by Chris Reed | April 10, 2016 12:55 pm
While the Census Bureau’s decision to begin issuing poverty rate statistics that include cost of living has established California as the state with the highest [1]percentage of impoverished residents, most media coverage hasn’t focused on the more specific poverty statistics that show Los Angeles County has the largest concentration of poverty in the nation.
The Census Bureau estimates that 23 percent of state residents meet its alternative definition of impoverished. A 2011 study [2]done by the Public Policy Institute of California and the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality, which also took into account cost of living, put L.A. County’s poverty rate at 27 percent. With the cost of rent ballooning since then, that figure may be low. But the established data suggest that at least 2.7 million of the county’s 10.2 million residents are in poverty. That’s about the same number of people as the population of Chicago — America’s third-largest city.
Now a new study by the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, with the help of public opinion research firm Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin, Metz and Associates, has come along that puts a face on this poverty and what it means to have so little money in a place as expensive as Los Angeles County. (Here’s the UCLA summary[3]; here’s a slideshow[4].) It’s based on interviews with 1,401 county residents.
Perhaps the harshest finding was the extent of economic insecurity among Latinos, the largest ethnic group in the county. Some 44 percent of Latinos, and 54 percent of Latino men (including those of all incomes) worried about going hungry, more than double the rate of any other ethnic/racial group. Also, 44 percent of Latinos worried about going homeless, much higher than any other group, including a majority of men.
Other findings:
Former Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky told the Los Angeles Times that the survey findings were a stark reminder of “the clear differences by class, by economic standing, even more so than the racial divide. … Economic differences seem to be the fault line in our county. It really paints a picture of a Los Angeles that is two worlds.”
On racially tinged questions, the UCLA study had some results that may surprise.
Source URL: https://calwatchdog.com/2016/04/10/54-latino-men-l-county-fear-going-hungry/
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