Imagine that a newspaper has asked you to write a movie review about one of the films. In writing your review, consider whether or not the film is s
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Using the link above answer the following question in 500 words:
Imagine that a newspaper has asked you to write a movie review about one of the films. In writing your review, consider whether or not the film is successful in the task it attempts: can it have an impact on combating the issues it portrays? Why or why not? Include your personal thoughts on the film, as well as on PhotoVoice as a research tool.
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Social Class,
Inequality, &
Poverty
Peter Kaufman, State University of New York at New
Paltz Todd Schoepflin, Niagara University
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
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Social Class, Inequality, &
Poverty
P E T E R K A U F M A N , S T A T E U N I V E R S I T Y O F N E W Y O R K A T N E W
P A L T Z T O D D S C H O E P F L I N , N I A G A R A U N I V E R S I T Y
INTRODUCTION
SOCIAL CLASS
The social class structure of the United States
Is social class ascribed or achieved?
Social mobility
INEQUALITY
The growing gap between the poor and the rich
U.S. inequality in global context
POVERTY
What is poverty?
Characteristics of the poor
The working poor and the jobless poor
Homelessness
The importance of affordable housing
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
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INTRODUCTION
Why do sociologists study social class inequality?
I was raised in a poor household. My mom is a Hispanic single mother on welfare who
lacks formal education. My father was an Italian immigrant who died of alcoholism. I grew up
with my mom’s side of the family. Among most of my family tobacco and alcohol use were
prominent. Marijuana and cocaine were also used frequently. The most successful thing I ever
witnessed anyone in my family do was join the army or graduate high school. Working was
hardly the trend in my family. My diet consisted of mostly unhealthy foods: fried meats, sauces
loaded with salt, pork fat, greasy snacks, lots of soda, and microwaveable food items. If I saw
anything green on my plate I thought, “eww disgusting” and I wouldn’t touch it. Not
surprisingly, I was overweight for much of my childhood and adolescence. And with all of the
second-hand smoke I breathed in I also developed asthma.
When I was 18, my mother kicked me out of the house and I moved in with the family of
a rich, white, friend of mine. This family had a different position in life on so many levels. They
had different interests, concerns, and ways of doing things. It all seemed so foreign to me. For
example, they were very health conscious. They had foods and products in their home that I
had never seen or heard of before. The parents even took time to exercise daily. And they
had lots of books in the home which they actually read. Although the way they lived seemed
strange to me I also knew that the lifestyle of this family allowed them to have many more
possibilities than I could ever imagine in my upbringing.
This excerpt comes from an essay written by Alejandro (Alex) Russo, a student in one of
our sociology classes.1 This brief autobiographical sketch captures many of the themes that we
discuss in this chapter. It also offers a snapshot of how social class has a significant impact on
our lives. As Alex suggests, social class influences our goals and aspirations, our potential and
possibilities, our lifestyle choices and habits, and even our health and well-being.
Despite its significance, social class often goes unacknowledged. We often don’t
recognize the effects of social class until we interact with people who have different
economic resources—much like Alex didn’t recognize the influence social class had on his life
until he moved in with his wealthy friend. In this sense, social class is invisible in plain sight. Unlike
characteristics such as race and gender, which are more obvious and easier to see and
define, we can’t always figure out someone’s social class just by looking at them. But if we are
seeing the world sociologically, indicators of social class quickly come into focus.
Some of us, like Alex, grow up in poverty while others grow up in affluent families who
may use their power and influence to ensure their children get into elite colleges (more on the
“Operation Varsity Blues” college admission scandal later).
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
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Some students attend rat- and cockroach-infested schools with outdated and
insufficient textbooks, while others attend schools with state-of-the-art facilities and computers
for every student.
Some adults work three jobs and over 80 hours a week just to support their families while
others enjoy paid vacations, health insurance, and employer contributions to a retirement
account.
And some of us live in cities like Flint, Michigan, while others live in cities like Bloomfield
Hills, Michigan. Although these two communities are separated by only 45 miles, the life
experiences of the people who live there are worlds apart. In Flint, the median household
income is $28,834, the unemployment rate is nearly twice the national average, 40% of
residents live in poverty, and the city is infamous for its lead-contaminated drinking water, its
abandoned and boarded-up homes, and its rising homicide rate.2 In contrast, Bloomfield Hills
is one of the richest cities in America. The median household income is $182,243, the value of
most homes is close to $1 million, and the community is known for its quiet, rural residential
properties, its exclusive country clubs, and its world-renowned educational institutions.
In this chapter we take a journey through the landscape of social class. We meet other
individuals and consider how their lives have been shaped and guided by their social class
position. Some individuals are greatly supported and enabled by their social class position
while others, like Alex, face many obstacles and constraints. Before examining how social class
contributes to some of these inequalities, we begin with a solid understanding of what exactly
we mean when we use the term social class.
SOCIAL CLASS
How do sociologists make sense of social class?
What is the social class structure of the United States?
Are we assigned a social class at birth or is it something we accomplish?
Is the American Dream alive and well or is it just a myth?
Consider these films: Pretty Woman, Boyz n the Hood, 8 Mile, Titanic, Dreamgirls, Pursuit
of Happyness, Annie, Slumdog Millionaire, The Hunger Games, Snowpiercer, The Great Gatsby,
The Wolf of Wall Street, Crazy Rich Asians, Hustlers, and Parasite. They all have one thing in
common: they revolve around social class.
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
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Social class is one of the central concepts in sociology. As you learned in the first
chapter, sociology emerged when scholars began investigating the economic inequality they
witnessed, particularly during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Karl Marx was an early sociologist,
and one of his central concerns was no different than what many sociologists still study today:
the growing economic gap between the haves and the have-nots.
Social class is just one form of stratification, a system that puts categories of people into
a hierarchy. All societies have stratification systems, but they vary in what categories are used
to sort people and how unequal those categories of people are. Religion, gender, wealth,
and race are common foundations for stratification, leading to unequal access to resources,
political rights, and other benefits. In other chapters, you’ll learn how the U.S. is stratified
according to race, ethnicity, and gender. In this chapter, we’re focusing on economic
stratification, and we analyze social class inequality in the U.S. as a structural problem, not as
something that results from personal failing.
A social class is generally defined as a group of individuals who share a similar
economic position based on income, wealth, education, and occupation. When referring to
social class, most people rely on a simple system consisting of the upper, middle, and lower (or
working) classes. This model is quick and convenient; however, as we will see, social class is
much more complicated than this.
Most definitions of social class are based on income, the total amount of money
someone earns each year. Income is a convenient indicator of social class, and it’s commonly
used to identify a person’s class standing.
Another common indicator of social
class is wealth—the total amount of money
that a person has or could have if she sold
off all her assets. If you take all the money in
someone’s bank and retirement accounts,
and add the value of everything they own—
cars, perhaps a home, property, anything
they have invested in the stock market, and
anything else that they could sell—the
resulting total amount is their wealth.
Although there is often a strong connection
between income and wealth (that is, people
who earn high salaries also often own a lot of
wealth), this is not always the case. You could have wealth from sources such as savings,
investments, real estate, and inheritance, even if you don’t earn a high income, or any
income at all.
Factory workers, a typical working-class job.
(Source: Wikimedia Commons)
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
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The amount of money we make or have is not the only factor that may determine our
social class. Education and occupation are also often included in the mix. Both
characteristics—how far we went in school and what kind of job we have—are linked with
income and with each other.
The social class structure of the United States
Over 30 years ago, an undergraduate student at Harvard University walked into a
public housing project outside of Boston and began research for his senior thesis. Little did he
know that he was laying the groundwork for what was to become one of the most well-known
sociological studies of social class in the United States. Jay MacLeod’s Ain’t No Makin’ It is a
story of two groups of teenagers who lived in the housing project: The Brothers, a
predominantly Black peer group, and the Hallway Hangers, who were predominantly White.3
MacLeod followed the Brothers and the Hallway Hangers from their teenage years into
young adulthood and then into middle age. He documents their dreams, aspirations,
successes, and failures. Ain't No Makin’ It demonstrates that social class can be a complicated
concept to understand. It’s often ignored and unacknowledged. Even though it had a
significant impact on the life choices and chances of the Brothers and Hallway Hangers, social
class was not part of their vocabulary. This is true for the majority of Americans today: Most of
us don’t speak about social class regularly. In the rare instances when we do talk about social
class or are asked to identify our own social class position, Americans almost always say we
are middle class.4
If we want to understand the important impact that social class has on our lives, we
can’t rely on the simplistic model of lower, middle, and upper classes. We need to account for
multiple factors such as income, wealth, education, and occupation. We use Dennis Gilbert’s
model of the class structure that relies primarily on income, occupation, and education.5
Although Gilbert does not factor in wealth, since it is often difficult to measure, we can see
how wealth is connected to these other three factors and how it might influence our social
class standing.
Gilbert’s model includes six social classes that are situated within three broad
categories. At the top is the first category, the privileged classes, made up of what he calls
the capitalist class and the upper-middle class.
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
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The capitalist class (commonly known as the
top 1%) makes money from the things they own:
businesses, real estate, stocks, and bonds.
Although the 1% may work, they usually do not
gain their tremendous wealth from their annual
salary. Instead, they are part of the super-rich
because the things they own (their wealth) bring
them a continual stream of lucrative profits.
The second group in the privileged class
category is the upper-middle class. Making up
about 14% of the population, these well-educated
individuals rely on their high incomes from jobs to catapult them into this category. Typical jobs
among this group include business managers, doctors, lawyers, accountants, and some small
business owners. Gilbert includes a sub-category at the top of the upper-middle class called
the working rich. Although relatively small in size, this group includes individuals whose annual
incomes are well into the six-figure range. One of the main features that distinguishes this
group from the capitalist class is that the working rich rely on their salaries to maintain their
class position.
The second category in Gilbert’s social-class model is called the majority classes. Here
we have about 60% of the population, evenly split between the middle class and the working
class. People in the middle class are likely to have a high school diploma and some college
experience (an increasing number even have a bachelor’s degree). They work as teachers,
nurses, master craftspeople (plumbers, electricians, carpenters), and lower-level managers.
Just below them is the working class. These individuals have probably completed high school
or a trade school; they typically work as office support (secretaries and administrative
assistants), retail sales workers, factory workers, or low-paid craftspeople.
As you consider the distinctions between the middle class and the working class, you
may be thinking of examples of people you know who don’t quite fit into this model. That’s not
surprising. As Gilbert points out, the distinction between the middle class and the working class
can be fuzzy. You may know someone who has only a high school education but works in an
occupation and earns a yearly salary that puts them in the middle class. On the other hand,
some people may have a higher level of education (such as a college degree) but work in
jobs that place them in the working class, either by choice or because they can’t find a better
job. Determining social class is not an exact science. Instead of relying on just one or two
factors such as income or education, we need to consider the interplay between these
factors.
The third and final category in Gilbert’s model is the lower classes. Making up about
one-quarter of the U. S. population, this group includes the working poor (15%) and the
Eye surgeon, an example of an
upper-middle-class job. (Source)
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
Page 8
underclass (10%). Both have some education, but most do not have more than a high school
diploma.
The working poor are typically employed in insecure and low-wage jobs such as
janitorial and cleaning services, manual labor, landscaping, restaurant support (fast food, wait
staff, line cooks), and other service industries. Because the jobs held by the working poor do
not generally provide much in the way of benefits (such as medical, dental, or vision care;
paid vacations; retirement accounts), the working poor are more likely than social classes
above them to face financial insecurity and instability. Many workers in these jobs also
encounter unpredictable and inflexible work schedules, putting them in stressful and
precarious situations since their income may vary from week to week.
Author Barbara Ehrenreich tried to survive
on these types of low-wage jobs in order to
understand the daily struggles of the working poor,
an experience described in her book Nickel and
Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America. She
worked as a diner waitress, motel maid,
housecleaner, and Walmart salesperson and
found it nearly impossible to cover the cost of rent,
gas, and meals. Benefits that the middle and
upper classes may take for granted, such as paid
sick leave, didn’t exist at these jobs; when
Ehrenreich was sick, she had to go to work anyway
because she couldn’t afford to lose a day’s wages. As she pointed out, long days on the job,
sometimes followed by a shift at a second job just to make ends meet, leave low-wage
workers with little energy or spare time to look for better jobs or to attend college.
Going to work sick can even lead to death, as was the case for Augustín Rodriguez, a
longtime employee at a Smithfield Foods meatpacking plant in South Dakota. His death was
tied to a COVID-19 outbreak at the facility, which offered a $500 bonus to workers who didn’t
miss any shifts during the month of April, 2020, at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.6
Fast-food workers on strike for higher pay.
(Source)
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
Page 9
Table 1: Gilbert’s Model of the Social-Class Structure in the United States7
Class, % of Households
Source of Income,
Occupation of Main
Earner
Typical Education
Typical Household
Income, 2012
Privileged Classes
Capitalists, 1% Investors, executives,
heirs
Selective college or
university, often
graduate or
professional school
$1 million
Upper middle, 14% Upper management
and professionals,
successful small
business owners,
including the working
rich
College, often
graduate or
professional study
$150,000
(working rich:
$500,000)
Majority Classes
Middle, 30% Lower-level
managers,
semiprofessionals,
nonretail sales
workers, craftsmen
At least high school,
often some college
$70,000
Working, 30% Machine operators,
low- paid craftsmen,
clerical workers, retail
sales workers
High school $40,000
Lower Classes
Working poor, 15% Most service workers,
laborers, low-paid
machine operators,
and clerical workers
At least some high
school
$25,000
Underclass, 10% Unemployed or part-
time work; many
depend on public
assistance and other
government programs
Some high school $15,000
At the bottom of Gilbert’s model is the underclass. They may be part-time workers,
unemployed, or may have inconsistent and unreliable work opportunities (such as seasonal
work that is only available for part of the year). Many rely on public assistance benefits, which
have been shrinking over the past twenty years. Although their financial insecurity forces this
group to rely on public assistance to help pay for food, shelter, and clothing, they actually
receive less in government benefits than the majority and privileged classes.8 While the lower
classes may receive limited benefits in the way of food, housing, and tax subsidies, the
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
Page 10
wealthier classes gain significantly more valuable benefits through government policies that
allow them to drastically lower the amount they owe in taxes. The ability to write off expenses
such as part of their mortgage interest payments (which is most valuable for those with the
most expensive homes), deposits into retirement accounts (which low-income workers are
often unable to afford), and profits from certain types of stock trading or capital gains are all
tax benefits provided to more privileged Americans.
Is social class ascribed or achieved?
As you think about the descriptions and characteristics of the various social classes, you
are probably locating yourself somewhere in Gilbert’s model. You may even realize that
you’re in a different social class than the one you thought you were in. Maybe you grew up
assuming you were in the middle class (as many people do), but according to Gilbert you fit
into a different category. As you ponder where you fall on this social class spectrum, you might
also consider how you actually ended up in that particular social class location. Did you use
your own income, education, and occupation or did you use your parents’? Did you receive
your social class through birth or is it something you accomplished through your own efforts?
These questions reflect an important
distinction discussed in the Social Structure and
the Individual chapter: the difference between
ascribed and achieved statuses. As you’ll recall,
an ascribed status is one you acquired when you
were born or that you take on involuntarily later
in life. In contrast, you gain an achieved status at
least in part through your achievements, abilities,
or efforts.
When you were born, you automatically
entered into the social class of your parents or
guardians. You did not get to choose if you were born into the capitalist class or the working
poor. But the social class ascribed to us at birth is not necessarily the social class we have
when we become adults. For example, nearly 30% of students entering four-year colleges and
more than 50% of students who enter two-year colleges are first-generation students—neither
of their parents completed college.9 Most of these students are probably in college because
they view education as a way to achieve a higher-paying job and a higher social class than
their parents.
The distinction between ascribed and achieved social class status is particularly
relevant when we try to understand social inequality. There is a long-standing assumption,
particularly in the United States, that social class is largely an achieved status. Most people
believe that your position in the social class structure depends mostly on your own individual
Children born into poverty. (Source)
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
Page 11
efforts: are you motivated, do you work hard, do you make smart financial decisions, and are
you willing to go the extra mile?
But the idea that our social class standing is based on our own merit is not altogether
accurate. Consider the demographics of the CEOs of the Fortune 500—a list of the 500 largest
and most profitable companies in the U.S. In 2021, this list contained only 41 women CEOs
(8.2%) and just 4 African American CEOs (0.8%). And 2021 is the first year two Black women
have been Fortune 500 CEOs at the same time.10 Given that women make up nearly 51% of
the U.S. population and African Americans comprise a little over 13%, we might ask why CEOs
of Fortune 500 companies are overwhelmingly White men. Are women and African Americans
just not working hard enough or not motivated enough to lead the biggest companies in
America? Or is something about their race and gender (both ascribed characteristics) holding
them back from making it to the top?
Table 2: SAT Scores and Family Income
Family Income
Critical Reading
Mathematics
Writing
$0-$20,000 435 462 429
$20,000-40,000 465 482 455
$40,000-60,000 487 500 474
$60,000-80,000 500 511 486
$80,000-100,000 512 524 499
$100,000-120,000 522 536 511
$120,000-140,000 526 540 515
$140,000-160,000 533 548 523
$160,000-200,000 539 555 531
More than $200,000 563 565 586
Source: College Board11
Another example might hit closer to home. You may have taken the SAT, ACT, or
another standardized test at some point. Did you know that the best way to predict a
student’s performance on these college entrance exams is to measure their family income? As
Table 2 shows, if you want to do well on the SAT, your best strategy is to be born into a wealthy
family.
One reason for this relationship between social class and educational achievement is
that parents with higher incomes have more resources to help their children succeed
academically. As Annette Lareau demonstrates in her book, Home Advantage, although
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
Page 12
parents from all social classes have similar aspirations for their children, those with greater
financial means can significantly boost their kids’ learning by stocking their house with lots of
books to read, sending their children to higher-quality daycares and schools, and paying for
tutors and test preparation courses, which parents with lower incomes often can’t afford.12
And as we will see in the next section, such advantages (or disadvantages) help explain why
many people reproduce their ascribed social class position.
Social mobility
“Don’t let somebody ever tell you, you can’t do
something. If you want something, go get it. Period.”
These lines are from the movie The Pursuit of
Happyness, based on the life of Chris Gardner.
Gardner went from being homeless to working in the
finance industry and later became an inspirational
speaker. In moving from a life of poverty to an
achieved social class of wealth and comfort, Chris
Gardner’s story exemplifies the rags-to-riches narrative
of the American Dream.
The American Dream is a strongly-held and
much-cherished belief in the United States. We are told
that with hard work, determination, and a “can do” spirit, it’s possible to be born into a
working poor or even an underclass family and eventually make it into the more privileged
classes. The American Dream suggests that an ascribed social class should not hold you back
from becoming who or what you want to be. As long as you work hard, have a good attitude,
and don’t give up, you can live your dreams.
When people like Chris Gardner move from an ascribed social class position to a new
achieved social class position, they have experienced social mobility. Upward mobility, which
is most often discussed in the context of the American Dream, occurs when someone moves
from a lower social class position to a higher one. This form of mobility is obviously the one most
of us would prefer.
But we can also experience downward mobility—dropping into a lower social class. A
decline in social class standing may occur due to factors such as being laid off, choosing to
pursue a less lucrative career path than your parents, making bad financial decisions, or
getting divorced (a common cause of downward mobility for women).13 It can also be
caused by issues entirely outside our control, such as entering the job market during a
recession.
The idea of the American Dream is regularly invoked by politicians, educators, religious
leaders, and media pundits. We also have shining models of the American Dream like Oprah
Chris Gardner. (Source: Wikimedia
Commons)
Social Class, Inequality, & Poverty (Fall 2021)
Page 13
Winfrey, who went from a childhood of poverty and abuse to become America’s first Black
billionaire, and Jay-Z, who lived in a housing project and sold drugs before becoming a
billionaire with impressive real estate and art collections.14 The idea that the American Dream
is alive and well is so pervasive that most people don’t even question it. Many of us just assume
that upward social mobility is the norm. “The sky's the limit,” to b
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