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Poverty
Related: About this forumMore Than 50% of All Americans Have Been Poor, and Capitalism Thinks That's Awesome
http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/ted-rall/57976/more-than-50-of-all-americans-have-been-poor-and-capitalism-thinks-thats-awesomeMore Than 50% of All Americans Have Been Poor, and Capitalism Thinks That's Awesome
Capitalism
by Ted Rall | August 30, 2014 - 9:34am
~snip~
Conventional wisdom i.e., what the media says, not what most people think repeatedly implies that poverty is a permanent state that chronically afflicts a relatively small number of Americans, while the rest of us thrive in a vast, if besieged, middle class. In fact, most Americans between age 25 and 75 have spent at least one year living under the poverty line.
One of the biggest myths about poverty in the United States is that a relatively small segment of the population is poor, and that this represents a more or less permanent underclass, Columbia University economist and social work professor Irwin Garfinkel tells Columbia magazine. But poverty is quite dynamic. Lots of people move in and out of poverty over the course of their lives. And it doesnt take much for people at the edge to lose their footing: a reduction in work hours, an inability to find affordable day care, a family breakup, or an illness any of these can be disastrous.
Even if you bounce back, the effects of these financial setbacks linger. For young adults, attending cheaper colleges or passing up higher education or being unable to afford to take a low-paid internship burdens them with opportunity costs that hobble them the remainder of their lives (which will likelier end sooner). Debts accrue with compound interest and must be repaid; damaged credit ratings block qualified buyers from purchasing homes. Diseases go undetected and untreated during periods without healthcare. Gaps on resumes are a red flag for employers.
Americans pay a price for the boom-and-bust cycle of capitalism. To find out exactly how high the cost is, Professor Garfinkel and his colleagues at Columbia have created the Poverty Tracker, dubbed one of the most richly detailed studies of poverty ever undertaken in the United States. The Poverty Tracker is a meticulous long-term survey of 2,300 New York households across all income levels for at least two years that aims to create a much more intimate and precise portrait of economic distress than has ever been conducted in any US city.
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The Poverty Tracker, mentioned above: http://www.robinhood.org/initiatives/povertytracker
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More Than 50% of All Americans Have Been Poor, and Capitalism Thinks That's Awesome (Original Post)
unhappycamper
Aug 2014
OP
I'm for a socialist government. If we had single payer, free higher education, and other perks
Louisiana1976
Aug 2014
#1
Louisiana1976
(3,962 posts)1. I'm for a socialist government. If we had single payer, free higher education, and other perks
found in socialist societies I wouldn't say it would eliminate poverty entirely but it would prevent more people from slipping into poverty.