please note:

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+ Please Note: These slides are meant to help students think about the material. They are not meant to replace reading the material or taking notes. Using these slides as your only means of garnering information could harm your ability to understand the content of this class. Please turn off cell phones, MP3 players and other technology of which I’m unaware.

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Please Note:. These slides are meant to help students think about the material. They are not meant to replace reading the material or taking notes. Using these slides as your only means of garnering information could harm your ability to understand the content of this class. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Please Note:

+Please Note:

These slides are meant to help students think about the material. They are not meant to replace reading the material or taking notes. Using these slides as your only means of garnering information could harm your ability to understand the content of this class.

• Please turn off cell phones, MP3 players and other technology of which I’m unaware.

Page 2: Please Note:

+What is Stratification?

The way political power, wealth, income, health and other opportunities are disparately organized.

Page 3: Please Note:

+Examples of Strat.

1) Global Priorities Basic education for everyone in the world would

cost 6 billion dollars more than what we presently spend.

Water sanitation for everyone in the world would cost 9 billion dollars more.

Basic health and nutrition for everyone in the world would cost 13 billion dollars more.

Ice cream sales in Europe is 11 billion dollars Pet foods in U.S. and Europe costs 17 billion dollars Military spending in the world is 780 billion

Page 4: Please Note:

+Examples of Strat

2)Global Stratification A) Number of children in the world is 2.2

billion but the number of children in poverty is 1 billion.

B) 10% of the worlds population controlled 54% of the worlds’ income in 2008 and 40% owned 5% of the worlds’ income.

C) 20% of the population in developed nations consume 86% of the worlds goods.

D) U.S. citizens consume 25% of worlds’ oil and is responsible for 25% of all carbon dioxide emissions (but is 4% of the world’s population).

Page 5: Please Note:

+ Examples of Global Strat. Continued…

Difference in wealth between richest and poorest countries:

1820: 3 to 1

1913: 11 to 1

1950: 35 to 1

1973: 35 to 1

1992: 72 to 1

2008: 100 to1

United Nations determined in 1998 that if 20 wealthiest people in the world gave 40% of their wealth away, there would be no more poverty.

Page 6: Please Note:

+U.S. Stratification

3) Income and Wealth Gap in U.S.

U.S. has largest gap between rich and poor. .

Page 7: Please Note:

+Average CEO Pay

Page 8: Please Note:
Page 9: Please Note:

+Stratification

1) How would you measure the well-being of Society?

2) Government defines well-being with two measures:

GNP– “is the total value of all final goods and services produced by a country's factors of production and sold on the market in a given time period. For example, because Mercedes-Benz is owned by Germans, its profits from its Belgian activities would count towards German GNP, but because the activities take place in Belgium it would count toward Belgian GDP. A Brit working in Paris would have her income count toward UK GNP but her output would be part of French GDP” (wikipedia).

Unemployment – Number of people in a population actively looking for employment.

Page 10: Please Note:

+GDP as Institutionalized

GDP NOT easy to measure! Product Approach: businesses fill out surveys of value added outputs

(outputs minus inputs).

Expenditure Approach: GDP (Y) is a sum of Consumption (C), Investment (I), Government Spending (G) and Net Exports (X - M).

Income Approach:

GDP = COE + GOS + GMI + TP & M - SP & M Compensation of employees (COE) measures the total remuneration to

employees for work done. It includes wages and salaries, as well as employer contributions to social security and other such programs.

Gross operating surplus (GOS) is the surplus due to owners of incorporated businesses. Often called profits, although only a subset of total costs are subtracted from gross output to calculate GOS.

Gross mixed income (GMI) is the same measure as GOS, but for unincorporated businesses. This often includes most small businesses.

This American Life: 1/3/10….44: 02 to 46:46 WATCH: http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2011/10/26/141741360/video-what-is-gdp

Page 11: Please Note:

+Standard of Living vs Quality of Life Economic well being of macro (society as a whole)

Versus

Overall sense of well being of micro (sum of individuals)

Page 12: Please Note:

+Quality of Life: VariablesWhat makes you happy? Health/physical comfort

Family relationships

Political stability

Security

Choices/opportunities (equality)

Fulfilling work

Spiritual fulfillment

Community support/involvement

Environment (climate)

Page 13: Please Note:

United Nations “Quality of Life Index”life expectancy, literacy, school enrollment and per capita gross domestic product in 182

countries.Very high Human DevelopmentVery high Human Development

Norway Australia Iceland Canada Ireland Netherlands Sweden France Switzerland Japan Luxembourg Finland United States Austria Spain Denmark Belgium Italy Liechtenstein New Zealand United Kingdom Germany Singapore Hong Kong, China (SAR) Greece

Low Human DevelopmentLow Human DevelopmentTogo Malawi Benin Timor-Leste Côte d'Ivoire Zambia Eritrea Senegal Rwanda Gambia Liberia Guinea Ethiopia Mozambique Guinea-Bissau Burundi Chad Congo (Democratic Republic of the)

Burkina Faso Burkina Faso

Mali Mali

Central African Republic Central African Republic

Sierra Leone Sierra Leone

Afghanistan Afghanistan

NigerNiger

Page 14: Please Note:

Why Norway ?1)Universal health-care, 2)Subsidized higher education and job re-training3)Comprehensive social security system (1-3 World Economic Forum). 4)Most peaceful country in the world ( Global Peace Index) 5)The world's most democratic country (Democracy Index).6)The world’s most gender equitable country (World economic forum)7)Accessible bike trails and public transportation.8)Subsidized Childcare

Page 15: Please Note:

+Stratification

3) Other measures of Well-being:

Genuine Progress Indicator:

http://www.rprogress.org/newprograms/sustIndi/gpi/index.shtml

Page 16: Please Note:

+Stratification

4) How does Capitalism Contribute to Stratification?

A) Structural InequalityBuilding Poverty into the Economic System.

Structural unemployment, unlivable wages, poverty, etc.

B) Why is U.S. Capitalism more stratified than other capitalist countries?Theoretically, stratification is fair if you have:Equal opportunity: Free competition and free information.

Practically, US is less likely to provide equal opportunity than any other industrialized nation in the world.

Page 17: Please Note:

+Stratification

Supply Side Economics: Social policy that favors businesses. Trickle Down Theory

Trade Agreements (What is free trade?)

Tax Policy (Transfer pricing? Capital Gains?)

Minimum Wage instead of Living Wage)

Bailouts,

Subsidies

Page 18: Please Note:

+When Is Stratification Justified?

In capitalism, how do we justify giving some people more than others?

Think of the IDEOLOGY that justifies this?

In which ways is this ideology contradicted by rules and other ideologies?

Page 19: Please Note:

+Meritocracy?

What is it?

Schooling in Capitalist America?