The Ghost Economy: Poverty Determinants in Single U.S. Households

The Ghost Economy: Poverty Determinants in Single U.S. Households

36:57 Mar 18, 2026
About this episode
Send a text🎙️Available for Broadcast📖 Read companion article 🎥 YouTube: Two families. Identical income on paper. Completely different lives.One has an invisible team of workers — cooking every meal, caring for every child, cleaning every room — for free. The other has nothing. Our official poverty statistics call them equal.This episode reframes what income and poverty actually mean — by introducing the concept of extended income: market earnings plus the imputed value of all unpaid household labour. Drawing on two landmark peer-reviewed studies, we uncover how fifty years of declining household production have masked a crisis of inequality that official income graphs cannot see.From the research:Women's unpaid labour declined from 37 to 24 hours/week between 1965 and 2018 — a 35% drop.For the poorest 10%, that unpaid work made up 56% of total economic well-being. When it shrank, real inequality grew nearly twice as fast as official data shows.The bottom decile is actually poorer now, in real living-standard terms, than in 1965 — despite modest cash income gains.A single mother earning $15/hr may net just $3/hr after child care costs — a phenomenon researchers call the employment paradox.References: Household production time and inequality in material living standards in the U.S., 1965–2018https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0047272726000186?via%3DihubGender and poverty in the United States: Evidence from the Survey of Consumer FinancesThis is Heliox: Where Evidence Meets EmpathyIndependent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter.  Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas. Support the showDisclosure: This podcast uses AI-generated synthetic voices for a material portion of the audio content, in line with Apple Podcasts guidelines. We make rigorous science accessible, accurate, and unforgettable.Produced by Michelle Bruecker and Scott Bleackley, it features reviews of emerging research and ideas from leading thinkers, curated under our creative direction with AI assistance for voice, imagery, and composition. Systemic voice
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