Poverty In Biff Loman's Death Of A Salesman

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“We think sometimes that poverty is only being hungry, naked and homeless. The poverty of being unwanted, unloved, and uncared for is the greatest poverty”-Mother Teresa. As of 2014 forty-seven million people live in poverty in the USA alone. In the whole world 1.6 billion people live in poverty. It’s almost unfathomable that there are so many people who live like this. This creates an economic inequity between people and thus creates social classes that eventually lead the gap to grow larger and larger. This then makes it almost impossible for people to move up from poverty. In the play The Death of a Salesman one of the main characters, Biff Loman steals many things throughout the play such as a pen and a suit and lands himself in jail for …show more content…
The key is to make sure that the money that is invested into the education system actually makes its way to the students and not to meaningless other things. If anything it should be invested in programs that help the youth to pursue higher education so that this cycle that we see can be broken and allow them to further themselves in life. Another solution is that maybe we could find investor to help out with these low performing schools. If they can take these teenagers off of the street then less of them would actually go to prison. That would lead to a decrease in the prison population and it would eventually work out in which the money that was spent on the inmates would go back to the students. Despite what policemen say(), the vast amount of funding placed into state penitentiaries as opposed to public schooling and programs for impoverished communities within the united states has a negative effect on the youth. It creates an economic inequality that will eventually drag them into a cycle of poverty and the only solution to stop this would be to make adjustments on where the money actually goes and if it actually reaches the …show more content…
Nearly 75% of imprisonment spending happens at a state level, where dollars are drawn from a general fund that is ment to pay for a range of public needs including health care public assisting and education (Steven Hawks). California spends about $47,000 per inmate while only spending about $9,000 for every student enrolled in schools as of recently(Prann). If you take a look back at 2008 California was spending $49,000 per inmate. If you break down those numbers the states was spending about $20,000 on just security alone and almost $8,000 on medical which include check ups, medicine, and even surgeries