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US becoming 'world champion of extreme inequality' under Donald Trump, says UN

Charlemagne

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US becoming 'world champion of extreme inequality' under Donald Trump, says UN poverty envoy

'The American dream is rapidly becoming the American illusion'

Andrew Buncombe New York Friday 15 December 2017

The United States under Donald Trump is fast becoming “the champion of inequality”, according to a scathing report by the United Nation’s expert on poverty.

While the US is one of the richest nations, entrenched poverty already experienced by many will be made worse by policies promoted by Mr Trump and the Republicans, in particular a planned tax overhaul that critics say gives huge cuts to the wealthy, it added.

“The American dream is rapidly becoming the American illusion, as the United States now has the lowest rate of social mobility of any of the rich countries,” said Philip Alston the UN Nations Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights.

“American exceptionalism was a constant theme in my conversations. But instead of realising its founders’ admirable commitments, today’s United States has proved itself to be exceptional in far more problematic ways that are shockingly at odds with its immense wealth and its founding commitment to human rights.”

He added: “There is no other developed country where so many voters are disenfranchised and where so few poor voters even care to go to the polls.”

Mr Alston delivered his comments alongside a draft report which he made public. His final report will be available in the spring of 2018 and will be presented to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva in June of next year.

On his 15-day visit around the US, the Australian Mr Alston, a law professor at New York University, visited Los Angeles, San Francisco, Alabama, Georgia, Puerto Rico and West Virginia. He spoke to low-income families and officials.

In Alabama, he saw conditions he said he had never previously witnessed in the developed world. Taken to Butler and then Lowndes counties he was shown families whose homes had no proper sewage system and who create their own unhygienic systems using PVC piping.

While E. coli is common in both communities, which are largely made up of African Americans, academics recently discovered that hookworm, a disease associated with extreme poverty and which was thought to have been eradicated in the US more than 100 years ago, still persists in pockets of Lowndes County, located just 20 miles from the state capital, Montgomery.

“I think it’s very uncommon in the first world. This is not a sight that one normally sees,” Mr Alston told AL.com as he visited Alabama. “I’d have to say that I haven’t seen this.”

Mr Alston said statistics from the US Census Bureau in September 2017 indicated more than 40m people - more than one in eight Americans - were living in poverty. Almost half of those, 18.5m, were living in deep poverty, with reported family income below half of the poverty threshold.

He said while it was frequently assumed that poor people belonged almost entirely to minority groups, but noted there were eight million more white people than African-Americans living in poverty. “The face of poverty in America is not only black or Hispanic, but also white, Asian and many other colours,” he said.

He said the tax and welfare reforms being proposed by Mr Trump and the Republican leadership in Congress, were likely to have “devastating consequences” for the poorest 20 per cent of Americans.

“The proposed tax reform package stakes out America’s bid to become the most unequal society in the world,” Mr Alston said.

“It will greatly increase the already high levels of wealth and income inequality between the richest one percent and the poorest 50 percent of Americans."

He added: “The dramatic cuts in welfare, foreshadowed by President Trump and Speaker Paul Ryan, and already beginning to be implemented by the administration, will essentially shred crucial dimensions of a safety net that is already full of holes.”

Republicans declined to meet Mr Alston in Washington, with the office of Speaker Paul Ryan saying he was too busy. Yet independent senator Bernie Sanders seized on the envoy’s findings.

He wrote on Twitter: “Our job: fight back against the reactionary Trump agenda and for a progressive agenda that works for the middle class, not the one per cent.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/trump-un-inequality-poverty-envoy-world-champion-a8113591.html
 

bver_hunter

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It is no wonder that Trump's popularity has dropped to around 32% and this new Tax Law has a 29% Approval rating. When this tax legislation is implemented and there has to be huge cuts in benefits for many of his cult followers, then reality will hit home. Yes, there is already a feeling of inequality among the minorities, especially with the rhetoric that has been dished out from Day 1 of Trump's campaign. The polarisation is intense especially with the extremists groups like the neo-nazis and KKK now being rejuvenated under the present administration, and attacks on groups that are not considered to be "right wing".
 

Frankfooter

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danmand

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The star has had a couple of good articles on Canada's dropping of corporate taxes as well.
http://projects.thestar.com/canadas-corporations-pay-less-tax-than-you-think/index.html
https://www.thestar.com/opinion/edi...e-to-take-another-look-at-our-tax-system.html

We're nowhere as bad as the states, but over the last 30 years the share of taxes paid by individuals has gone way up while corporate taxes have gone way down.
And there's nothing to show for it.
It is only a problem if there are vast inequalities in society(USA) and capital (shares of companies) is in the hands of 1%. If society is more equal, shares of companies are more evenly distributed, if not in the hands of everybody, then through pension funds etc, and the amount of taxes a company pays is less important because profits eventually will be taxed through taxes on the dividends paid to shareholders.
 

jcpro

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LOL! As if welfare payments or the food stamps programs ever did anything for the problem of inequality. We, in Canada, dumped billions with a b, over decades into our Native communities, yet they can't even manage clean drinking water let alone higher living standards.
 

canada-man

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the obsession with universities is creating inequality

https://academicmatters.ca/2016/01/higher-education-and-growing-inequality/

Rather than a tool of social mobility, higher education now reinforces inequality.
In recent decades all countries have seen a rapid growth in the number of students going into higher education, including students from lower income backgrounds. But has this created more equal societies?

Take the case of the United States, still in many ways the model and trend leader for the Western world in economy, society, and higher education. The USA has developed extreme levels of economic and social inequality, social mobility is declining, and higher education has been unable to compensate—in fact, higher education itself is becoming more stratified. The upper middle class dominates access to the top private universities, participation rates have stopped growing, and graduation rates among low-income families are very disappointing. Inequality is also increasing in Canada—although social mobility, the opportunity to raise up from a low-income background or remote location—is still higher in Canada than in other English-speaking countries.

This article draws together what we know about economic and social inequality with what we know about social ordering through higher education. Following Thomas Piketty’s historical approach to inequality in his book Capital in the Twenty-first Century, we can see important patterns emerging in the last three decades.
 

Frankfooter

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It is only a problem if there are vast inequalities in society(USA) and capital (shares of companies) is in the hands of 1%. If society is more equal, shares of companies are more evenly distributed, if not in the hands of everybody, then through pension funds etc, and the amount of taxes a company pays is less important because profits eventually will be taxed through taxes on the dividends paid to shareholders.
Then it may be a problem here soon but definitely is a problem in the US.

Vox has a very well documented story showing that racial resentment pushed Trump into power (with some help from the Russians of course). Trump took the anger from poor whites and funnelled that into a form of racial tribalism that tricked poor people into voting him into power. The budget shows Trump to really just be about making the rich richer.
https://www.vox.com/identities/2017/12/15/16781222/trump-racism-economic-anxiety-study

And Al Jazeera has a similar article suggesting that Trump is hastening the end game of capitalism in the US, which looks a lot like a form of the game of monopoly, with the concentration of wealth.
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/trump-tribalism-american-capitalism-171213074012028.html
 

mandrill

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the obsession with universities is creating inequality

https://academicmatters.ca/2016/01/higher-education-and-growing-inequality/

Rather than a tool of social mobility, higher education now reinforces inequality.
In recent decades all countries have seen a rapid growth in the number of students going into higher education, including students from lower income backgrounds. But has this created more equal societies?

Take the case of the United States, still in many ways the model and trend leader for the Western world in economy, society, and higher education. The USA has developed extreme levels of economic and social inequality, social mobility is declining, and higher education has been unable to compensate—in fact, higher education itself is becoming more stratified. The upper middle class dominates access to the top private universities, participation rates have stopped growing, and graduation rates among low-income families are very disappointing. Inequality is also increasing in Canada—although social mobility, the opportunity to raise up from a low-income background or remote location—is still higher in Canada than in other English-speaking countries.

This article draws together what we know about economic and social inequality with what we know about social ordering through higher education. Following Thomas Piketty’s historical approach to inequality in his book Capital in the Twenty-first Century, we can see important patterns emerging in the last three decades.
Congratulations, C-M! You've finally posted something that I agree with.

But here's the problem. The education scam feeds on itself. As more and more kids go to school, employers become more and more picky about qualifications. You get "degree inflation". A BA got you a good job 40 years ago and an MA gets you squat today. So kids pile on more and more years of expensive school for the same jobs - maybe!

It's better in Canada, where schooling is subsidized by the taxpayer and student debt is a little more under control. In the US, kids get worthless pieces of paper which cost them $200,000 or more and then cannot get jobs to pay off their student loans. So no wonder working class kids avoid universities!

Now you tell me what the solution to this problem is??!!

I would suggest radically revamping the post secondary education system.
 

canada-man

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Congratulations, C-M! You've finally posted something that I agree with.

But here's the problem. The education scam feeds on itself. As more and more kids go to school, employers become more and more picky about qualifications. You get "degree inflation". A BA got you a good job 40 years ago and an MA gets you squat today. So kids pile on more and more years of expensive school for the same jobs - maybe!

It's better in Canada, where schooling is subsidized by the taxpayer and student debt is a little more under control. In the US, kids get worthless pieces of paper which cost them $200,000 or more and then cannot get jobs to pay off their student loans. So no wonder working class kids avoid universities!

Now you tell me what the solution to this problem is??!!

I would suggest radically revamping the post secondary education system.
in places like Germany high school kids have choices they can do trades/vocational or go to university
 

danmand

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in places like Germany high school kids have choices they can do trades/vocational or go to university
In places like Germany, Univerity tuition is free.
 

danmand

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Congratulations, C-M! You've finally posted something that I agree with.

But here's the problem. The education scam feeds on itself. As more and more kids go to school, employers become more and more picky about qualifications. You get "degree inflation". A BA got you a good job 40 years ago and an MA gets you squat today. So kids pile on more and more years of expensive school for the same jobs - maybe!

It's better in Canada, where schooling is subsidized by the taxpayer and student debt is a little more under control. In the US, kids get worthless pieces of paper which cost them $200,000 or more and then cannot get jobs to pay off their student loans. So no wonder working class kids avoid universities!

Now you tell me what the solution to this problem is??!!

I would suggest radically revamping the post secondary education system.
The problem is not with university education, but with the high tuition at American and Canadian universities. Free University tuition has been proven in Europe to create social mobility.

U of T law school tuition was $24,000 a year when my daughter went there.
 

mandrill

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The problem is not with university education, but with the high tuition at American and Canadian universities. Free University tuition has been proven in Europe to create social mobility.

U of T law school tuition was $24,000 a year when my daughter went there.
I see then that your very own family has betrayed your hatred of lawyers and joined our corrupt and evil membership! :eyebrows:
 

mandrill

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in places like Germany high school kids have choices they can do trades/vocational or go to university
Same in Canada. Kids can go to Central Tech for instance.

But that is only a disincentive to working class kids proceeding to university.
 

danmand

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I see then that your very own family has betrayed your hatred of lawyers and joined our corrupt and evil membership! :eyebrows:
She is not my daughter anymore :rolleyes:
 

Aardvark154

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The points about the extreme costs of Higher Education including Graduate and Professional Schools is well taken.

Further that these days many skilled tradespeople can make as much as University Graduates.
 

Aardvark154

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Even for those Americans who agree with much of what he might say, a very liberal Australian Expat working at an American University, and side-lighting as a U.N. Official trashing on the United States is not going to have much gravitas
 

FAST

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The points about the extreme costs of Higher Education including Graduate and Professional Schools is well taken.

Further that these days many skilled tradespeople can make as much as University Graduates.
And that is the key difference with Europe, but our biased, out of touch educators are happy pushing a degree in ancient history.,...aka,... burger flipping
 

onthebottom

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Hooterville
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danmand

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