Working Poor Essays

  • The Working Poor in America

    1400 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Working Poor in America The concept of the "working poor" has gained prominence in the post-welfare reform era. As welfare rolls shrunk, the focus shifted from the dependent poor to the working poor. It was obvious that without substantial outside support, even families with full-time low-wage workers were still earning less than the official poverty line. And while American society purports that anyone can prosper if they work hard enough, it became apparent that with inadequate opportunity

  • The Working Poor in America

    1165 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Working Poor in America The United States, a place where anyone can “pick themselves up by the bootstraps” and realize the American dream of a comfortable lifestyle. Well, for over 30 million Americans this is no longer possible. Though we live in the richest and most powerful country in the world there are many who are living under or at the precipice of the poverty level, “While the United States has enjoyed unprecedented affluence, low-wage employees have been testing the American doctrine

  • Analysis Of The Working Poor By David K. Shipler

    881 Words  | 2 Pages

    In The Working Poor: Invisible in America, David K. Shipler describes about the lives of United States citizens who live within poverty. He highlights the U.S.’s disregard for its working poor, the nature of poverty, and the causes of poverty faced by low-wage earners. Shipler performs an amazing job with describing the factors that play their parts into the lives of U.S. citizens who live are poor and within poverty. Shipler explains the effects of tax payments and refunds, the abuse of the poor

  • The Working Poor by D. Shipler

    1081 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Working Poor The objective of this essay is to illuminate my overall reaction to the reading of “The Working Poor” conveying what I do not like while highlighting a sociological perspective, in addition to explaining if the reading is applicable to my own life experience. Taking notice, the subject at hand was very sobering alluding even if we ourselves have not been partakers of living in the obscurity of prosperity between poverty and wellbeing, certainly we have encountered someone that has

  • Mos Def's Working Class Poor

    1107 Words  | 3 Pages

    of poverty. Mos Def examines the way American business intentionally denigrates the working class to demonstrate the exploitation and social control that continuously decimates the working poor’s hope. America’s working-class poor, especially those of color often feel neglected, inadequate, and deprived of hope. Mos Def demonstrates the distress of those living in poverty when he expresses, “ Working class poor: better keep your

  • The Working Poor Essay

    1084 Words  | 3 Pages

    According to Shipler, the working poor need remedies to improve their circumstances. Throughout his novel, Shipler addressed potential solutions that seemed to adjust the lives of the working poor. To help combat low self-esteem and competence more programs should be created by the state or local communities that could be created to assist the working poor in getting their GEDs, personal hygiene if necessary, learning skills that are necessary for job training, balancing daily personal finances,

  • The Working Poor Summary

    1315 Words  | 3 Pages

    in poverty have much more difficulty finding good jobs than those who are not. In The Working Poor, by David Shipler, there are many different circumstances that cause people to get to that point. Many of those in poverty have too many barriers in their way for them to be able to rise above the poverty line and support themselves. Some circumstances that cannot be avoided like disabilities or being born into a poor household can create biases that make it more difficult to get employment. Seeing what

  • Race, Urban Poverty, and Public Policy

    2428 Words  | 5 Pages

    comparative data with which to highlight the problems of ghetto poverty affecting blacks. In No Shame in My Game, Puerto Rican and Dominican immigrants are part of the changing demographics in Harlem. In Canarsie, the possible migration of blacks into a working/middle-class neighborhood prompts conservative backlash from a traditionally liberal community. In Streetwise, the migration of yuppies as a result of gentrification, and the movement of nearby-ghetto blacks into these urban renewal sites also invoke

  • Essay About Sweatshops

    735 Words  | 2 Pages

    injustice. Unfortunately, good intentions alone won’t change the world and sweatshops have taken the first step to change the world. Sweatshops have been marked as unethical and unfair, but on the contrary sweatshops are sources of opportunities where the poor have the chance to get a job and education. Places like Vietnam are examples of how sweatshops improve We know sweatshops do not eradicate world poverty but at least try to improve it. It is better to try to do something than doing nothing to end the

  • Poverty and Classism

    758 Words  | 2 Pages

    good education, most people would encounter challenges in finding income-generating work, especially when there are few employment opportunities during an economic downturn. According to Koppelman and Goodhart, merchants would sometimes exploit the poor by enforcing or formulating policies that would earn them more profits. These practices include blank price tags, bait and switch, rent-to-own and pawnshops (2007). These types of inequality and exploitation would make it harder for the low income

  • Essay On Cheap Labor

    690 Words  | 2 Pages

    of the poor workers overseas. While they might be giving them an oppurtunity to make money, they are essentially doing more harm. Cheap labor is simply defined as laboring for very cheap pay which includes no benefits, working in harsh environments, and being subjected to abuse and finally working excessively elongated hours with no breaks or lunches. Cheap labor is unethical for several main points, core countries usually don’t pay their citizens predatory wages, the environments that poor works

  • Nickel and Dimed

    788 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nickel and Dimed, by Barbara Enrenreich, is a novel written about her experiences while living and working among the common poor folk of America. Her adventures bring her from a restaurant in Ohio to the coasts of Maine to a Wal-Mart in Minnesota. Although her living and working locations change, one thing stays constant about Barbara her humorous and witty remarks. These remarks keep the reader entertained. Although her wisecracks are clever, they seem to at many times go too far, and have a tendency

  • Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, by Barbara Ehrenreich

    1068 Words  | 3 Pages

    is physically and mentally challenging. Ehrenreich develops a distaste for management while working at the establishment. She watches management sit around and treat employees poorly. Management does not value their workforce and routinely show a lack of compassion for their employees. Additionally, Ehrenreich uncovers an economic condition that the working poor face. The dilemma is if the working poor cannot make enough money for a security deposit for an apartment, then they are forced to live

  • Social Experiment In Nickel And Dimed

    776 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nickel and Dimed is a book about the author’s trip into the working poor world. Her profession was as a professor in biology. She noticed similar traits of her studies throughout the years, their struggle with being working poor. This struggled she saw preempted her to create a social experiment that is about how to live as a unskilled, working poor person in America. Instead of experimenting on others she took upon herself to be the one who drives into this unknown world to her. This assignment

  • The Poor Essay: The Structural Aspects Of Poverty

    2554 Words  | 6 Pages

    People are poor because there’s something lacking in them, and changing them is therefore the only effective remedy. From this he suggests doing away with public solutions such as affirmative action, welfare, and income support systems, including “AFDC, Medicaid, food stamps, unemployment insurance, and the rest. It would leave the working-aged person with no recourse whatsoever except the job market, family members, friends

  • The Theme Of 'Cherokee' By Ron Rash

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    couple fighting to save their truck by gambling their last one hundred and fifty-seven dollars in slot machines at a casino in North Carolina. Rash did an impeccable job at creating two ordinary, everyday people by portraying their lives as the working poor of America. The two characters, Danny and Lisa, both work; however, they are barely making it by and fell behind on their truck payments. Throughout the short story is observed a theme of freedom, or lack thereof, not only through the plot but

  • kettle bottom

    1272 Words  | 3 Pages

    appropriate clothing. The lack of living essentials and the inability to afford everything that they desire provides people living in poverty with a greater appreciation for small acts of kindness. Many of the poems in Fishers collection show aspects of the poor being grateful for the little things in life. One of the poems shows a little girl being extremely appreciative of something every... ... middle of paper ... ...than those of the wealthy, were often more painful than the deaths of the wealthy,

  • The Minimum Wage

    3664 Words  | 8 Pages

    would be no logical reason why the minimum wage could not be set at $10, $100, or $1 million per hour. Historically, defenders of the minimum wage have not disputed the dis-employment effects of the minimum wage, but argued that on balance the working poor were better off. In other words, the higher incomes of those with jobs offset the lower incomes of those without jobs, as a result of the minimum wage l "levitan". Now, President Obama is advancing the novel economic theory that modest increases

  • Pros And Cons Of Working Poor

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    WORKING POOR The economic climate may not look very viable with the historical decline of the union’s position in the labor market. The lack of a survivable wage as well as no guarantee on whether or not an occupation is stable enough to accumulate wealth may have its worst repercussions on the working poor. According to the University of California’s Center for Poverty Research, the working poor can roughly be defined as those who spent 27 weeks or more in a year “in the labor force” either working

  • Technology and its effect on Poverty in Pygmalion

    843 Words  | 2 Pages

    bad effects of poverty and can improve the lives of poor. Poverty is the most difficult way of living. It makes the life of humans very pathetic and pitiful. Life in poverty leads the poor to struggle from day to day. If such poor person has given an opportunity to make changes in lives, he or she will try to utilize the opportunity to bring change to his or her life. “Pygmalion,” a movie based on Bernard Shaw’s play, is about the life of a poor, young flower girl who has been overlooked and disrespected