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The Shame of Poverty

Robert Walker

CHAPTER

1 The Origins of Poverty

This chapter argues that more attention should be paid to the psychosocial dimensions of poverty and notably to shame experienced as a result of living in poverty. Such shame is internally felt but structurally imposed by social institutions and by people who are not poor. Shame associated with poverty is painful, constrains human agency, and may contribute to the persistence of poverty. The chapter explains that poverty is a political construct and traces its origins to the writings of Confucius in China, to the Vedic culture of ancient India, and to philosophers and politicians in the ancient Graeco-Roman world. These ideas have been carried forward and only partially transformed by the vectors of religion and ideology including Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Confucianism, and secularism. Poverty has almost invariably been construed as a policy problem and very often as a consequence of the personal failings of the people affected by poverty.

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The law of demand posits that as prices rise for a given resource, product, or commodity, demand declines; conversely, as prices fall, demand increases. On the supply side, the law posits that as price rises, producers supply more of a resource, product, or commodity; as prices fall, so does supply.

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“Most Young Kings Get Their Heads Cut Off.”

Jean-Michel Basquiat Holding Engagement Ring, New York, NY Photographed by Allen Ginsberg