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Tags: United States,
A Princeton University study by economists Deaton and Case shows the death rates for white working class Americans increased by 134 per 100,000 between 1999 and 2014.
Grouped Articles
The fatal trend among white working class Americans - The Washington Post
Washington Post 11/12/2015
America’s white working class is a dying breed - The Washington Post
Washington Post 11/12/2015
The missing working class - The Washington Post
Washington Post 11/12/2015
Both parties face a blue-collar imperative - The Washington Post
Washington Post 11/12/2015
New York Times 01/29/2016
The Democratic Platform’s Sharp Left Turn
WSJ 07/12/2016
A previous generation could count on good jobs in manufacturing with only a high school education. The last two decades of globalization have hit manufacturing jobs and wages in the U.S. hard and the impact is greatest on people without a college education. Other problems aggravating income and causing poverty is the increase of dropout rates from the labor force of young white American men, the effects of drug use and the lack of stable marraiges. This creates an underclass of whites in America, similiar to the underclass among minorities.
Grouped Articles
Racial Wealth Gap Widened During Recession
New York Times 04/28/2013
Wall Street Journal 09/14/2011
New York Times 06/22/2013
OECD report cites rising income inequality - The Washington Post
Washington Post 12/06/2011
U.S. Schools Chief Arne Duncan Labors to Straddle Political Divide
Wall Street Journal 07/22/2013
New York Times 02/10/2010
Deep poverty is defined as income 50% below the official poverty line. Since the beginning of the recession deep poverty in the U.S. has increased from 42% to 44%. The striking change in America is the accentuation of the income differences with the rise in deep poverty. This is coupled with similiar changes in income differences for the middle class Americans with income concentrated at the higher levels.
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 10/11/2013
Patchwork of Local Wage Laws Fuels Debate Over Raising Federal Minimum
Wall Street Journal 12/01/2013
Bloomberg's Real Antipoverty Record
Wall Street Journal 12/18/2013
Wall Street Journal 09/17/2010
Upward Mobility Has Not Declined, Study Says
New York Times 01/23/2014
New Data Muddle Debate on Economic Mobility
Wall Street Journal 01/24/2014
Howard Dean was governor of Vermont and Sanders was Mayor of Burlington, Vermont. Both candidates draw white, educated, affluent voters of the Democratic Party. But the situation is different in 2014, with the Democratic Party now 40% female, and many ethnic minorities represented in the party. Dean's major issue was his opposition to the Iraq war. Sanders says his positions are more class based and calls for a revolution to give working class Americans a chance for upward mobility.
Grouped Articles
Similarities Aside, Bernie Sanders Isn’t Rerunning Howard Dean’s 2004 Race
New York Times 08/09/2015
Bernie Sanders’s big challenge, explained in 2 charts - The Washington Post
Washington Post 08/12/2015
The Democrats’ Socialist Surge
Wall Street Journal 08/12/2015
How Bernie Sanders is plotting his path to the Democratic nomination - The Washington Post
Washington Post 09/12/2015
Sanders, Corbyn and the coming debate inside the Democratic Party - The Washington Post
Washington Post 09/13/2015
Why millennials love Bernie Sanders, and why that may not be enough - The Washington Post
Washington Post 10/28/2015
High unemployment and poverty in major urban areas of the US including Washington D.C. This is especially true for those without a college education.
Grouped Articles
New York Times 06/22/2013
The Great Stagnation in American Education
New York Times 09/07/2013
Peterson and Hanushek: The Vital Link of Education and Prosperity
Wall Street Journal 09/11/2013
Wall Street Journal 10/11/2013
Patchwork of Local Wage Laws Fuels Debate Over Raising Federal Minimum
Wall Street Journal 12/01/2013
Upward Mobility Has Not Declined, Study Says
New York Times 01/23/2014
The median income in the U.S. was 6.5% below the level in 2007, according to the Census Bureau. It declined in 2011 and 2012 and was stagnant in 2014. About 14.8% of the population, or 46.7 million people, are below the poverty level. About 34.7% of the people in the U.S. have experienced income levels below the poverty level for 2 months or more between 2009-2012
Grouped Articles
Wall Street Journal 09/17/2015
A Better Way to Measure Poverty
Wall Street Journal 10/19/2015
The fatal trend among white working class Americans - The Washington Post
Washington Post 11/12/2015
The I-Word Our Debates Are Missing
Wall Street Journal 12/10/2015
A Republican Cure for Liberal Failures on Poverty
Wall Street Journal 01/10/2016
Apple should repay Ireland 13bn euros, European Commission rules - BBC News
BBC News 08/30/2016
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