The Land Of Unequal Opportunity - Poverty In America
(Kathy Henry)
In the United States, disparities between rich and poor have risen sharply. Low-income individuals are increasingly unlikely to escape from their economic position of poverty. There are few stories of how someone made it from rags to riches, and poor families are increasing their annual working hours, if they have jobs. Income inequality is far greater in the United States than in other major countries. Australia, Canada and several other European countries have a much more equal distribution of income than America. The latest Census Bureau statistics show that the rich are still getting much richer, middle income Americans are just barely raising their incomes, and the poor are still falling further behind on the income ladder. Although America has been long celebrated for its wealth and the abundance of material resources, poverty has been omnipresent in American history. From its beginnings to present day, large numbers of Americans have been poor: they have lacked the resources to feed, clothe, and shelter themselves adequately according to socially defined standards. There are many issues when looking at poverty because it is a problem that permeates every dimension of culture and society. Poverty means that some people will have a lack of access to services like education, markets, health care, and the decision making process that goes on in politics. Just how many Americans have lived in poverty over the course of its history is impossible to measure; not only is data scarce, but the definition of poverty has changed too often to permit precise measurement. Nonetheless, there can be no doubt that poverty, as a personal condition and as a social problem, has long been a prominent feature of the economic and social landscape of American society.
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