The chart they use, shows the elderly spending less on housing---because they are FORCED TO DOWNSIZE! They also show less for transportation----because they can no longer afford to travel!
There is NO WAY the increase they show for health care is accurate. It's much higher than that and doesn't include things such as home health aids or nursing home costs, which are outrageous.
The poverty rate for the elderly is INCREASING under Bush. That article is filled with RW lies and offers a false sense of security while omitting the effects of cuts to Medicaire and SS.
http://ohioline.osu.edu/hyg-fact/5000/5706.htmlPoverty Among the Elderly
The elderly are people who are 65 years and older. The Census Bureau reports that the total population of elderly is 31,877,000 and 10.8% or 3,428,000 of the elderly are poor. Of the elderly poor population 6.8% or 912,000 are males and 13.6% or 2, 516,000 are females. The poverty rate for elderly women is approximately twice the poverty rate of elderly men and the poverty rate of elderly blacks and Hispanics are more than twice the poverty rate of elderly whites in the United States. The Census Bureau is reported in Table 1.
The poverty rate among the elderly has changed over time. In past decades the elderly were more likely to be poor and remain poor than any other age group because of limited income in their old age. In 1959 the elderly represented 35.2% of all people in poverty (Ropers, 1991). Since that time Social Security includes cost of living adjustments to recipients. The Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program supplements the income of the elderly, blind, and disabled. Medicare aids the elderly with financial benefits for their health care. Likewise, people have taken advantage of private pension plans to secure themselves in their old age. As a consequence of these government and private programs being established, the poverty rate of the elderly has dropped over the past three decades to 10.8% in 1996.
Even though the poverty rate for the elderly has been turned around, the financial future of the elderly is not necessary stable or secure. The elderly are living longer, medical costs are rising, and the prospects of the elderly needing long term medical care are threatening to their financial security. So, not only the elderly poor but the one-fifth of the elderly who are near poor (Ropers, 1991) and the middle class elderly are vulnerable to the financial strain of medical health care.
Women are a special subgroup within the population of the elderly poor. There are more elderly poor women than there are elderly poor men. Women tend to live longer than men and many elderly women are widows. Depending on her work life, elderly women are less likely to have a pension plan or the major pension plan between spouses in their retirement years. Many elderly women have had to deplete their pension and the pension of their husband in providing long term medical care for the husband