Poverty In Inner Cities Essay

523 Words2 Pages

Everyone will always have an unfair situation that may not go in there favor. The most unjust situation is people in inner cities in poverty. Poverty is an unjust situation because most people are born in poverty and it is very difficult to get out The poverty rate in the US steadily rose during the first decade of the century, climbing from 12.2% in 2000 to 15.3% in 2010. Poverty is a huge issue many people do not know about and are not trying fix it, and poverty leads to so many devastating effects including starvation, low birth weight, and life expectancy. The solution may seem easy, but overcoming poverty involves increasing employment rate, which includes many components. One of the components is, “Creating more effective labor market intermediaries to make it easier for inner-city residents to find good jobs and for employers throughout the metropolitan area to find good inner city workers.” This quote means that making it easier for unemployed citizens to find a job. When finding a high paying job they have many requirement that are difficult to reach, including bachelor's degrees and prior training. If more jobs include on site training it would make potentially …show more content…

A quote that supports my claim is, “With female full-time workers earning just 78 cents for every $1 earned by men, action must be taken to ensure equal pay for equal work. Closing the gender wage gap would cut poverty in half for working women and their families and add nearly half a trillion dollars to the nation’s gross domestic product.” This quote supports my claim because when women are earning the same amount of money for the same job as men their yearly income will be much greater. When women are making more money they can afford to live and pay there bills. A single mother in poverty would have a harder time to support her children, then a single father in poverty would

More about Poverty In Inner Cities Essay

Open Document