“POVERTY AND SOCIAL LIFE”
Poverty is defined as a condition in which a person or family lacks the financial resources to afford a basic, minimum standard of living. Poor people don’t have adequate income; they can’t afford housing, health facilities and education which is essential for basic survival. So, poverty can be understood simply as a lack of money, or more broadly, barriers to everyday human life.
Every country has its
own measure for poverty. However, a widely recognized authority on the topic of
“extreme poverty” is the World Bank. The Bank keeps a metric called the
International Poverty Line and, as of 2015, set the definition of extreme
poverty as those who live on less than US$1.90 per day. (Those living on
between $1.90-$3.10 per day are classified as the “moderate poor.”) This number
is based on the monetary value of a person’s consumption rather than income
alone.
Poverty
is an exceptionally complicated social phenomenon, and trying to discover its
causes is equally complicated. The stereotypic (and simplistic) explanation
persists—that the poor cause their own poverty—based on the notion that
anything is possible in America. Some theorists have accused the poor of having
little concern for the future and preferring to “live for the moment”; others
have accused them of engaging in self‐defeating behavior. Still
other theorists have characterized the poor as fatalists, resigning themselves
to a culture of poverty in which nothing can be
done to change their economic outcomes. In this culture of poverty—which passes
from generation to generation—the poor feel negative, inferior, passive,
hopeless, and powerless.
The
“blame the poor” perspective is stereotypic and not applicable to all of the
underclass. Not only are most poor people able and willing to work hard, they
do so when given the chance. The real trouble has to do with such problems as
minimum wages and lack of access to the education necessary for obtaining a
better‐paying job.
HOW TO ELIMINATE POVERTY
1. Quality education
Access to
quality education which provides children with the knowledge
and life skills they need to realize their full potential. It’s also essential
to creating change in a child’s life. Plan International helps by training
teachers, building new schools and breaking down barriers that prevent many
children – and girls in particular – from attending school and staying in
school.
2. Access to
Healthcare
Access to health is
essential. Plan International helps communities build health clinics, train
health care workers and invest in equipment and medicine, so children can grow
up healthy and strong.
3. Water &
sanitation
Water and
sanitation are also essential for every child’s survival. Each
year, Plan International helps communities build school latrines, community
water points and helps to establish organizations to ensure the continued
management and maintenance of water points.
4. Economic security
Economic
security: means people have the skills and resilience they need to
withstand hard economic times and grow their incomes. Plan International works
to overcome poverty by helping communities around the world gain the economic
security they need to thrive, this includes training people living in poverty
to acquire the skills and knowledge they need to secure a livelihood, and
support their families.
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