So similar to what you said yesterday, if we can agree on what the real dynamics are here, we actually discuss policy in a civil, and perhaps productive manner.
Unfortunately, I doubt that agreement will be reached on "what the real dynamics are." The data simply aren't there.
The two major camps seem to be :
1) poverty is a matter of chance and circumstance
2) poverty is a result of personal character and choices
The problem is that we have strong evidence that chance and circumstance have a strong effect on personal character and choices -- and similarly, the chance and circumstance are strongly affected by personal character and choices. So even the simplistic "well, isn't it both?" isn't a satisfactory answer....
Just as a simple example, let's look at a key aspect of "personal character" -- the ability to delay gratification. This is strongly tied to financial and other success in the psychological and demographic literature. This is what lets a successful student turn down a chance to go drinking and dancing on Saturday night because there's a big test coming up on Monday. This is what lets a girl not have sex on this date because she forgot to bring contraceptives, and therefore not get pregnant. And, of course, this is what lets a young employee save $100 a month on a barely minimum wage job until they have enough to open their own business and pay themselves.
But key to that ability is the knowledge that you'll still have what you delayed. It does me no good to put $100 in the bank if I expect the bank to close in six months. It does me no good to stay home and study if the teacher has already told me I will fail the course no matter what I do.
The American humourist P. J. O'Rourke had an interesting chapter in one of his books that epitomized this. Politically, of course, he's an arch-conservative, and he was writing on conditions in some public housing projects of New Jersey or something. He was -- rightly -- appalled at the maintenance conditions there, because the government didn't bother to clean up or fix anything, and the tenants had no incentive to. At the time, there was a proposal being floated around to "privatize" the projects; give the welfare residents relatively low-interest mortgages on the apartments that they already lived in. The idea was that the residents would pay the same in mortgage payments that they were currently paying in rent, but they would build equity. After 30 years, they would own the place outright -- and in the meantime, they would have incentive to keep the place up, repair it, improve it, &c. Sounds like a win all around, yes?
Of course, there were a few downsides, mainly in the labor that would be needed in upkeep, repair, and improvement. "Sweat-equity" is the term usually applied to this. But many of the people involved were only intermittently employed anyway; they could at least get some financial benefit in equity out of the time they weren't "working."
The residents would have none of it. He spoke to them, outlined all of the financial advantages that would accrue, and they politely but firmly declined to even discuss it. From this, he concluded that they were all stupid (in traditional Republican fashion).
The actual story, as I saw it, is considerably different and rather more complex. When this article was written, the first way of "property forfeiture" cases was in full swing. Your boyfriend is arrested for possession of drugs?
You lose your car. There wasn't much point in opening a bank account, because that just gave The Man more to seize. You get busted for something (a routine hazard of life in the projects), the judge just fines you more heavily. The more money you have, the less you're likely to keep. What's the point in sweating to build equity when your hard-earned labor is likely to disappear in the stroke of a pen?
There's no
point in delaying gratification if there's little chance of it being around later to enjoy.
So the ability to delay gratification is only a positive in certain circumstances. Character drives circumstance, but circumstance also drives character. Under a condition where you knew your money would be worthless in six months, I doubt any of you would make long-term investments, eiher.....