terence P. Jeffrey
During the
four years that marked President Barack Obama’s first term in office, the real median income of American households
dropped by $2,627 and the number of people in poverty increased by
approximately 6,667,000, according to data released today by the Census Bureau.
The record total of approximately
46,496,000 people in the United States who are now in poverty, according to the
Census Bureau, is more than twice the population of Syria, which, according to
the CIA, has 22,457,336 people.
In 2008, the year Obama
was elected, real median household income in the United States was $53,644
according to the Census Bureau. In 2012, the last full year of Obama’s first
term, median household income was $51,017. Thus, real median household income
dropped $2,627—or 4.89 percent—from 2008 to 2012. In fact, real median household income dropped in
every year of Obama's first term. In 2008, when he was elected, it was $53,644.
In 2009, the year he was inaugurated, it dropped to $53,285. In 2010, his
second year in office, it dropped to $51,892. In 2011, his third year in
office, it dropped to $51,100. And, in
2012, his fourth year in office, it dropped to $51,017.
At the same time the number of people living in
poverty in the United States increased. In
2008, according to the Census Bureau, there were approximately 39,829,000
people living in poverty in this country. In 2012, there were 46,496,000. That
is an increase of approximately 6,667,000—of 16.73 percent—from 2008 to 2012. The number of people in poverty increased
during three of the four years of Obama's first term--taking a slight dip from
2010 to 2011, but then rising again from 2011 to 2012. In 2008, there were
39,829 people in poverty in the U.S. In 2009, it climbed to 43,569. In 2010, it
climbed again to 46,343. In 2011, it dipped to 46,247. And, in 2012, it climbed
to an all-time high 46,496. In 2008,
the year Obama was elected, people in poverty represented 13.2 percent of the
national population. In 2012, they represented 15.0 percent of the population. The income threshold at which a
person was determined to be in “poverty,” according to the Census Bureau,
depended on the size of their household. If a person lived by themselves and
earned less than $11,270 in 2012, they were considered to be in poverty. A
family of two people was considered in poverty if they earned less than
$14,937. The threshold for a family of three was $18,284, for a family of four
it was $23,492, and for a family of five it was $27,827.
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