ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
15.10.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


Living in Poverty

Author: Harris R. Sherline Author Ranking Blue | Posted: 16-05-2008 | Comments: 0 | Views: 18 | Rating:  (53) Article Popularity - Blue (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!

Imagine, if you can, living in a one-room hut with a dirt floor, little or no shelter from the elements, no running water or electricity, in a community that has only dirt roads, no doctors or medical facilities, no police protection, no schools, no employment, where the average annual income is often as little as a dollar a day, starvation and death are constant companions and grinding deprivation is so severe that parents are often forced to sell their children into servitude or prostitution, and infant mortality is extremely high. It’s truly a bleak picture.

Life expectancy in many places is very short, as low as 33.2 years in some parts of Africa (where AIDS has taken a devastating toll), compared to the low 80s elsewhere around the world.

There are far too many places on this earth where there is no law, no safety or security, where abuse by those in power is simply considered the rightful spoils of controlling the government, and where there is little or no freedom due to government repression.

The World Bank describes the nature of poverty as follows:

Poverty is hunger. Poverty is lack of shelter. Poverty is being sick and not being able to see a doctor. Poverty is not being able to go to school and not knowing how to read. Poverty is not having a job, is fear for the future, living one day at a time. Poverty is losing a child to illness brought about by unclean water. Poverty is powerlessness, lack of representation and freedom.

globalissues.org reports that “The World Bank defines extreme poverty as living on less than US$ (PPP) 1 per day, and moderate poverty as less than $2 a day. It has been estimated that in 2001, 1.1 billion people had consumption levels below $1 a day and 2.7 billion lived on less than $2 a day.”

If poverty means subsisting on $1.00 to $2.00 a day throughout much of the world, what does it look like in America today, where it is generally defined on the basis of income? At the risk of oversimplification, the current income thresholds used by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services range from $9,800 for a single person to $33,600 for a family of eight in the 48 contiguous states and D.C. It’s slightly higher in Alaska and Hawaii. What’s important about this is the dramatic contrast with the $365 to $730 annual income of those the World Bank says are living in poverty elsewhere around the world.

But, income is not the only measure. The following criteria are used to describe poverty in a study titled, The Myth of Widespread American Poverty, by Robert E. Rector, who defined it on the basis of material hardship:

>The individual frequently lacks food to eat or is significantly undernourished due to an inability to afford or obtain sufficient food.

>The individual lives in housing that is severely overcrowded (with more than 1.5 persons per room); is
severely dilapidated, or is unsafe.

>The individual has a significant, health impairing, medical condition requiring treatment and cannot afford or otherwise obtain medical care.

If you think about it, the average American lives better than tribal chieftains do in many other parts of the world. The standard of living of Americans, including many of those who are defined by our government as living in poverty, is generally far higher than that of many leaders in Africa and other underdeveloped societies.

Mr. Rector also observed, “Many of the popular conceptions about poverty in this nation are inaccurate, particularly the image of poverty as a static and unyielding condition………..We have not only triumphed over poverty as it was historically understood, but that triumph has been so great that we have difficulty remembering what it meant to be poor or even to be middle class in earlier generations.” His study concluded:

Today the typical American, defined as poor by the government, has a refrigerator, a stove, a clothes washer, a car, air conditioning, a VCR, a microwave, a stereo, and a color TV. He is able to obtain medical care and his home is in good repair and is not over-crowded. By his own report, his family is not hungry and in the last year he had sufficient funds to meet his essential needs. While this individual’s life is not opulent, it is equally far from the popular images of poverty conveyed by politicians, the press, and activists.

Dating back to the early years of the “War on Poverty,” launched by Lyndon Johnson in 1964, the American public has been systematically misled by politicians, bureaucrats and activists into believing that poverty in the United States has grown progressively worse with each generation and that the conditions of those who live in this circumstance today are intractable and without hope, always in need of ever greater and more expensive government programs to overcome the disadvantages of those who are “living in poverty.”

Poverty has become an industry in America. And, like all industries, its goal is to grow the business, including advertising to attract customers (clients) and encouraging people to sign up for free services, sometimes even if they don’t actually qualify. If and when most of us think about it at all, we probably assume that the goal is to eradicate poverty and eventually go out of business. Not so. Who’s going to do that?

It turns out that the number of people counted as living in poverty is more a matter of definition than reality. By systematically adjusting the income levels that are used to determine who is included and omitting various non-cash measures or economic circumstances, such as Medicare or MediCaid insurance, the value of homes, ownership of stoves, refrigerators, TVs, autos and other property, the living conditions of America’s poor are generally portrayed as being much worse than they really are.

We need to re-think our attitudes about how the poor are viewed in America, particularly when compared with the poor around the rest of the world: $9,800 to over $30,000 a year cash income, plus Medicare or MediCaid health insurance, plus the value of homes, autos, stoves, refrigerators, TVs, VCRs, free education, etc. vs $365 to $730 a year on which to subsist elsewhere.

Say what you will about the quality or lack of quality or sufficiency of any of the benefits that America’s poor may receive from the government, or the need for improvement, the fact remains that no one living in poverty anywhere else in the world has anything approaching the advantages that America’s poor enjoy.

So, when compared to the poor throughout the rest of the world, America’s poor are not really poor at all.

© 2007-2008 Harris R. Sherline, All Rights Reserved

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/news-and-society-articles/living-in-poverty-416466.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

Harris Sherline is a retired Certified Public Accountant and executive. His diverse business background includes experience as a partner in a public accounting firm, as a principal in a number of business ventures and as CEO of a hospital. His conservative commentaries appear weekly in two Santa Barbara newspapers. In addition, his op-ed articles currently appear regularly on three widely read web sites and his own weblog,
Opinionfest.com.

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest News and Society Articles

Claddagh Rings - Designed to Last
By: Scott Wilhelmy | 15/10/2008
With a history dating back to Roman times, Claddagh rings or their predecessor--Fede rings--actually predate the diamond ring in symbolism with a link to romance, marriage, engagement or commitment. The Claddagh rings is particularly distinctive with hands, a heart and a crown, each with significance in the overall picture. These...

Celtic Jewelry Symbols and Meanings
By: Scott Wilhelmy | 15/10/2008
It is easy to spot and distinguish a piece of Celtic jewelry in a wide range of different pieces of jewelry in your local jewelry shop. Most, if not all, of these pieces of jewelry would often have the same kind of designs. This is not to say that designers...

The Claddagh Ring: An Irish Jewelry of Love
By: Scott Wilhelmy | 15/10/2008
Irish jewelry pieces are among the most sought after pieces of jewelry that are available in the market. These could now be found in many brick and mortar stores and in various jewelry stores that are available over the Internet. Of all the different kinds of Irish jewelry pieces, the...

The Ring of Fire: Where Trouble is Born
By: Gordon Gumpertz | 13/10/2008
The Ring of Fire is a horseshoe-shaped line of volcanoes and deep ocean trenches that runs around the Pacific Rim: from New Zealand up through Tonga, New Guinea, Indonesia, Japan, the Aleutian Island Chain, Alaska, and down the West Coast of Canada, the United States, Mexico, and Central America, finally...

Why Christmas is Really All About Children
By: Jayne Waldorf | 13/10/2008
It could be said that since it was the birth of a baby as a gift to mankind that gave rise to Christmas, then children should also and always be the primary focus of the season. Individual families will say they have always put children first and parents will sacrifice seeking...

Bordeaux and the Barbarians
By: Sarah Martin | 11/10/2008
The early prosperity of Bordeaux and the fame it enjoyed under Rome's rule was quickly destroyed when it was invaded. The city was blasted by the Alans, Ilerulians, Sarmatians, and Vandals in 406, which left the city in ruins. The destruction The invasion of the city by the Barbarians left...

Why Just Go Green?
By: Michael DeVries | 05/10/2008
It's in vogue for advertisers to tout their green initiatives from how much paper they've saved through online billing and paying systems to recycling, reusing, and replenishing valuable resources. And, certainly I-ShopTheWorld does not question the integrity of this need to preserve the environment. We are "green" in that context, for sure,...

The Gift of Fairy Magic
By: John Hill | 05/10/2008
Throughout the world, fairies are known for their timeless beauty and powerful magical gifts. Fairies are believed to be descended from supernatural beings from another world that came to this earth to begin their civilization anew. With so many different stories, legends, myths and tales about fairies, it has become...

More from Harris R. Sherline

Solving the Health Care Dilemma
By: Harris R. Sherline | 10/06/2008 | Politics
...the flip side of unlimited demand is a shortage of supply. And, not having enough doctors, nurses, or expensive equipment, such as CAT Scans and MRIs, eventually leads to rationing. Without enough health care to go around, rationing becomes a necessity. That has been the failing with nationalized health care in England, Canada, Germany, Japan, the former USSR, everywhere it has been tried.

Who’s the Boss?
By: Harris R. Sherline | 10/06/2008 | Human Resources
Extreme caution must be exercised in almost any employee-related matter lest we run afoul of the law and draw a discrimination lawsuit of one sort or another. And, the amount of time, effort and energy that’s expended (read wasted) for that purpose often diverts management’s attention from conducting the business of the firm, at considerable loss of time and money.

Observations
By: Harris R. Sherline | 10/06/2008 | Culture
Random thoughts about a variety of issues.

“neither a Borrower Nor a Lender Be.”
By: Harris R. Sherline | 01/06/2008 | Economics
David M. Walker, Controller General of the United States, has been speaking around the country for over two years, delivering the message that the U.S. is rapidly going bankrupt.

Are We Schizo or What?
By: Harris R. Sherline | 01/06/2008 | Culture
It’s little wonder that there are so many problems in America today when there is such contradictory, schizophrenic behavior in our society.

Who Said It?
By: Harris R. Sherline | 01/06/2008 | Culture
Alexis de Tocqueville's prescient observations are as valid today as they were over 170 years ago and, from the vantage point of having visited here so early in our history, it’s truly remarkable how accurate his conclusions about the contemporary American character and system of government were.

Pushing Drugs
By: Harris R. Sherline | 01/06/2008 | Medicine
A survey of family physicians found that 71 percent felt DTC (Direct To Consumer) ads pressure doctors into prescribing drugs that they would not normally prescribe.

Money Talks
By: Harris R. Sherline | 29/05/2008 | Politics
It’s obvious that the failure to regulate campaign finance certainly is not for lack of trying. The theory generally seems to have been that if we could just get money out of the equation, the political process would somehow eliminate corruption and favoritism.

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below