L
LisaB
Guest
I have a serious problem with this very common perception that the working poor are stuck in their situation and have limited opportunities to improve. I really believe in many (most?) cases they find themselves in these positions by choice. What stops a person working a minimum wage job from attending free night school to improve their skills? What about working towards a promotion at their current job, even without further education? What stops a cashier from becoming a shift manager, and moving up from there? We really need to value working smarter, not harder, as a society.There are, I think, two separate classes of people here that need to be distinguished.
One is the working poor, those who often work long hours with low pay because they need it to make ends meet. For this class, just working less isn’t really an option - they often have very limited opportunities and it can be very hard to get ahead when you’re working long hours to survive.
The other is those who have enough to meet their needs comfortably, but still work long hours for various reasons. Some might be motivated by greed; some by fear that if they don’t put in long hours they’ll be made fired in favor of someone who will; some simply by that being the expectation and not questioning it; some by debts or other expenses.