Tag Archives: american households

11 Pets That You Shouldn’t Buy (PHOTOS)

This year, over 62 percent of American households care for pets in 71.4 million homes. Pet ownership rates have risen nationwide from 56 percent since 1988.With 50 percent of the world’s primates and turtles facing extinction and a booming illegal pet… Continue reading

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The 2010 Census: Steady Progress

The Decennial Census, a snapshot of America that began in March, will determine many important issues in our communities including apportionment of congressional seats and the allotment of Federal and State aid for vital services in our schools, senior centers and critical infrastructure projects. With billions of dollars at stake, the answers to 10 simple questions on the census form will have a huge impact across the country for the next decade.

After consecutive undercounts in 1990 and 2000, the Census Bureau took unprecedented action to raise awareness about the importance of completing and returning the 2010 census forms. As a result, the response rate to mailed questionnaires increased from 67 percent in 2000, to 72 percent of American households in 2010. When you consider that the Census Bureau estimates that each percentage increase in the response rate of the mailed forms saves $80 million, the five percent increase saved American taxpayers more than $400 million.

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The 2010 Census: Steady Progress

The Decennial Census, a snapshot of America that began in March, will determine many important issues in our communities including apportionment of congressional seats and the allotment of Federal and State aid for vital services in our schools, senior centers and critical infrastructure projects. With billions of dollars at stake, the answers to 10 simple questions on the census form will have a huge impact across the country for the next decade.

After consecutive undercounts in 1990 and 2000, the Census Bureau took unprecedented action to raise awareness about the importance of completing and returning the 2010 census forms. As a result, the response rate to mailed questionnaires increased from 67 percent in 2000, to 72 percent of American households in 2010. When you consider that the Census Bureau estimates that each percentage increase in the response rate of the mailed forms saves $80 million, the five percent increase saved American taxpayers more than $400 million.

More… Continue reading

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Earth Day Challenge: Green the Fast-Growing Gadget Industry

In the first week of sales, a remarkable 500,000 Americans purchased the new iPad. An equally dramatic number of these customers, however, were in the dark about the full spectrum of iPad’s functionality. Few knew what the iPad actually does. This exemplifies well the strength of the cultural compulsion in America to own the latest electronic gadget, irrespective of actual need or purpose.

IPad sales are indicative of a global trend: Electronic gadget ownership is on the rise throughout the world. Cell phones, for example, rank highest, in terms of ownership, with nearly 5 billion mobile subscribers globally. Televisions, computers, and compact disc players can be found in the majority of most American households, and increasingly the same goes for developing countries. Who would have thought that Lithuania would rank 1st in mobile subscribers and Estonia would rank 21st in computer ownership per capita, or that the Czech Republic would rank one percentage point behind the U.S. in television ownership per household. Electronics know no boundary. Rich and poor alike, nations are increasingly plugging in.

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A Dumbbelled Recovery

We continue to see divergent streams of data on the US economy. There are flows of good news and flows of less bad, but far from good news. There is a macroeconomic dumbbell forming defined by areas of strength at either end of a central void. The middle portion of the recovery is dramatically absent. Jobs, earnings and household balance sheets are the middle. Financial asset markets and large, globally diversified firms have begun the rebuilding process. Bond demand is red hot. Average American households are spending more, as savings rates fall.

The labor market remains very weak and rates of delinquency, default and personal bankruptcy remain at crisis levels. There were more than 158,000 bankruptcy filings in March 2010. We have nearly 8 million homes in the foreclosure pipeline and 27 million households reporting that they owe more than their homes are worth. Lender Processing Services (LPS) reported on 11 April 2010 that 13.3% of the mortgages in its database are not currently being paid in full and on time. We have the highest number of bankruptcy filings since the surge that preceded the bankruptcy reform of late 2005. We have massive distress in prime mortgages and jumbo loans. Consumer credit outstanding has been declining for 5 quarters and is negative year to date in 2010.

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You Only Need a Heart Full of Grace

If it weren’t for the distinctive 1960s fashion, it would be easy to mistake the picture of the 1963 March on Washington for 2010. The placards in the grainy photo of the thousands gathered on the national mall express the concerns of the day: jobs, access to quality education, housing.

Fast forward some 45 years and we are a nation that has made remarkable progress on some dimensions of Dr. King’s dream, but we are also a nation grappling with the upheaval of high unemployment and economic dislocation and its very real human manifestations. Almost 20% of our nation’s children live in poverty and half of our minority students drop out of high school. One in six American households struggles to keep adequate food on the table and nonprofits around the country are reporting record demand for basic services such as housing and utility assistance.

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Sharing the Privilege of Abundance

Thanksgiving always evokes memories of the days when, as mothers of young children, we would bundle them up to deliver turkey baskets — family to family — to those in Washington, DC who couldn’t afford a holiday dinner of their own.

That simple act connected our children to the original spirit of Thanksgiving — where families stop not only to give thanks for plenty, but to share with strangers in need. Thanksgiving is one of the few days where soup kitchens and food pantries around the country burst at the seams — not just with turkey and stuffing, but with volunteers eager to serve.

Americans, in fact, are the most generous people in the world when it comes to private philanthropy: 85 percent of American families give their time or money, with private giving averaging $300 billion a year.

This year Thanksgiving strikes at a critical hour for families everywhere who have been hit hard by the global financial meltdown.

In the United States, one in nine people rely each month on food stamps. Demand at food pantries and homeless shelters is at record levels. And 17 million American households have had difficulty putting food on the table during the last year — a 14-year high.

Yet while we concentrate our efforts on addressing hunger at home, we must remember another face of hunger in our world — one that’s largely invisible until we glimpse it on our TVs from some distant country, when a typhoon, earthquake, flood, drought or conflict makes the evening news.

It’s easy to forget the silent tsunami of hunger that rips an ever-greater swath through the places where there are no streets, where mothers wonder if their malnourished babies will survive and fathers despair that they cannot provide even a single meal for their desperate families. The compounding impact of the food, fuel and financial crises has pushed the numbers of those suffering chronic hunger past one billion — one in six people on earth — for the first time in history.

Those in the “Bottom Billion” subsist on a dollar a day or less. Each day, hunger and related ailments claim 25,000 lives, mostly children — making hunger the world’s No. 1 public health threat. Even when chronic hunger does not kill, it maims — shattering health, longevity, and hope.

Malnutrition in children under age two causes irreversible damage to their minds and bodies. In countries like Ethiopia, Pakistan and Guatemala, one in two children is stunted. Not only is this an incalculable human loss, but it is a quantifiable financial loss to these nations. Studies show malnutrition causes tens of billions of dollars in losses to poor countries — or as much as 11 percent of GDP.

As we’ve traveled the world, the two of us have shared stories and tears with other mothers — far from Washington — who have watched, helplessly, as their children slipped from their grasp into the maws of hunger. For them, Thanksgiving never comes.

Although the mind reels with the huge needs of the world, the solutions are surprisingly achievable. Many nations — Ireland, China, Brazil, and a growing number of African countries — have beat back the worst of hunger. Inexpensive nutritional interventions can dramatically improve the health — and lives — of women and children. For just 25 cents a day, we can feed a child at school, giving them a real shot at forging a better future.

And with $3.2 billion a year — or $1.5 billion less than Americans spend on Halloween annually and a fraction of America’s private giving — we can feed the 66 million children worldwide who go to school hungry. This alone won’t end hunger, but it would be a huge step forward.

If we are to solve hunger, it will take the political will and resources of governments. It’s encouraging that the Obama administration and Congressional leadership recognize that a sustainable, comprehensive food security strategy is vital to ensure our planet’s future peace and prosperity.

Yet every one of us, at all levels, can make a difference — especially if we work together. The World Food Programme’s first Internet citizens’ campaign, www.wfp.org/1billion, is mobilizing the online community: if a billion Internet users donate a dollar a week, we could transform the lives of a billion hungry people across the world.

As we enter the season of colossal Wall Street bonuses and a frenzy of holiday spending, it is time for us to once more share the privilege of plenty. It is time to declare, once and for all, that not a single child should die from — or be irrevocably stunted by — hunger.

Not on our watch.

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