Covid-19期间美国家庭面临严重财务负担的收入差异

Mary T G Findling, R. Blendon, J. Benson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

Covid-19大流行近两年来,美国的经济复苏仍然不平等。作者发现,低收入和中等收入家庭在经济上继续受到影响。在一项新的调查中,研究了三角洲变体爆发期间美国家庭面临的严重问题,讨论了不同收入水平(< 50,000美元/年、50,000 - 99,999美元/年或100,000美元以上/年)家庭经历的四个关键差异,以及它们对未来的影响。首先,尽管在2019冠状病毒病爆发期间,联邦和州政府拨款数万亿美元来保护弱势美国人,大多数美国家庭报告说,他们在过去几个月里得到了联邦政府的经济援助,但年收入低于5万美元的美国家庭中,59%仍然面临严重的财务问题,而年收入在5万美元以上的家庭中,只有不到四分之一的家庭报告说这一点。其次,租房者的住房危机可能会在短期内恶化,因为年收入低于5万美元的租房者中有34%的人表示在支付租金方面存在严重问题,而年收入在5万美元以上的租房者中,这一比例不到10%。这包括美国四大城市中收入低于5万美元的租房者的很大一部分(59%的休斯顿租房者,51%的芝加哥租房者,44%的洛杉矶租房者和44%的纽约租房者)。第三,许多低收入家庭面临的问题可能会持续一段时间,因为在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,30%收入低于5万美元的家庭失去了所有家庭储蓄,没有任何储蓄可以依靠。第四,这些问题可能会代际延伸,因为收入低于5万美元的儿童家庭中有72%报告面临严重的财务问题,其中49%的家庭报告他们的孩子在Covid-19大流行期间在学校落后很多,相比之下,收入超过5万美元的儿童家庭中有三分之一或更少的家庭报告这些问题。这项研究是由哈佛大学陈曾熙公共卫生学院的研究人员进行的,使用了哈佛大学、全国公共广播电台和罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会2021年的民意调查。
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Income Differences in Serious Financial Burdens Facing U.S. Households during Covid-19
Abstract Nearly two years into the Covid-19 pandemic, America’s economic recovery remains unequal. The authors find that low- and moderate-income households continue to suffer financially. In a new survey examining serious problems facing U.S. households during the delta variant outbreak, four key differences among the experiences of households by income level (<$50,000/year, $50,000–$99,999/year, or $100,000+/year) are discussed, as well as their implications for the future. First, despite trillions of dollars appropriated by federal and state governments during the Covid-19 outbreak to protect vulnerable Americans and a majority of American households reporting they have received financial assistance from the federal government in the past few months, 59% of U.S. households earning below $50,000 a year still report facing serious financial problems, while fewer than one in four households earning $50,000+/year report this. Second, the housing crisis among renters is likely to worsen in the near-term, as 34% of renters earning below $50,000/year report serious problems paying rent, compared to fewer than 10% of those earning $50,000+. This includes large shares of renters earning below $50,000 in the four largest U.S. cities (59% of Houston renters, 51% of Chicago renters, 44% of Los Angeles renters, and 44% of New York City renters). Third, problems for many lower-income households are likely to endure over time, as 30% of households earning <$50,000 lost all of their household savings during the Covid-19 pandemic and have no savings to fall back on. Fourth, these problems may extend intergenerationally, as 72% of households with children earning <$50,000 report facing serious financial problems, and 49% of these households report their children have fallen behind in school a lot during the Covid-19 pandemic, compared with one-third or fewer households with children earning $50,000+ who report these problems. This study was conducted by researchers at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, using a 2021 poll by Harvard, National Public Radio, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
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