Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024
Poverty in the United States

LEFT VIEWPOINTS

  • Contrast two categories of poverty: absolute poverty and relative poverty. The United States has little absolute poverty. Poverty-stricken nations, like the Democratic Republic of the Congo, have a lot of absolute poverty. The U.S. struggles with relative poverty. Relative poverty leads to issues like crime, poor neighborhoods, underfunded schools, generational welfare, and homelessness.
What do different kinds of poverty look like?

The policy changes that would drastically reduce relative poverty in the United States are:

  1. Universal Basic Income (UBI): If everyone received a flat stipend that provided just enough money to afford basic needs (food and shelter), we would eliminate most homelessness and also end the need for most welfare.
  2. Universal Healthcare: The United States is the only developed country without universal healthcare. Medicare for All is one model to provide public-funded healthcare to everyone, but it is the only universal healthcare system available. TR Reid wrote a book called, The Healing of America, which discusses healthcare systems around the world.
  3. Ending Property and Local Tax Funded Schools: Because schools are primarily funded at the local level, usually via property taxes, poor neighborhoods stay poor. Home values will not appreciate if people do not move to those neighborhoods, and families with means will not move to poor neighborhoods if the schools are perceived as bad.

Poverty is like punishment for a crime you didn’t commit.

Eli Khamarov

By LeftViewpoint

I am politically left by U.S. standards, although I'd be considered moderate in most European Countries. I believe in universal healthcare, a UBI, equal opportunity to education, and expanded democracy. I think the free market works best for most industries. However, I am convinced that some industries, such as healthcare and education, do not respond to market forces and should be publically funded. Additionally, I believe industries that damage and destroy the environment should be regulated. My views are my own, and they do not necessarily represent what other people on the left believe. In that sense, LeftViewpoint is "a" left viewpoint, not "the" left viewpoint.

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