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- 40% of Americans only one missed paycheck away from poverty
Millions of middle-class Americans are just one missed paycheck away from poverty, with 4 of 10 considered "liquid-asset poor," or without enough money socked away to cope with even a sudden
- 59% of Americans are Just One Paycheck Away from Homelessness
A financial survey found that 59% of Americans are currently at risk of experiencing homelessness In fact, they are just one paycheck away
- Millions of Americans are just one paycheck away from ‘financial . . .
A new study from NORC at the University of Chicago, an independent social research institution, found that 51% of working adults in the United States would need to access savings to cover
- One paycheck away: Homelessness is a series of trapdoors of addiction . . .
The National Low Income Housing Coalition — a nonprofit that aims to end the affordable housing crisis through policy and data research — deems housing costing more than 30% of wages spent on rent and utilities as unaffordable, placing workers at risk for homelessness
- PolitiFact | Though many Americans live paycheck to paycheck, some . . .
A video shared on Facebook claimed that "76% of Americans (are) living paycheck to paycheck, meaning they are one paycheck away from poverty "
- ONE PAYCHECK AWAY: From the front lines of our housing crisis
I’ve called it “One Paycheck Away” to emphasize the reality that homelessness is as close as one missed paycheck for most Americans — 59% if you believe the “Wealth Survey” by Edward Jones conducted in 2019 It’s likely higher post-pandemic There’s a new name for this: “Rent Burdened ”
- Homelessness Data Trends - United States Interagency Council on . . .
In effect, more than half of Americans live paycheck to paycheck and one crisis away from homelessness At the root of these systemic failures is historical and ongoing racism
- and busting the biggest myth - USC Center for Health Journalism
The idea that one catastrophe can cause anyone to spiral into homelessness — the idea that we’re all “one paycheck away” from homelessness, as it’s often phrased — is attractive to reporters
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