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Middle Class Inequality Analysis

Decent Essays

In pondering the question of inequality in the United States rising or falling; it must first be asked how would it be decided or what is considered equality? However, before answering these questions I will address two articles that present a difference in opinion on the subject of the middle class surviing or dying out. The first article I will address was wrote by Steven Pearlstein on the information provided by Stephen Rose in the New York Times. It was a bit dificult to find strong arguemnets in this article supporting his belief of the middle class surviving. However, there are a few things mentioned in the article that did make a good point. Pearlstein (2007) wrote, " $44,500 is reported the median household income with taking …show more content…

Even though I will say, it is always helpful to look at the past when concerning the persent and future. In the research data, how many people are in the house hold contributing to make up a middle class income? It is common knowledge that parents may live with thier kids, or high school children hold jobs as well; all contrubuting to a household income. How many jobs does each indivisual hold to contrubute to what is considered a middle class lifestyle? Data comparing the iflation or cost of living over the years; along with income. How many families are recieving some sort of government assitence? The range of income concerning middle class should be broken down more; there is quite a difference in comparing a households making double the income or more than a lower middle class.Without the proper data my oiponion would be more personal rather than fact. Noah Smith stated in the Bloomberg View, "economists and researchers of all kinds should save there opinions until the reseach and facts are complete to aviod bias interference" (2015). However, there is reseach and there is fact; which are two different things. Statistic and numbers can only provide a general truth of a circumstance or a situation; facts …show more content…

(2004, September 9). The squeeze is on. The American Prospect. Retrieved from http://prospect.org/article/squeeze-0
Dayaratna, K., Rector, R., & Sheffield, R. (2016). Maine food stamp work requirement cuts non-parent caseload by 80 percent (3091). Washington, DC: The Heritage Foundation.
Pearlstein, S. (2007, May 30). Fair to middling in the middle class. The Washington Post. Retrieved from http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/29/AR2007052902001.html
Smith, N. (2015, October 15). Check your economics bias - bloomberg view. Retrieved from

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