-
10 votes
-
The lines at US food banks are growing longer
24 votes -
Why loan sharks get five-star reviews—and why it matters
12 votes -
Swedish government accused of trying to ‘outlaw poverty’ over begging ban – critics say proposal may not be lawful and would not tackle root cause of vulnerability
36 votes -
Getting shorter and going hungrier: how children in the UK live today
17 votes -
US child poverty sharply increased between 2021 and 2023
16 votes -
"Why you feel poorer than ever: " (Spoiler) "The problem is getting what we need"
31 votes -
Giorgia Meloni accused of splitting Italy over law to let richer regions keep taxes. Critics say differentiated autonomy bill, sought by wealthier areas, will increase poverty in south.
9 votes -
GDP per capita vs. the federal poverty rate over the years (observation and discussion)
Fair warning, I'm a dummy trying to talk about stuff I don't fully understand, but I wanted to see others' thoughts on this. In the 1960s, America's GDP (per capita) was $3,000. Also, in 1960, the...
Fair warning, I'm a dummy trying to talk about stuff I don't fully understand, but I wanted to see others' thoughts on this.
In the 1960s, America's GDP (per capita) was $3,000.
Also, in 1960, the federal poverty limit was $3,000 for a family of four.In 2023, the GDP (per capita) was $82,034.
The federal poverty limit for a family of four in 2023 was $30,000.This can't be good for the American people. Unless I'm drawing comparisons between two completely unrelated things?
People who are barely in poverty today would have to earn ~2.7x the amount they earn to stay consistent with those who were barely in poverty in the 1960s if GDP and FPL were still equal to each other. So what about the families caught in the middle? Too high earnings to get help and too low to thrive? They just suffer, I guess.
Out of curiosity, I calculated what the thresholds would be if the percentages of GDP to FPL were swapped between 2023 and 1960.
1960s numbers adjusted if FPL matched 2023's percentage:
GDP=$3,000
FPL=$1,1111960s numbers adjusted if GDP matched the percentage comparison of 2023:
GDP=$8,100
FPL=$3,000Please let me know if it actually matters that the GDP per capita is 2.7x the federal poverty limit for a family of four. Also, let me know your thoughts.
8 votes -
Relative financial burden imposed on university students by housing cost in Germany steadily increasing. About a third of all students close to poverty line. How does this compare to your region?
The latest iteration of a study regarding the cost of student housing in Germany found, that rent prices for students have risen to a germany-wide average of 479€. Three years ago the average was...
The latest iteration of a study regarding the cost of student housing in Germany found, that rent prices for students have risen to a germany-wide average of 479€. Three years ago the average was just 391€. In Munich the average cost for student housing has risen to no less than 760€. This is more than double than the housing-cost covered by BAföG, a public program providing financial support to students from low-income families. [1]
Statistically, more than a third of students in Germany are at risk of poverty at the moment, meaning they have less than 60% of the country's mean income available. [2] [3]
Also with regards to Munich specifically, the number of designated student housing facilities has not grown significantly or even dropped over the past few years, while the number of students has been steadily increasing. This means that more and more students have to look for rooms in shared apartments on the city's highly competitive housing market. Statistically, these students are those that live close to the poverty line particularly often.
I realize that the cost of high-quality higher education in Germany is not as majorly fucked as for example in the USA, but still the financial burden on students is steadily increasing due to housing cost. How does this compare to where you're from? How is student housing organized in your city, how much does it cost relative to the mean income, and do you experience similar trends in your region?
Sources (german), besides in-person conversations and experiences:
[1] https://cms.moses-mendelssohn-institut.de/uploads/24_03_19_Wohnkosten_Studierende_804a7b53ef.pdf
[2] https://www.spiegel.de/start/statistisches-bundesamt-mehr-als-ein-drittel-der-studierenden-lebt-unter-der-armutsgrenze-a-460cb19f-8a62-43ab-8b52-652814234250
[3] https://youtu.be/UVaY8SCtjwg28 votes -
The island of violent Basketball
4 votes -
Denmark's tough laws on begging hit Roma women with few other options – the Roma minority are heavily discriminated against across Europe
21 votes -
Why we can’t build better cities (ft. Not Just Bikes)
13 votes -
Greyhound bus stops are valuable US assets. Here’s who’s cashing in on them.
13 votes -
Millions of UK households forced to unplug fridge or freezer amid rising bills
37 votes -
Denmark aims a wrecking ball at ‘non-Western’ neighborhoods
42 votes -
What six months of Denver’s Basic Income Project tells us
50 votes -
Poverty, not the poor - a systematic analysis of the relatively high stable rate of US poverty using multinational data
21 votes -
A closer look at Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong, the most densely populated place that ever existed
40 votes -
Harassment and abuse perceived to harm poor women less − new research finds a ‘thicker skin’ bias
16 votes -
How dollar stores quietly consumed America
14 votes -
Chuuk Lagoon's skull problem
5 votes -
Exposed: Slum photography was at the heart of progressive campaigns against urban poverty. And it was a weapon against poor people.
5 votes -
How the richest country in the world has allowed its poor to remain poor
34 votes -
How extreme heat hits America's hungry
7 votes -
Every generator is a policy failure
21 votes -
The psychedelic drug that conquered Europe
11 votes -
One in five single adults in Canada live in poverty
49 votes -
Americans turning to installment apps Klarna, Affirm to buy groceries
50 votes -
Rising rents and diminishing aid fuel a sharp increase in evictions in US cities
52 votes -
Sweden set up a eugenics plan, grounded in the science of racial biology, between 1934 and 1976 – between 20,000 and 33,000 Swedes were forced to be sterilised
12 votes -
The ugly truth behind “We buy ugly houses”
10 votes -
The ‘open secret’ in most US workplaces: Discrimination against moms is still rampant
10 votes -
Japan’s ‘evaporated’ people: Inside an industry that helps people disappear
6 votes -
The rich have their own ethics: Effective altruism and the crypto crash
11 votes -
Globetrotting Black nutritionist Flemmie P. Kittrell revolutionized early childhood education and illuminated ‘hidden hunger’
2 votes -
'Everything Everywhere' props auctioned to support low-income Asians and trans community
6 votes -
Fast-rising electricity bills and surging food price inflation are taking their toll in Sweden – Matmissionen and the social stores offering food at rock-bottom prices
7 votes -
The Venezuelans trying to escape their country through video game grunt work
7 votes -
US child poverty rate at an all-time low
11 votes -
Poor teeth - If you have a mouthful of teeth shaped by a childhood in poverty, don’t go knocking on the door of American privilege
13 votes -
People don't want to hear about it – how the pandemic shaped Sweden's politics and left many feeling hopeless and disenfranchised
5 votes -
Does software piracy mitigate poverty?: Evidence from developing and Latin America countries
12 votes -
How people live off a garbage mountain that keeps catching on fire | World Wide Waste
2 votes -
Why miners risk their lives to get sulfur from an active volcano | Risky Business
4 votes -
My parents collect cans for a living
8 votes -
Frugal living 101: Huge list of ways to curb your home expenses during COVID times
8 votes -
Crime prediction software promised to be free of biases. New data shows it perpetuates them.
15 votes -
‘Am I even fit to be a mom?’ Diaper need is an invisible part of poverty in America
11 votes -
Faced with soaring Ds and Fs, schools are ditching the old way of grading
12 votes