The Simple Truth About Poverty
The tail is now where the head was generations ago, said 19th-century British historian Thomas Macaulay.
Today, the American “tail” wallows in opulence once reserved for the “head” of society.
The late political scientist James Q. Wilson:
The poorest Americans today live a better life than all but the richest persons 100 years ago.
Before air conditioning, for example, even the industrial titan hemorrhaged sweat from his overheated dome on sweltering summer days.
Today, 80% of “poor” households enjoy the kindly, cooling influence of the air conditioner.
Automobiles set the rich man apart through the 1930s.
Wide auto ownership didn’t spread to the middling classes until the 1950s.
Today… 75% of “poor” households boast a car or truck.
And 30% own two or more.
Television was once a luxury, a luxury consisting of half-decipherable images and five channels.
Nearly all of today’s poor own a television — and 40% own TVs with wide plasma screens.
Some two-thirds are dizzied by endless viewing options beamed in by cable or satellite.
Half the poor own a personal computer — offering today’s poor a “wealth” of information that would stagger yesterday’s rich.
And FDR’s chicken in every pot is today’s smartphone in every hand.
Meantime, obesity was once a mark of wealth. Today, it is largely a mark of poverty.
Jordan Weissmann in Slate:
When it comes to consumer goods, low-income families might have it better off than ever. The poor can buy cheap cellphones and televisions that would have seemed like fantastical luxuries to yesteryear’s rich. Microwaves and air conditioners are standard. Food is relatively inexpensive, as is clothing.
Yes, the tail is now where the head once was.
But returning to Macaulay… “the head and tail keep their distance.”
Material progress advances on a hundred fronts.
But society does not grade poverty on an absolute scale.
Society grades poverty on a sliding scale.
And the poor man of today does not compare his lot with the rich man of yesterday.
He compares it with the rich man of today.
Compared with the average poor, today’s rich live in oriental luxury.
They soar on easy wings of leisure… rocket from one good time to the next… have life by the throat.
All this the poor man sees.
His imagination shows him even more.
Ironically, he watches the rich man’s frolics on a 50-inch plasma television screen while luxuriating in air-conditioned comfort and munching microwaved dishes.
That is, he feels poverty’s sting surrounded by amenities yesterday’s rich could scarcely conceive.
The tail has caught up with the head… but it brings no comfort.
But it is not only the poor “tail” who fixates on the “head” far beyond it.
Man is a creature eternally grasping.
His eye is forever glued to the next rung of the ladder… the prettier plum just out of reach… the more colorful bird in the next bush.
A poor man may tell himself he’d settle for the middle class.
But once he finds himself lodged therein, discontentment soon bubbles within him.
He sets his cap for the upper class.
If by grace he attains it, he at once takes notice of the floor above him.
And he begins another merry chase up the ladder.
Such is man.
He focuses not on what he has… but on what he lacks.
We, of course, are no exception.
And you can bet we’ve got our sights on a thing or three beyond our grasp.
Besides, it is this ceaseless striving that accounts for all material progress.
But maybe, just maybe, on some distant tomorrow… a fellow can learn to find ease in his own inn, however modest, wherever he finds it.
It seems he will find it in no other…
Regards,
Brian Maher
Managing editor, The Daily Reckoning
Comments: