The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

140


THE POOR


ARE UNLUCKY,


NOT BAD


THE POVERTY PROBLEM


I


n high-income countries
governments often account for
30–50 percent of spending in
the economy. About half of this
consists of “social transfers,” or
welfare spending. In historical
terms such high social spending is
a comparatively new development,
dating from the 1930s and 40s.
Welfare spending has a long
history. In the 16th century
England’s Poor Law assumed there
were three types of poor people: the

deserving poor (the old, the young,
and the sick), the deserving
unemployed (those willing to work
but unable to find employment), and
the undeserving poor (beggars). The
first two groups were given food
and money donated by local people,
but the third group were treated as
criminals. With industrialization
the view of the poor changed, and
by the 18th century many people
thought that the poor had only
themselves to blame. British

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Society and the economy

KEY THINKERS
John Stuart Mill (1806–73)
Amartya Sen (1933– )

BEFORE
1879 US economist Henry
George publishes Progress
and Poverty, a huge bestseller
that called for a land tax to
alleviate poverty.

1890s Charles Booth and
Seebohm Rowntree conduct
poverty surveys in the UK.

AFTER
1958 US economist John
Kenneth Galbraith draws
attention to poverty in his
book The Affluent Society.

1973 Indian economist
Amartya Sen proposes a
new poverty index.

2012 The World Bank
defines extreme poverty
as an income of less than
$1 a day.

Most sources of poverty are outside a person’s control.

The poor are unlucky, not bad.


In many countries
education must
be paid for, and
the poor cannot
afford it.

This leads to
poor job
prospects
and bad health.

The poor
have no
private
property.
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