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TERM PAPER SOC 101 (INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY) SEC:1; SUMMER 2013
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Page 1: The social cause of poverty

TERM PAPER

SOC 101 (INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY)

SEC:1; SUMMER 2013

Page 2: The social cause of poverty

The Social cause of Poverty

Submitted to

Ms. Lutfun Nahar Lata

Lecturer, Department of Economics and Social Sciences (ESS)

BRAC University

Prepared by

• Tareq Mahmud

• Tanvir Ahmed Sakif

• Mashrur Ridwan

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Chapter Page no.

1. Introduction 4

2. Methodology 2.1 Focus Group 2.2 Group size 2.3 Data collection 2.4 Data Analysis 2.5 Limitation

4-106661010

3. Descriptive Results3.1Overpopulation3.2 Population Density3.3 Birth Rates3.4 Distribution of resources3.5 lack of education3.6 Environmental degradation:

3.7 Economic trends: 3.8 Demographic shifts: 3.9 Others: 3.10 Economic

- High rate of unemployment- Unfair trade

3.11 Corruption (Economically-wise)

3.12 Tackling corruption 3.13 Poor Governance3.14 Political

-Prejudice and inequality-Corruption (Politically-wise)-Centralization of Power-Civil War

3.15 3.15Natural Disasters

10-2211121212131415161718181818192020-2220212222

4. Collective Positives Negatives

23 23 23

Conclusion 24

Reference 24

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TITLE: The Social cause of Poverty

1. Introduction:

Poverty is a term of low income it refers to the deprivation of basic needs which is mostly foods,

sufficient cloth, shelter, health care, pure drinking water, proper sanitation facilities, and

education. Poverty is a global phenomenon. There are many reasons behind this poverty.

According to world health organization if any persons daily income is less than US$2 is consider

as poor. In our country many people live in poverty without it there are also so many people

living under poverty line. In this paper our group member interviewed some poor people to

investigate and find out the reasons behind there poverty.

2. Methodology:

Poverty As Defined By...

What is Poverty? We all know that very word relates to the very poor, but what else?

"Poverty is the deprivation of common necessities such as food, clothing, shelter and safe drinking water, all of which determine our quality of life." - Wikipedia

Generally, the term poverty refers to :

1) the lack of daily necessities -- water(potable water, of course) -- food -- clothing -- shelter

2) financial incapability for education and other With the lack of daily necessities comes many problems. Without potable water, the risks of contracting cholera, a disease contracted upon contact with dirty water, are higher. Without food, malnutrition, and other diet-related problems begin to emerge. With no proper clothing, these people have nothing to protect their skin from the roughness of the environment. Death rates

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among the populace will increase, creating environmental problems. With that, more problems shall rise as each reaction leads to another.

Without education, children of poor families cannot take on higher-paying jobs since they lack the academic qualifications required, and are thus forced to take on low-paying jobs i.e. contract worker, construction worker, cleaner, etc. With a low paying job, these children will eventually be unable to support their families, let alone support him or herself. With that, the vicious cycle goes on. “The World Bank reports that global food prices rose 83% over the last three years and the FAO cites a 45% increase in their world food price index just the past nine months. The Economist’s comparable index stands at its highest point since it was originally formulated in 1845. As of March 2008, average world wheat prices were 130% above their level a year earlier, soy prices were 87% higher, rice had climbed 74%, and maize was up 31%.”

— Eric Holt-Giménez and Loren Peabody, From Food Rebellions to Food Sovereignty: Urgent call to fix a broken food system, Institute for Food and Development Policy, May 16, 2008

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 behaviour. 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.

More recently, sociologists have focused on other theories of poverty. One theory of poverty has

to do with the flight of the middle class, including employers, from the cities and into the

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suburbs. This has limited the opportunities for the inner‐city poor to find adequate jobs.

According to another theory, the poor would rather receive welfare payments than work in

demeaning positions as maids or in fast‐food restaurants. As a result of this view, the welfare

system has come under increasing attack in recent years.

Again, no simple explanations for or solutions to the problem of poverty exist. Although varying

theories abound, sociologists will continue to pay attention to this issue in the years to come.

2.1 Focus Group

Bangladesh is generally a poor developing country. The majority of her people are poor. Most of them fall under poverty. So our focus is mostly on these people.

Causes and Effects of Poverty

Any discussion of social class and mobility would be incomplete without a discussion of poverty, which is defined as the lack of the minimum food and shelter necessary for maintaining life. More specifically, this condition is known as absolute poverty. Today it is estimated that more than 35 million Americans—approximately 14 percent of the population—live in poverty. Of course, like all other social science statistics, these are not without controversy. Other estimates of poverty in the United States range from 10 percent to 21 percent, depending on one's political leanings. This is why many sociologists prefer a relative, rather than an absolute, definition of poverty. According to the definition of relative poverty, the poor are those who lack what is needed by most Americans to live decently because they earn less than half of the nation's median income. By this standard, around 20 percent of Americans live in poverty, and this has been the case for at least the past 40 years. Of these 20 percent, 60 percent are from the working class poor.

2.2 Group Size:

Each group was consisted of two members. We have taken 3X2 interviews from 3 class of people and they are the Upper Class, Middle Class and the Lower Class people.

2.3 Data Collection:

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We have divided the society into three classes. We have also taken their in interviews and their interviews are listed below:

UPPER CLASS PEOPLE

Question 1: What do you think about poverty and which type of people do you think as poor?

MR. Fakhar Uddin: Poverty is generally given term to people who earns everyday and spends that daily income they are generally the poor people. They don’t have any resurvey money or cash in the bank.

Mr. Wahidul Islam Biddut: Those people who can’t full fill their all wishes dew to economical conditions on basis of their income they lie under poverty. They are usually the poor people of our country.

Question 2: What is the social cause of poverty?

Mr. Fakhar Uddin: Society pushes the poverty in many ways, like instead of sending a child to school we are enforcing them to work at houses, shops and different offices. The society don’t respect the poors and the people of the society also don’t allow them to stay around our neighborhood.

Mr. Wahidul Islam Biddut: Society is actually not responsible for poverty. It is the poor people then selves who are responsible. May be many of them did not get the opportunity but the society is helping them.

Question 3: How Society is increasing poverty?

Mr. Fakhar Uddin: It is almost the same as I said before but including that Corruption and natural disaster is another main reason behind it. We don’t give them any chance to improve their self.and come out of poverty.

Mr Wahidul Islam Biddut: I don’t think society is increasing poverty. Instead they are tiring to decrease this problem. In various society the people are helping them and giving them education ,but what is they fault if there tries are going to vain. They are also financelly helping them through many ways but if the poverty think that is not enough then what is there mistake in this.

Question : what can be the role of society to dcrease poverty ?

Mr. Fakhar Uddin : The upper class society is the one who can help them the most. If one able person takes the responsibilities of other disable person than the poor people will get the chance to gather education and I think the educated people will not remain under poverty they will be able to do some thing or the other with there education.

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Mr Wahidul Islam Biddut: The society is already doing manything if it do not improve by this way than it is the fault of those povrty class people who don’t know to utilize the resources provided to them.the think that could be included that is the higher society must not through them far away.

MIDDLE CLASS PEOPLE:

Q1)What do you think about poverty? give me your opinion.

Firstly Poverty is basically a low standard of living which is widespread in an undeveloped countries. It occurs mainly when people have very Little amenities like food, health, education Etc.

Q2.What are the social causes of poverty? Could you explain from your point of view?

The main cause would be the unequal distribution of wealth between rich and the poor and Secondly lacking of education among the people...of course the poor ones And it is often seen that The richer owner are always dominant over the poor ones and backward classes in a society....That is also Another cause.

Q3.Which class of people is responsible for this unequal distribution of wealth?

The dominant ones or the richer class more precisely. Since they were wants are much more higher and also they consume more and the ones in a poor class.

Q4.Do you think our society can provide proper facilities to poor people? Which facilities should society provide to them?

Of course as it is said that nothing is impossible so in fact I do not think that is impossible to provide proper facilities or helping them by contributing some of our wealth to them but i say that its totally 100% possible to provide proper and required facilities to the poor people. The facilities that are most required and helpful to them should they provided. Like helping them assume there basic education...provides them the equal opportunities just as the rich ones and theavailability of providing jobs to them according 2 there capabilities.

Second Interview

What do you think about poverty? Give me your opinion.

A:want of insufficient food, cloth and living place which is very necessary to lead a normal life.

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2.What are the social cause of poverty? Could you explain from your point of view?

A: From the theory “Ragnar Nsrgs” The devil Circle of poverty and mostly lacking of education.

3. any other cause do you think which is responsible for this poverty?

A. Insufficient resources and do not know the utilizing those resources properly is one of the main cause. For want of education people could not know the way how to utilize those insufficient resource. Want of revenue is also a cause .Some time people takes loan from different banks and could not pay the lone in time because most of the banks give loan in high interest . Many people become poor to pay the lone with high rate interest.

4.do you think our society can provide proper facilities to poor people? Which facilities should society provide them?

A: Absolutely not. Those people who are poor they become poorer and those who are rich they become more rich. In Bangladesh prospective there are no opportunities to poor. If society could provide proper opportunities they can improve them self rapidly rather than rich people with their positive thinking. Government and conscious people should take necessary steps for improvement those poor people.

How does society treat poor people?

A: In our poverty treat as a crusts .Every one think that poor people have no values in our society. People do not understand that those poor people are also an important part of our society. People do not think that if the poor people will become self sufficient it will be good for their society. Most of the people thinks other people as competitor . Every people should be more ethical. If the help each other to improving themselves it will be more helpful to improve socio economic development in Bangladesh. I believe that if our society educated all peoples and every people become more ethical and helpful to each other than our country will become developed. I hope if society treat properly for our owns development than our country will become a model of others.

LOWER CLASS PEOPLE

Q.1-why do you think you are facing poverty?

Rabeya(maid servant)- I am illiterate. So, I have no knowledge about how to write and read. So, Illiterate people are facing poverty.

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Karim (Ricksha-puller)- I was born I poor family. My father was farmer. He was not able to send me school. So, I passed class 5. There is no job without degree. I have no degree. So, I have no job and money.

Q.2-How does society treat you?

Rabeya- Society! We are not a member of society. We are not human being. We are bitch. They treat us like an animal. I don’t think that they think us as human being .

Karim- Sometimes boys whose age is like my boy, try to hurt me. They bring sticks, hit me and also slap me. Their parents smile when they punish us. Society treat us like this way. But some people are really good. Sometimes they give us more money than our desired money.

Q.3- Which class of people will you blame for your economic condition?

Rabeya- I am poor but I don’t want to see my daughter and son will face poverty. So, I want to send them school and want them literate. But rich people don’t help us. Sometimes they even don’t give us our salary properly.

Karim- I have some cousins who are rich. They don’t help us. I have not enough money to send them school. Not only rich people but also government doesn’t help us. We want scholarships that we can send our children to school. If we are not able to send our children to school, our poverty will never end.

Q.4- Which facilities do you think society can provide you?

Rabeya- We want proper salary. We want proper respect from society. If we don’t help them, how society will earn money? Government can give us loan so that we can start business.

Karim- if society treats us properly, our poverty will decrease gradually. I want to start a grocery shop’s, I need money. Government should give us loan.

Q.5- How will you utilize facilities?

Rabeya- I want to buy cows and goats so that I can make profit by selling milk. That will help us to decrease poverty and my economic condition will be good.

Karim- I want to start a grocery shop. By making profit, I want to send my sons schools.

2.4 Limitation

As we have a very less time to do our thesis and we have faced different political issues during

our study time. Political situations like Hortal pushed us backward in going and doing many

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things. We also had the month of Holy Ramadan during our thesis work. We have visited slums

and some of them are not vary safe so we could not visit many places.

3. Descriptive Results:

Why we always remain under poverty?

In our short analysis of the many causes of poverty, we shall explore three sections- economic, political, and external.

3.1 Overpopulation

Overpopulation is defined as the situation of having large numbers of people with too few

resources and too little space. Overpopulation can result from either a high population density

(the ratio of people to land area) or from low amounts of resources, or from both.

A high population density pressures the available resources in the country, as the resources can

only support a certain number of people.

Poverty can also depend on the country's mix of population density and agriculture productivity.

For example, Bangladesh has one of the world's highest population density with 1,147 persons

per sq km (2,970 persons per sq mi). A large majority of the people of Bangladesh engage in

low-productivity manual farming, which contributes to the country is extremely high level of

poverty. However, this only applies to third-world countries who do not have advanced

technologies.

High birth rates contribute to overpopulation in many developing countries. Children, especially

boys, are assets to many poor families because they provide labor, usually for farming. Cultural

norms in traditionally rural societies commonly sanction the value of large families. Also, the

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governments of developing countries often provide little or no support, financial or political, for

family planning (see Birth Control) Families may also not know about family planning due to the

lack of education. Hence, most developing countries have high rates of population growth.

3.2 Population Density

A country’s level of poverty can depend greatly on its mix of population density and agricultural

productivity. Bangladesh, for example, has one of the world’s highest population densities, with

1,078 persons per sq km (2,791 persons per sq mi). A large majority of the people

of Bangladesh engage in low-productivity manual farming, which contributes to the country’s

extremely high level of poverty.

Some of the smaller countries in western Europe, such as The Netherlands and Belgium, have

high population densities as well. These countries practice mechanized farming and are involved

in high-tech industries.

On the other hand, many countries in sub-Saharan Africa have population densities of less than

30 persons per sq km (80 persons per sq mi). Many people in these countries practice manual

subsistence farming. These countries have infertile land and lack the economic resources and

technology to boost productivity. As a consequence, these nations are very poor.

3.3Birth Rates

High birth rates contribute to overpopulation in many developing countries. Children are assets

to many poor families because they provide labor, usually for farming.

Cultural norms in traditionally rural societies commonly sanction the value of large families.

Also, the governments of developing countries often provide little or no support, financial or

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political, for family planning and birth control.

3.4 Distribution of resources:

In many developing countries, the problems of poverty are massive and pervasive. In recent

decades most of these countries have tried to develop their economies with industry and

technology with varying levels of success. Many developing countries, however, lack essential

raw materials and the knowledge and skills gained through formal education and training.

Because these things are necessary for the development of industry,developing countries

generally must rely on trade with developed countries for manufactured goods, but they cannot

afford much.

Because people in developed nations may have more wealth and resources than those in

developing countries, their standard of living is also generally higher. Thus, people who have

what would be considered adequate wealth and resources in developing countries may be

considered poor in developed countries.

In contrast, people in developing countries may consider themselves to be doing well if they

have productive gardens, some livestock, and a house of thatch or mud-brick. In rural areas,

people may be accustomed to not having plumbing, electricity, or formal health care. By the

standards of developed countries, such living conditions are considered hallmarks of poverty.

According to reports, people’s incomes are not enough to cover the cost of their basic necessities

and provide them basic services such as water, electricity, transportation and communication. It

pointed out that recent surveys confirm that 80 percent of citizen’s expenses go for to food, most

notably among vulnerable groups that are deprived of basic services and luxury means.

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3.5Lack of education:

Illiteracy and lack of education are common in poor countries. Governments of developing

countries often cannot afford to provide for good public schools, especially in rural

areas. Whereas virtually all children in industrialized countries have access to an education, only

about 60 percent of children in sub-Saharan Africa even attend elementary school. Poor people

also often forego schooling in order to concentrate on making a minimal living. In addition,

developing countries tend to have few employment opportunities, especially for women. As a

result, people may see little reason to go to school.

Reports have also argued that 41 percent of Yemen’s rural population lives on less than two

dollars per day, and 85 percent of Yemen’s poor population live in rural areas. It clarified that 47

percent of Yemen’s population are illiterate, which is another reason for poverty and

unemployment.

In countries with high populations, unemployment levels of only a few percentage points mean

that millions of working-age people cannot find work and earn an adequate income. Because

unemployment figures indicate only the number of people eligible to work who have no job but

are seeking employment, such figures are not necessarily an accurate indicator of the number of

people living in poverty. Other people may not be able to find enough work or may earn wages

too low to support themselves.

3.6Environmental degradation:

Environmental degradation is the deterioration of the natural environment, including the

atmosphere, bodies of water, soil, and forests — is an important cause of poverty. Environmental

problems have led to shortages of food, clean water, materials for shelter, and other essential

resources. As forests, land, air, and water are degraded, people who live directly off these natural

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resources suffer most from the effects. People in developed countries, on the other hand, have

technologies and conveniences such as air and water filters, refined fuels, and industrially

produced and stored foods to buffer themselves from the effects of environmental degradation.

In developing countries, deforestation has had particularly devastating environmental

effects. Many rural people, particularly in tropical regions, depend on forests as a source of food

and other resources, and deforestation damages or eliminates these supplies. Forests also absorb

many pollutants and water from extended rains; without forests, pollution increases and massive

flooding further decreases the usability of the deforested areas.

3.7 Economic trends:

Poverty in many developed countries can be linked to economic trends.

Changes in labor markets in developed countries have also contributed to increased poverty

levels. For instance, the number of relatively high-paying manufacturing jobs has declined, while

the demand for workers in service- and technology-related industries has increased. Historically,

people have learned the skills required for jobs that involve manual labor, such as those in

manufacturing, either on the job or through easily accessible school vocational programs. As

these jobs are replaced by service- and technology-related jobs—jobs that usually require skills

taught at the college level—people who cannot afford a college education find it increasingly

difficult to obtain well-paying work.

In many developed nations the number of people living in poverty has increased due to rising

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disparities in the distribution of resources within these countries.

Since the 1970s, for instance, the poorest 20 percent of all U.S. households have earned an

increasingly smaller percentage of the total national income (generally less than 5 percent) while

the wealthiest 5 percent of households have earned an increasingly greater percentage (about 45

percent of the total).

3.8Demographic shifts:

Some researchers also cite demographic shifts as contributing to increases in overall poverty. In

particular, demographic shifts have led to increases in poverty among children.

In the United States, for instance, typical family structures have changed significantly, leading to

an increase in single-parent families, which tend to be poorer.

There are differing beliefs about individual responsibility for poverty. Some people believe that

poverty is a symptom of societal structure and that some proportion of any society inevitably will

be poor. Others feel that poverty results from a failure of social institutions, such as the labor

market and schools.

In addition, many people in developed countries blame cycles of poverty, or the tendency for the

poor to remain poor, on overly generous welfare programs. Supporters of this position, including

some politicians, argue against government spending and initiatives to help the poor.

In the United States, the belief that cash welfare assistance actually encouraged personal

decisions leading to poverty dominated policy discussions of the 1990s. In response, in 1996 the

U.S. Congress created a new welfare program called Temporary Assistance to Needy Families

(TANF). This program ended the guarantee of cash benefits for poor families with children,

shifted more control to the states, and established stricter work requirements for recipients. The

numbers of poor families with children receiving cash welfare fell dramatically, from 4.6 million

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in 1996 to 2.1 million at the end of 2001.

3.9 Others:

Reports have noted that poverty is also symptomatic a symptom of poor basic services, scarce

financial resources and low returns from natural wealth such as oil, gas, minerals and fisheries

while revenues from public investments and taxes are exposed to corruption and embezzlement.

3.10 Economic

- High rate of unemployment

Unemployment is rampant now that the global financial crisis has ravaged the world's economy.

With a higher number of unemployed people, crime rates in these cities will increase as people

grow desperate to survive. It is also believed, however, that some governments of the world

intentionally keep a "sufficient" number of people out of work as a replacement batch when the

need arrives.

- Unfair trade

High subsidies and protective tariffs for agriculture in the developed world drains the taxed

money and increases prices for consumers in the developed world, decreasing competition and

efficiency and preventing exports by more competitive agricultural and other sectors in the

developed world due to retaliatory trade barriers and undermining the very type of industry in

which developing countries do.

3.11 Corruption (Economically-wise)

Corruption often accompanies centralization of power, when leaders are not accountable to those

they serve. More directly, corruption inhibits development when leaders help themselves to

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money that would otherwise be used for development projects.

Corruption, both in government and business, places heavy cost on society. Businesses should

enact, publicize and follow codes of conduct banning corruption on the part of their staff and

directors.

Citizens must demand greater transparency on the part of both government and the corporate

sector and create reform movements where needed.

Corruption is both a major cause and a result of poverty around the world. It occurs at all levels

of society, from local and national governments, civil society, judiciary functions, large and

small businesses, military and other services and so on. Corruption affects the poorest the most,

whether in rich or poor nations.

The issue of corruption is very much inter-related with other issues. At a global level, the

economic system that has shaped the current form of globalization in the past decades requires

further scrutiny for it has also created conditions whereby corruption can flourish and exacerbate

the conditions of people around the world who already have little say about their own destiny.

A difficult thing to measure or compare, however, is the impact of corruption on poverty against

the effects of inequalities that are structured into law, such as unequal trade agreements,

structural adjustment policies,” free” trade agreements and so on.

It is easier to see corruption. It is harder to see these other more formal, even legal forms of

“corruption.” It is easy to assume that these are not even issues because they are part of the laws

and institutions that govern national and international communities and many of us will be

accustomed to it—it is how it works, so to speak.

This is not to belittle the issue of corruption, however, for its impacts are enormous evidently.

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3.12 Tackling corruption

A broader way to try and tackle corruption can be made by attempting to provide a more just,

democratic and transparent process in terms of relations between donor nations and their

creditors:

An independent process would have five goals:

To restore some justice to a system in which international creditors play the role of plaintiff,

judge and jury, in their own court of international finance.

To introduce discipline into sovereign lending and borrowing arrangements—and thereby

prevent future crises.

To counter corruption in borrowing and lending, by introducing accountability through a free

press and greater transparency to civil society in both the creditor and debtor nations.

To strengthen local democratic institutions, by empowering them to challenge and influence

elites.

To encourage greater understanding and economic literacy among citizens, and thereby empower

them to question, challenge and hold their elites to account.

3.13 Poor Governance

Governance is defined as the manner in which power is exercised in the management of a

country's social and economic resources for development.

Good governance implies a capacity to turn public income into human development outcomes.

Good governance is an essential pre-condition for pro-poor growth as it establishes the enabling

regulatory and legal framework essential for the sound functioning of land, labor, capital and

other factor markets.

Corruption and political instability resulted in weakening of business confidence, deteriorating

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economic growth, declining public expenditure on basic entitlements, low efficiency in delivery

of public services as discussed in the earlier section on human development, and a serious

undermining of state institutions and the rule of law.

3.14 Political

Prejudice and inequality

Social inequality that stems from cultural ideas about the relative worth of different genders,

races, ethnic groups, and social classes. Ascribed inequality works by placing individuals in

different social categories at birth, often based on religious, ethnic, or 'racial' characteristics. In

certain countries in the world, governments tend to favour a specific creed or race or people. This

is evident in South Africa. In South African history, apartheid laws defined a binary caste system

that assigned different rights and social spaces to different races, using skin colour to

automatically determine the opportunities available to individuals in each group. These people

enjoy educational, social and welfare benefits. For example, the children of these people are able

to enjoy education with subsidised school fees; adults are able to obtain high-paying jobs easily

etc. Instead of channelling resources to help those at need, the governments of these countries

choose to treat different races and creeds with prejudice and will treat others with

less favouritism. Hence, this leads to poverty.

Corruption (Politically-wise)

Corruption is a rampant problem in the world today, especially in third-world countries. It

undermines democracy and good governance by flouting formal processes. Corruption often

occurs when leaders are not accountable to those they serve. Corruption usually inhibits

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development when leaders help themselves to money that would otherwise be used for

development projects. Corruption increases the cost of business through the price of illicit

payments themselves, the management cost of negotiating with officials, and the risk of breached

agreements or detection. Also, it generates economic distortions in the public sector by diverting

public investment into capital projects where bribes and kickbacks are more

plentiful. In Nigeria for example, more than 400 Billion dollars was stolen from the National

Treasury by Nigeria's leaders from 1960 to 1999. Forms of such corruption include

embezzlement, bribery, cronyism, nepotism, graft etc. Hence, this leads to poverty as leaders

should have used the money they usurped to help the poor, which results in a lack of funds.

Centralization of Power

In many developing countries, political power is disproportionately centralized. Instead of

having a network of political representatives distributed equally throughout society, in

centralized systems of governance one major party, politician, or region is responsible for

decision-making throughout the country, causing development problems. For example,

politicians make decisions about places that they are unfamiliar with, lacking sufficient

knowledge about the context to design effective and appropriate policies and programs.

Civil Wars

Wars like our liberation war in 1971 made us lame in all side. We just started out new nation

during that time. Our economy has restarted then. Then we had to face time like 1974, 1990, and

2008. These social wars make our situation poor and poorer.

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Natural Disasters

Natural disasters such as hurricanes and earthquakes have caused millions of dollars worth of

infrastructure and the loss of lives. Developing countries often suffer much more extensive and

acute crises at the hands of natural disasters, because limited resources become obstacles for the

construction of adequate housing, infrastructure, and mechanisms for responding to crises.

Natural disasters, being uncontrollable by man, affect annual agricultural output, such as floods

destroying the fertility of soils by washing away mineral-rich topsoil, and take away natural

decomposing agents, rendering the soil infertile. Droughts cause the land to become barren and

unsuitable for cultivation. The states of the U.S.A situated in Tornado Alley face constant fears

of poor harvests in the face of frequent tornado occurrences. In the case of the Sichuan

Earthquake in 2008 and The 2004 Tsunami catastrophe not only resulted in the loss of

agriculture, but the destruction of millions of dollars worth of infrastructure as well.

4. Collective

As we have taken the interview of three class of people we have found out various ideas from

different prospective of people. In some cases their thought was positive and where as in other

cases their thought was negative. They are described below

Positives

The lower class people get some facility as said by the upper class people. The Middle class

people are satisfied and they want to move towards the higher class. The Middle class can easily

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cope up with the Higher class they have a very less boundary in between them. The Higer class

wants to help the poor’s.

Negatives

The Lower class people have no bound of their need. Even after getting lot of facility they don’t

use it. In some cases the higher class people cant tolerate the poor class and they only think of

them. Both the middle class and the Higher class negates the pours but the middle class has a bit

more sympathy for the poor’s. The lower class has a want but no effort.

Conclusion

There are things that some people until now can't apprehend. Aside from the everyday

expenditure, many people have vices such as cigarettes and alcohols which we weren't able to

include in our daily expenses. When people begin to get wages or salaries, they immediately

spend the money for worthless and nonsense things instead of saving it. Some of them, if it is not

for their vices, they spend their money in stakes, testing their luck and expecting to be rich

immediately.

As we all know, poverty is a curse. It was written in the Bible that God has curse man, "In toil

you will eat of it all the days of your life." This only means that man can't eat without working

hard. God will only provide for those who are persistent. There's no place in this world for lazy

people.

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Reference

http://povertyhci.weebly.com/causes-of-poverty.html (July 22, 2013; 11:55PM)

http://povertyhci.weebly.com/how-do-you-define-poverty.html (July 23, 2013; 01:57AM)

http://www.cliffsnotes.com/sciences/sociology/social-and-global-stratification/causes-and-

effects-of-poverty (July 23, 2013; 02:12AM)

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