Our Poverty
Myth
The illusion that people are to blame for their own
poverty goes back centuries in our culture.
By Jill Richardson
May 27, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "OtherWords"
- If you’re poor, many Americans think, it’s
your own fault. It’s a sign of your own moral
failing.
I don’t
personally believe that, but the idea has roots in
our culture going back centuries.
In The
Wealth of Nations, the foundational work of
modern capitalism, Adam Smith extolled the virtues
of working hard and being thrifty with money. That
wasn’t just the way to get rich, he reasoned — it
was morally righteous.
Sociologist
Max Weber took the idea further in describing what
he called the Protestant work ethic.
To Puritans
who believed that one was either predestined for
heaven or for hell, Weber wrote, working hard and
accumulating wealth was a sign of God’s blessing.
Those who got rich, the Puritans thought, must have
been chosen by God for heaven; those who were poor
were damned.
Even major
American philanthropists have subscribed to this
idea.
John D.
Rockefeller, a religious Baptist, thought his
extraordinary wealth was
evidence from God of his righteousness.
Fortunately, he took this as a sign that he should
use his money for good. He gave it to universities
and medical research centers, and his descendants
used it for great art museums, national parks, and
more.
But
Rockefeller also believed that the poor were often
deserving of their fate. If they’d just worked
harder, or budgeted their money wisely, then they
wouldn’t be poor.
Plenty of
Americans agree. Sadly,
that’s often not the case.
The first
factor determining one’s wealth as an adult is an
accident of birth. If you’re born to wealthy
parents, you’ll go to better schools and get better
health care. Your odds of success as an adult are
higher.
If, on
other hand, you’re born to poor parents who must
work multiple jobs instead of staying home to care
for you — or who can’t afford healthy food, medical
care, or a house in a good school district — your
chances of earning your way into the middle class as
an adult plummet.
In fact, if
your parents’ income is in the bottom 20 percent,
there’s
a 40 percent chance you’ll be stuck in that
low-income bracket for your entire life. Thanks to
racism, that figure
rises to 50 percent for black people born into
poverty.
Indeed,
racial disparities crop up even at the bottom of the
ladder.
Due to
historic racism and discrimination, data from the
Economic Policy Institute shows, low-income white
families tend to be
wealthier than black families making the same
income. Furthermore,
whites are more likely to have friends and family
who can help them out of a financial bind.
Finally,
thanks to decades of discriminatory housing and
lending practices, black families are more likely to
live in poorer neighborhoods. That impacts the
quality of the schools they attend, among many other
things.
So why
can’t a hardworking family get ahead? For one thing,
it’s expensive to be poor.
Try finding
an affordable place to live. You need to have enough
cash on hand to pay a deposit. Many apartments
require you to prove your income is 2.5 times the
cost of the rent.
Public
assistance programs only help the most destitute,
and often don’t provide enough even then.
For the
disabled, the situation is worse. In theory, Social
Security provides for those with disabilities. In
reality, getting approved for disability payments is
costly (in both medical and legal fees) and
difficult. Once you get approved, disability
payments are low, condemning you to poverty for
life.
In short,
there are many reasons why poor Americans are poor.
It doesn’t help that our society thinks it’s their
own fault.
OtherWords columnist Jill Richardson is the
author of Recipe
for America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and
What We Can Do to Fix It. OtherWords.org.
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