Many Americans Still Feeling Left Behind in the Current Economy

These statistics are alarming and indicate that the economy is trickling at too slow a rate. We as a nation can and must do better.
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Late last month, I spoke with a former student of mine who informed me that he was working two jobs in an effort to make ends meet and support his very young family. He had temporarily taken a leave of absence from school in an effort to get his personal affairs in order. The student in question further stated that he felt that despite being fiscally responsible and doing all he could to meet basic living expenses , he saw himself as constantly swimming upstream being thrashed around by undercurrents in the water. His story is not an aberration. The fact is that the current economy is still having an adverse effect on millions of Americans throughout the nation.

Anyone who is even halfway sane is well aware of the fact that that nation's economic situation, while gradually improving, is far from robust. People in all regions of the nation are still struggling. USA Today finance reporter John Wagoner recently cited a fall 2013 report released by the Federal Reserve Board on August 7th entitled "Report on The Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households" indicated that a large percentage of American families had economically rebounded from the recession that took place from December 2007 to June 2009. The crisis was the harshest downturn in the economy since the Great Depression.

Some of the findings in the report were:

25 percent of people polled stated that they were just getting by
34 percent said that they were worse off than they were five years ago
13 percent stated the they were having severe economic issues
34 percent said that their economic situation was roughly similar to what is was in 2008

That being said, 60 percent of those interviewed in the same study indicated that they were doing fine or living comfortably. Other findings were:

24 percent of those polled had significant student loan debt
84 percent were concerned about out of pocket costs for health care
18 percent had went without seeing a doctor
43 percent said that they would be unable to cover a major out-of-pocket expense

In regards to the future prospects:

31 percent reported that they had no retirement savings or pension
49 percent said that they had made little to financial planning for the future
40 percent said that they would have to delay retirement

There have a number of studies that have demonstrated that millennials (young people under 34) have been particularly hard hit and affected by the current economic climate gripping our nation. In fact, unlike previous generations, a large percentage of young people have not even had the opportunity to work at an entry level job. This fact in and of itself is troubling. Lower income people over 55 are facing real economic adversity as well.

These statistics are alarming and indicate that the economy is trickling at too slow a rate. Moreover, it demonstrates far too many Americans are just two paychecks or one bad major accident (health-related or otherwise) or misfortune from having their lives turned upside down or in some cases, damaged to an extent from which may take years, decades, if ever to be able to recover from. Such a situation is cause for real alarm. We as a nation can and must do better.

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