congo poverty

Ending poverty forever – how to get it done

Many people have come to believe that the poor are at fault for their standing in life. If you think people want to suffer through a life of depravity, you are sorely mistaken, as many of the decisions the poor have to make on a regular basis are ones you wouldn’t ever want to make yourself.

Some are so turned off by these injustices, they feel obligated to do all they can to help turn their fortunes around.

Larry Pohill Cafe Valley has used much of his free time in recent years to help the downtrodden, thereby easing a great deal of their misery.

Let’s not stop there, though: how about eradicating poverty forever? It is not an unsolvable issue, as there are measures taken by other societies and study groups have been shown to make a huge difference in the lives of ordinary people.

How can we wipe out poverty in the next few decades? Here’s how to get it done…

 

1) Education should be free

 

The world where a family can be raised on a high school diploma passed us by decades ago. These days, opportunity is only within reach to those who possess a post-secondary degree of some sort, be it a university degree or a trades school certificate.

The problem with this is that the cost of education is out of reach for most people, except for the wealthy and those lucky enough to earn scholarships. Left with their nose pressed against the glass, they struggle to survive in jobs in retail, warehousing, and in other precarious fields.

Funding colleges completely in the same way we do for elementary and high schools will level the playing field and give gifted students the opportunity for a better life.

 

2) Establish universal healthcare

 

Of all the fears that plague the mind of working class people in America, a sudden medical emergency ranks among the biggest.

Broken limbs can cost thousands, while chronic diseases can start even middle class folks on a rapid descent towards bankruptcy.

When the government takes on the responsibility of paying for healthcare, private insurance’s role is greatly marginalized, lowering costs for virtually all people despite marginally higher taxes.

The few hundred dollars in extra levies would be greatly overshadowed by the elimination of private insurance premiums, which cost people thousands of dollars per year.

 

3) It’s time for an Unconditional Basic Income

 

Automation is one of the scariest trends in economics these days, as it stands ready to automate the vast majority of jobs in America’s biggest industries, most notably transportation.

When taxi cabs and 18-wheelers start being automated en-masse, millions will hit the unemployment rolls directly, with millions more in support industries following quickly on their heels.


Unlike the industrial and information revolutions, the automation revolution promises no successor industry to absorb the majority of humans that will be let loose into a job market that has nowhere near enough openings for all of them.

The listlessness of able-bodied adults and the inability of them to make a living threatens to fuel a spike in crimes of necessity, which will create an unpleasant society in which to live. If we want our tech-filled future to not be a dystopia, we must institute a universal basic income.

A regular cash supplement designed to fund the basics of life (food, housing, basic utilities, etc), it will greatly reduce the misery currently experienced by low-income individuals in our society.

 

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