No--you can't. Throwing money at poverty has been tried, it doesn't work.
You don't solve poverty by providing better houses and the like. You solve poverty by providing education. Unfortunately, education is like water--you can lead the horse to it, you can't make it drink. Fundamentally, this is a cultural problem, not an economic problem. I do not know how to fix it, though.
I don't think that's entirely true. I'm sure you're thinking of better housing as many steps beyond inadequate heating and plumbing and lack of safe drinking water, lead paint, infestation with cockroaches and rats and other horrors because those things do have an immediate affect on health and well being with children bearing the biggest burden. That affects ability to benefit to the fullest from educational and employment and training opportunities.
Improve the housing, you drive up the cost, now you have more homeless because there's nothing they can afford.
And...better housing often is found in 'better neighborhoods' that are safer, nearer to things like grocery stores, parks, good quality schools and day care. All of those things have a positive affect on school attendance, school achievement, health and well being.
It is extremely stressful to live in an unsafe home or an unsafe neighborhood. Poverty is extremely stressful and that stress contributes substantially to lower health and lower achievement in school, job training, employment, etc.
Which doesn't mean throwing money at it works.
We need to do much, much, much more to have mixed housing so that lower income people have some of the same opportunities for school, decent access to good grocery stores, clinics, child care without the stigma because rich(er) people use the same stores, the same schools, etc. Universal day care would really help. It won't stop some families from needing or preferring nannies or au pairs but it will make it normal to drop our child off for day care so that you can go to school or work yourself and if middle class parents are using the service, there is more pressure to ensure that it is decent quality. And the kids go to school as well prepared as their peers from more wealthy families.
Try to make mixed housing and you'll just trigger flight by those who are able to. Parents will quite rightly realize the schools are going to go in the shitter. Besides, putting poor students in good schools provides virtually zero benefit to them, all you do is hurt the good students. Trying to equalize like this actually always ends up being nothing but hammering down those who stand up.
Of course, universal health care, better public transportation, a living wage, affordable education from birth through out life--those thing would really help.
Except for the little detail of how much it will cost. The left never pays any attention to that and thinks pipe dreams can actually work.
You don't solve poverty by providing better houses and the like. You solve poverty by providing education. Unfortunately, education is like water--you can lead the horse to it, you can't make it drink. Fundamentally, this is a cultural problem, not an economic problem.
If you are talking about college education, that is nonsense. You do realize that most US citizens do not have a college degree. The distribution of income was less unequal from 1945 to about 1980 even though a vast majority of workers did not a college degree.
And, if you think about it, if everyone had a college degree, there could be no college premium.
As Toni pointed out, the aging of the labor force is disproportionately affecting the skilled trades. And, as Michael Sandel points out in his new book "The Tyranny of Merit", discrimination/snobbery based on educational credentials is the only prejudice that is acceptable.
I wasn't thinking about college education--an awful lot of people in poverty do not even have a meaningful high school education. I do agree there should be more vocational education.
You don't solve poverty by providing better houses and the like. You solve poverty by providing education. Unfortunately, education is like water--you can lead the horse to it, you can't make it drink. Fundamentally, this is a cultural problem, not an economic problem. I do not know how to fix it, though.
One side of some mouths say we need more education, the other side of the exact same mouths whine about unqualified blacks and hispanics taking Asian and White seats in college classrooms.
Nothing incompatible. You're focusing on race, I'm focusing on unqualified. You don't solve the problem of inferior education by simply decreeing that they did learn.
Education is important but it is just one facet. Hungry kids don’t learn well. Hungry kids living in an unsupervised her cause Mon is working three jobs to not be able to pay for food without government support learn even less well. Hungry kids with little supervision having their brains poisoned by the lead in the dust they are breathing every spring and summer learn even more poorly.
And you assume this is the cause. Hint: Most people in poverty work well under 40 hr/wk. That hungry kid is more likely parent(s) who care more about smoking/alcohol/drugs than their kids.
Cultural your ass! White America enslaved them. Then when they were free, white America rioted and murdered them / destroyed their businesses. White America plotted to keep then out of good neighborhoods for decades longer. And in the 50s when it was seen something needed to be done, nothing was done. And then white America put a lot of blacks in jail for drugs. Cultural?! The African American condition in America is caused by White immorality, neglect, hatred, and conspiracy over a period of a few centuries. Blacks haven’t gotten out of the poverty in just 30 years of less unequal playing field? And you want to say it is cultural? At the height of your pedestal, you must be able to touch the moon.
Well maybe she shouldn’t have had three children.
Except for the little detail that if it really is racism why do immigrant blacks fare so much better? If it's legacy effects that is a cultural issue, not a discrimination issue.
You can't hope to solve a problem if you don't first acknowledge it. It doesn't mean denigration. But it does mean the 50 plus year of liberal spending and social engineering should probably stop. If such policies were helpful, then the issue would have gone away a long time ago.
I fully agree. The War on Poverty of the 1960s only solved one-half of the problem. It obviously didn't work. Why settle for half measure? This is why we slowly got rid of it.
It didn't solve even half the problem. The big benefit from the 1960s was the civil rights movement.
But you are demonizing the poor for having a congenital defect, do you honestly believe that what you are doing will eliminate poverty? I think not.
It probably is because it somehow absolves you in your mind from supporting the obvious solution embraced by most other highly developed countries, pay the poor more for the work that they already do.
It's not congenital--culture is not passed genetically.
It's not just the 'poor' who struggle, also workers that do essential work within the economy but are poorly paid for their time and effort.
<< bingo >>
I think that the main argument against paying the poor more for the work they already do comes from the fantasy economics believers, as in a self-regulating free market, free trade, deregulation, etc. that have time and again proven to be either unobtainable or destructive in their own right. These people invariably think that the labor market is a nearly perfect market that pays workers what they are worth in spite of all available evidence that people are paid what they can negotiate. And that for more than fifty years we have been reducing workers' abilities to negotiate.
No. For 50 years we have been reducing worker's ability to engage in extortion. The labor market does do a pretty good job of scaling income to value.