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Rich Democracies, Poor People - How Politics Explain Poverty (Hardcover, New)
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Rich Democracies, Poor People - How Politics Explain Poverty (Hardcover, New)
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Poverty is not an individual's choice. Nor, as David Brady
demonstrates, is it necessary. Building on the latest scholarship
in poverty studies, this book points out that among affluent
Western societies, there is immense cross-national and historical
variation in poverty. Brady seeks to determine what makes poverty
so entrenched in some affluent democracies whereas it is a solvable
problem in others. He illustrates that, among these democracies,
the United States is in the worst shape, with three times as much
poverty as some West European countries. In the U.S., nearly 20% of
the population is poor, as are almost a fourth of U.S. children and
elderly. Searching for the causes of this dilemma, Brady puts forth
a sweeping new theory to explain that the fundamental cause of
poverty is politics, starting from the simple claim that the
distribution of resources in states and markets is inherently
political. Societies make collective choices about how to divide
their resources, and these choices are institutionalized. Brady
points out that where poverty is low, equality has been
institutionalized, and where poverty is widespread, as most visibly
demonstrated by the US, there has been a failure to
institutionalize equality. Hence, it is a society that collectively
decides how much of the population will be economically secure.
Countries with a relatively low level of poverty in fact socialize
the responsibility of preventing citizens from being poor. This
book effectively tackles the issue of how this collective
responsibility is conceived and institutionalized, by defining the
mechanisms that shape this ideology, or prevent it from coming into
being. David Brady offers promising new directions for
understanding the politics of social equality, and takes an
ambitious step forward in the struggle against poverty.
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