Tuesday, February 23, 2016

How do you get poor and who do we blame?

The biggest question we face in our economy is who do we blame for poverty in our country? Personally, it is not the fault of the poor that they are poor. In RIP, the Middle Class 1946-2013 Edward McClelland argues that people are poor due to ghee lack of government interference. He uses an example of a couple from New York and how they were successful up until economic failure, as the company they worked for moved over seas. Both individuals spent their lives going to school in order to obtain a degree to have a secure well-paying job. However, their secondary education doesn’t amount to what they made back when there was government influence in the economy. Meanwhile in From Nicked And Dimed by Barbara Ehrenreich is an excerpt from a maid discussing the job of she and her co-workers. Though they do not make nearly enough money or receive the benefits they deserve, they still earn enough to maintain their lifestyles. Both of these excerpts give great real world examples instead of just a perception to look at. Sometimes being poor isn’t necessarily not having a house or a car but it is making ends meet or living pay check to paycheck just to maintain their lifestyles. Even those whole make an ample amount of money can still in a sense be poor. Because of our government’s lack of influence in our economy prices and living costs continuing to go up which makes it harder to afford a stable life. As in the example McClelland gave us it seems as if now a days even if you have a secondary education with a degree you may not get a job in the field of study, and if you do it may not even pay enough. Seems that being poor is just something that happens, it’s not intended or forced to happen but life happens and without government influence it’s hard for individuals to live with significant “leisure” money. 

1 comment:

  1. In this world being poor is a scary thing. Its's a place that nobody would like to be put in or have to live through at all, but sometimes life just happens. Just like Edward McClelland describes in his article, "RIP, the Middle class:1946-2013". McClellan explains how during the time in the 1970s high school graduates and even dropouts could get a job at an assembly line and still earn more money than a school teacher. But then around the 1980s all of that began to change with Americas first Great Recession and because of that a lot more people became poor. It wasn't because those people wanted to be poor or caused themselves to be poor, instead it was the governments lack of influence on the economy. Also being poor doesn't necessarily mean that you are living in poverty either; you could just be struggling at always being able to keep food, a house, and possibly even clothes with the amount of money you are making from your job. For instance, In "Nickel and Dimed" by Barbara Ehrenreich she talks about a maid working with her coworkers. And how everyday they clean people's houses to perfection and in return don't receive enough pay for the amount of work they put into it. For many people this is the life they are living and its unfortunate, but that just shows us how much inequality is within the economy.

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