Named one of the Best Business Books of 2007 by Library JournalThe Missing Class gives voice to the 54 million Americans, including 21 percent of the nation's children, who are sandwiched between poor and middle class. While government programs help the needy and politicians woo the more fortunate, the "Missing Class" is largely invisible and ignored. Through the experiences of nine families, Katherine Newman and Victor Tan Chen trace the unique problems faced by individuals in this large and growing demographic-the "near poor." The question for the Missing Class is not whether they're doing better than the truly poor-they are. The question is whether these individuals, on the razor's edge of subsistence, are safely ensconced in the Missing Class or in danger of losing it all. The Missing Class has much to tell us about whether the American dream still exists for those who are sacrificing daily to achieve it.
You see them every day. You deal with them at the doctor's office, the bookstore, and everyone else you go. They're those people that ensure that life runs smoothly for the rest of us - people working hard in not always that rewarding jobs, often in professional or nearly blue collar environments - they're the people who get things done. This book presents some of their stories in an engaging, interesting read that pulls no punches. I appreciated the multiple stories of families living in these situations, through their triumphs, their heartbreak, and some challenges brought on by their own decisions. The authors don't make these people out to be perfect, nor do they demonize them. They simply tell the stories and let the reader draw their own conclusions. I appreciate that. The book doesn't spout statistics, charts, or graphs - all of which can be effective - but it does provide a firsthand look at how these people live, struggle, and thrive. Too often do we focus on the rich (who are becoming richer) or the desperately poor, while ignoring the rest. One story stood out to me - the woman working for low wages in a doctor's office, who had her job threatened by taking too many days off to care for her kids. I wonder how much those doctors make? I wonder if they could take a cut in pay to cover her health insurance? It's striking and maddening how the haves can so easily exclude the have nots.
human face to the economic underclass
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
This is a very welcome, topical book, on a segment of the American population which is quite sizable and is growing, but is often overlooked. The ongoing economic downturn has expanded the size of those who fall short of the middle class but who earn enough to avoid designation as being in poverty. It is this group which authors, Kathleen Newman, Yale sociologist, and Harvard grad student Victor Tan Chen call "the missing class". The authors track the challenges which those in the "missing class" face. These challenges are largely interrelated and make the point, made repeatedly in the book, that membership in the missing class is so insecure that all elements of it are vulnerable when one element of it is de-stabilized. This is one of the major points of the book. The authors define the missing class as above the poverty-line but still economically uncertain enough that members are only a paycheck or two from being on the streets, and they are certainly not in the middle class. Such economic insecurity can bleed into all aspects of lives, from familial relations, to monetary planning, from child-care to marriage. The authors show that if one's job situation changes, key elements of a person's life are thrown into chaos quite easily. The thesis of the book is that membership in the missing class is not a sustainable escape from poverty. Membership is tenuous and taxing and far from certain. The authors cite many examples in which being in the missing class does not significantly separate people from poverty. The authors make the point that work conditions for those in the missing class may provide entree into the white-collar world, but that the membership is usually on the bottom rung of this class and so such membership is far from secure. One of the things which makes the missing class problematic is that there is often a lot of reliance on family, who sometimes may be caught in poverty and may be unjustifiably demanding of the family member who has done a little better. If relationships within the extended family are troublesome, it can be more difficult to address some of the significant challenges of being in the missing class. Perhaps kids are not trusted with family and so they are given more unregulated freedom. The kids might make decisions and those decisions may be good or may not. They may create more challenges. The tenuousness of the job situation may also present challenges with regard to health care. Health care might be not be available on reasonable terms, or even at all, from their employer. This will necessitate undertaking other, perhaps more short-term expensive but still necessary, health care, which might in turn require cutbacks on other crucial expenses like credit cards. Skimping on this payment can of course unleash more unpleasant results from unsympathetic multi-national corporations. This is one instance in which the tenuousness of membership in the missing class can be very unsettling and
Statistics in the flesh
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
The top 1% of America's population received 8.83% of national income in 1976 but were getting 21.93% by 2005. On average, a Fortune 500 C.E.O. made 40 times a worker's pay in 1980 but that ratio is 364 to 1 today. That erosion of America's middle class has led to what authors Katherine S. Newman and Victor Tan Chen use as the title of their book: THE MISSING CLASS. Individuals living the in the missing class are one job loss, medical bill, or maxed-out credit card away from poverty. While I quote statistics, THE MISSING CLASS reports on America's underpaid workforce in human terms. The book's nine stories tell of people who live hoping they won't come home to an eviction notice. Of course, first they have to hope the repo man does not take their cars before they can drive home from their low-paying jobs. Those who saw the documentary film THE BIG ONE will recall the tragedy of the woman whose small son died because the Workfare program forced her to take employment so far from home she could not watch him. Each of the nine THE MISSING CLASS narratives made me think of that family. Yet America closes hospitals and cuts education spending while it builds more prisons. Is that the plan? Read THE MISSING CLASS.
too rich to be poor--too poor to be rich
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
more important than we know. our society is built by people in the middle -- too rich to be poor--too poor to be rich the missing class is only missing society's attention on their struggle to survive medical care for all generatiions--education for the young and older--language skills for communication should be available to all
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