Deck 7: Confronting Economic Inequality

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Question
In 2011, a protest movement formed in New York City's Wall Street district. The movement, known as Occupy Wall Street, garnered global attention as participants protested the unequal distribution of wealth, or ______, in the United States.

A) economic enfranchisement
B) economic inequality
C) the culture of poverty
D) the culture of wealth
Use Space or
up arrow
down arrow
to flip the card.
Question
Economic inequality relates to and is affected by other forms of inequality, including ______.

A) social behavior
B) gender
C) work ethic
D) values
Question
When discussing economic inequality ______ refers to earnings, while ______ refers to assets people own.

A) income; wealth
B) wealth; income
C) capital; revenue
D) revenue; capital
Question
Fernando inherited stock in Google from his uncle, ensuring that he will likely have no financial troubles in his lifetime. This represents Fernando's ______.

A) income
B) wealth
C) revenue
D) capital
Question
What has been the result of the increase in CEO salaries over the past few decades?

A) Employee wages have been proportionately increased.
B) Employee wages have gone down to compensate.
C) CEOs have become more focused on short-term profits.
D) CEOs have a vested interest in the long-term results of the company.
Question
How does a high concentration of wealth at the top of the income pyramid impact the rest of the citizens in the United States?

A) It will improve the living standards of poorer citizens.
B) It will increase the number of citizens in the middle class.
C) It will leave fewer resources for the other citizens.
D) It will reduce competition for resources.
Question
How can wealth inequality be more pervasive than income inequality?

A) It is based on current employment opportunities.
B) It accumulates from one generation to the next.
C) It is based on gross rather than net pay.
D) It includes the value of benefits like health insurance.
Question
What is the Gini coefficient?

A) a measure of wealth inequality
B) a correlation between wealth and income
C) a measure of the causes of income disparities
D) a measure of income inequality
Question
Structural functionalists believe that inequality ______.

A) serves an important purpose in society
B) results in the wrong segment of society receiving the most rewards
C) is nonproductive and unnecessary for society
D) will not continue as globalization has more impact on society
Question
According to ______ theory, a young woman who starts her own medical practice in a town that was lacking one has a useful position in a society in which she should acquire wealth and prestige.

A) conflict
B) symbolic interactionism
C) structural functionalist
D) utilitarianism
Question
From a structural functionalist viewpoint, the positions most important to the functioning of society should gain the most in terms of income and prestige. This is a(n) ______.

A) meritocracy
B) capitalist utopia
C) socialist society
D) elite theory
Question
Bart has a doctorate degree and is managing a regional office of a pharmaceutical company. Brenda has a master's degree in biology and is a pharmaceutical sales rep. According to ______, Bart deserves to earn more money than Brenda.

A) the Gini coefficient
B) meritocracy
C) the qualifications scale
D) Karl Marx
Question
A recent graduate from Harvard medical school is the first child in his economically disfranchised home to receive a college degree. His talents have allowed him to enter a prestigious medical practice where he earns a large income. This is an example of ______.

A) oligarchy
B) meritocracy
C) democracy
D) socialism
Question
What is a critique of meritocracy theory?

A) Income does not reflect education levels.
B) Careers that fulfill functional roles are not adequately compensated.
C) One's social and economic advancement is due to family relations.
D) It assumes a level playing field for everyone in society.
Question
According to Marx, what is the key to wealth?

A) investing wisely
B) controlling the means of production
C) making a good living
D) a large inheritance
Question
Karl Marx argued that members of the proletariat class are convinced, through the control of media, that the bourgeoisies deserve their wealth and that if they work hard, they too can become rich. Marx termed this which of the following?

A) False consciousness
B) False dichotomy
C) False social construct
D) False ideology
Question
In Marx's conflict theory, those who owned the means of production were called ______.

A) the elite
B) the bourgeoisie
C) the proletariat
D) the capitalists
Question
Karl Marx cited the existence of two social classes in the modern society: the ______ who belong to the working class and the ______, or the wealthy owners of the means of production.

A) nouveau riche; serfs
B) proletariat; bourgeoisie
C) aristocrats; peasants
D) patricians; plebeians
Question
Max Weber's theory about class position focused on ______.

A) control of the means of production
B) salary and benefits
C) a person's own skills and social standing
D) inherited status
Question
According to Weber, the three traits that determine socioeconomic status are prestige, party, and ______.

A) wealth
B) income
C) family
D) class
Question
A student in an inner-city school works hard and gets good grades, but is not accepted into a prestigious college. A student in a wealthier school district does not work as hard or earn better grades, but is accepted to the prestigious college. How would Marx explain this?

A) Acceptance into a prestigious college is based on meritocracy, not grades.
B) Acceptance into a prestigious college is based on how well each student would function in that environment.
C) Acceptance into a prestigious college is based on which student most identifies as an honor student.
D) Acceptance into a prestigious college is based on social class.
Question
Society is based on a hierarchy organized according to social status and prestige, called ______.

A) social stratification
B) forced inequality
C) structured advantage
D) meritocracy
Question
All social institutions have advantages and disadvantages that create social stratification. These advantages and disadvantages are called ______.

A) systemic accumulation
B) fixed organization
C) structured inequalities
D) structured variables
Question
What is the most extreme form of stratification in that it offers no chance for mobility?

A) the estate system
B) slavery
C) the serf system
D) the class-based system
Question
A form of stratification in which individuals own other individuals as property and have the legal right to dispense with that property as they wish is called ______.

A) the estate system
B) slavery
C) the serf system
D) the class-based system
Question
In Elias's society, laws give people power based on social standing and there is limited social mobility. Most people have the same social position as their parents. This is ______.

A) the estate system
B) slavery
C) the serf system
D) the class-based system
Question
The form of social stratification prevalent in the United States is the ______ system.

A) estate
B) caste
C) serf
D) class-based
Question
Which social system confines individuals to a social group for life and sets strict parameters for relationships between these different social groups?

A) caste system
B) estate system
C) class-based system
D) gender stratification system
Question
A country has an estate system in place. How would social mobility occur in this country?

A) The lower levels of the system would likely remain in the same social position as their parents with little opportunity for advancement.
B) The lower levels of the system would be able to gain status with hard work and opportunity.
C) The lower levels of the system would have the freedom to vote and choose their professions.
D) The lower levels of the system would be confined to a specific lower class without the ability to improve.
Question
What term is defined as distinctions among people in terms of their income, occupation, and education?

A) class profiling
B) social structure
C) social class
D) status
Question
Members of the corporate community who dominate politics in Washington, D. C. are of which class?

A) middle class
B) power elite
C) upper class
D) entrepreneur class
Question
In a(n) ______ class, children are not typically exposed to people from other social classes.

A) lower
B) middle
C) upper-middle
D) upper
Question
The wealthy parents of two young children have enrolled them in private school, provided them with a private tutor, and offered many opportunities for extracurricular activities. This process is referred to as ______.

A) homogamy
B) social stratification
C) social class reproduction
D) economic equality
Question
How does the power elite impact the United States?

A) They have the strongest buying power and influence which products are sold.
B) They influence political decisions by influencing the politicians and their voters.
C) They make the most charitable contributions and have the greatest impact on lower status as a result.
D) They work to equalize the distribution of wealth in the country.
Question
Today, the middle class in the United States is ______.

A) in poverty
B) growing
C) shrinking
D) remaining steady
Question
The ______ class encompasses those who earn between $24,003 and $45,600 and comprises 20% of households.

A) working
B) poor
C) middle income
D) lower middle income
Question
To be considered "near poverty," you are earning ______ of the poverty level.

A) 101%
B) 110%
C) 150%
D) 200%
Question
Oscar Lewis's term ______ describes the beliefs, values, and attitudes of those living in poverty.

A) social regression
B) deep poverty
C) cycle of poverty
D) culture of poverty
Question
What theory suggests that the poor could move out of poverty if they just worked harder and changed their attitudes, or as some say, "pull themselves up by their bootstraps"?

A) conflict theory
B) feminist theory
C) culture of poverty
D) structural functionalism
Question
Which example demonstrates intergenerational mobility?

A) A young female graduates from college and gets a high paying job at her mother's law firm.
B) A young male grows up in poverty and eventually becomes CEO of a large company.
C) An older male is laid off due to a recession.
D) A female is promoted to CEO after working for the same company for 25 years.
Question
Which of these is an individual experiencing upward mobility?

A) A college graduate from a working-class family becomes a supervisor in a factory.
B) A woman works in business management until she has children and decides to stay home.
C) A man graduates from law school so he can become an attorney like his father.
D) An individual from a working-class family loses his factory job, but goes back to school to become an accountant.
Question
A company moves most of its production to another country in order to cut costs. As a result, most of the factory workers lose their jobs. What has occurred?

A) structural mobility
B) intergenerational mobility
C) upward mobility
D) downward mobility
Question
Which statement about college achievement is true?

A) There is an achievement gap between students at the top and the bottom of the economic pyramid.
B) The most important factor for achievement is the willingness to work hard; it's not where you start, it's where you finish that matters.
C) Test scores for high and middle income students are comparable, but they fall off for lower income students.
D) Students from middle income families are the most likely to attend and graduate from good colleges.
Question
Almost a third of students who take out loans for college ______.

A) complete their degrees
B) end up borrowing from their parents to pay it back
C) go on to add to their debt with graduate school
D) fail to complete their degrees
Question
One reason for historically high housing costs is ______.

A) the recent federal tax cut favoring the wealthy
B) policies that favor renters over homeowners
C) more landlords with fewer properties
D) the decline in public housing
Question
How does the neighborhood you live in affect your life expectancy?

A) It has very little effect; the geography you live in matters more.
B) The safer and healthier your environment is, the better chance you have to live a longer life.
C) The people you choose to surround yourself with impact your lifestyle, and hence your longevity.
D) Better neighborhoods offer more economic opportunity, which impacts life expectancy.
Question
Which of these nations is considered an upper middle-income nation?

A) the United States
B) Canada
C) Mexico
D) India
Question
Ronald Reagan's economic policies that cut corporate taxes and weakened regulations on businesses in the belief that it would benefit workers was called ______ economics.

A) laissez-faire
B) capitalist
C) trickle down
D) welfare
Question
The Trump administration's $2.3 trillion tax cut mostly benefited ______.

A) small businesses
B) middle income families
C) the top 1%
D) single parents
Question
Globally, even if individuals work hard to achieve, this success is largely impacted by ______.

A) trade practices
B) government policies
C) outsourcing
D) inherited wealth
Question
President Johnson carried out which of these programs under his War on Poverty?

A) the federal work study program
B) the Peace Corp
C) the right of unions to bargain with employers
D) the federal minimum wage
Question
What president established federal programs that established a safety net for the needy and put millions of people to work?

A) Roosevelt
B) Reagan
C) Truman
D) Obama
Question
What program, enacted in the 1930s, established unemployment insurance, social security, and the federal minimum wage?

A) the Great Experiment
B) the War on Poverty
C) the Great Society
D) the New Deal
Question
Two ways the text suggests for reducing inequality in the United States are raising the federal minimum wage or establishing ______, as Canada and Finland have implemented.

A) universal healthcare
B) Medicaid expansion
C) a universal basic income
D) mandatory early childhood education
Question
The poverty rate has ______ for the past 40 years, and economic inequality has ______.

A) remained low; decreased
B) remained high; increased
C) remained high; decreased
D) decreased; decreased
Question
Wealth refers to all earnings during a lifetime.
Question
Members of families with generational wealth and income have advantages over families with only income.
Question
The income gap in the United States is more significant than the wealth gap.
Question
According to the structural functionalist perspective, inequality impedes the ability to get the work of society done.
Question
In a meritocracy, movement to upper social classes occurs through hard work.
Question
Structured inequalities are the advantages and disadvantages built into social institutions.
Question
In an estate system there is no possibility of movement from one class to another.
Question
Intergenerational mobility occurs as an individual experiences a change in social class during their lifetime.
Question
Structural mobility occurs as a result of changes in the economy that create or end jobs for workers.
Question
Millennials are the only generation in which income has kept up with increasing rental and housing costs.
Question
The small number of people who are considered the richest in the world hold about half of the world's wealth.
Question
National and global policies can mitigate or increase inequality.
Question
Reagan's economic policies were successful in moving wealth from businesses to workers.
Question
More than half of taxpayers did not see any benefit from the Trump administration's changes in the tax laws.
Question
Nations in the EU have higher tax rates but better social support programs than the United States.
Question
What is one negative implication of wealth concentration at the top of the income pyramid?
Question
According to Marx, how does ideology influence inequality?
Question
Describe and give an example of the caste system.
Question
What are the five social classes delineated in the text, and which one has the most members in the United States?
Question
How does the United States compare to other nations in terms of potential for upward mobility?
Question
Compare Marx and Weber's views of inequality. How do these theories compare to those of structural functionalists?
Question
Define and explain the impact of structured inequalities on stratification systems.
Question
There is a diversity of opinion in the United States about whether the culture of poverty thesis is accurate. Describe the culture of poverty, and explain what your stand is on this debate. Support your position.
Question
What are some things that have increased structural mobility in the United States, and what is the impact of this?
Question
The United States has a higher rate of income inequality than many other nations. Using the information from the chapter, why do you think this is true? What can be done about it?
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Deck 7: Confronting Economic Inequality
1
In 2011, a protest movement formed in New York City's Wall Street district. The movement, known as Occupy Wall Street, garnered global attention as participants protested the unequal distribution of wealth, or ______, in the United States.

A) economic enfranchisement
B) economic inequality
C) the culture of poverty
D) the culture of wealth
B
2
Economic inequality relates to and is affected by other forms of inequality, including ______.

A) social behavior
B) gender
C) work ethic
D) values
B
3
When discussing economic inequality ______ refers to earnings, while ______ refers to assets people own.

A) income; wealth
B) wealth; income
C) capital; revenue
D) revenue; capital
A
4
Fernando inherited stock in Google from his uncle, ensuring that he will likely have no financial troubles in his lifetime. This represents Fernando's ______.

A) income
B) wealth
C) revenue
D) capital
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
What has been the result of the increase in CEO salaries over the past few decades?

A) Employee wages have been proportionately increased.
B) Employee wages have gone down to compensate.
C) CEOs have become more focused on short-term profits.
D) CEOs have a vested interest in the long-term results of the company.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
How does a high concentration of wealth at the top of the income pyramid impact the rest of the citizens in the United States?

A) It will improve the living standards of poorer citizens.
B) It will increase the number of citizens in the middle class.
C) It will leave fewer resources for the other citizens.
D) It will reduce competition for resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
How can wealth inequality be more pervasive than income inequality?

A) It is based on current employment opportunities.
B) It accumulates from one generation to the next.
C) It is based on gross rather than net pay.
D) It includes the value of benefits like health insurance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
What is the Gini coefficient?

A) a measure of wealth inequality
B) a correlation between wealth and income
C) a measure of the causes of income disparities
D) a measure of income inequality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Structural functionalists believe that inequality ______.

A) serves an important purpose in society
B) results in the wrong segment of society receiving the most rewards
C) is nonproductive and unnecessary for society
D) will not continue as globalization has more impact on society
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
According to ______ theory, a young woman who starts her own medical practice in a town that was lacking one has a useful position in a society in which she should acquire wealth and prestige.

A) conflict
B) symbolic interactionism
C) structural functionalist
D) utilitarianism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
From a structural functionalist viewpoint, the positions most important to the functioning of society should gain the most in terms of income and prestige. This is a(n) ______.

A) meritocracy
B) capitalist utopia
C) socialist society
D) elite theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Bart has a doctorate degree and is managing a regional office of a pharmaceutical company. Brenda has a master's degree in biology and is a pharmaceutical sales rep. According to ______, Bart deserves to earn more money than Brenda.

A) the Gini coefficient
B) meritocracy
C) the qualifications scale
D) Karl Marx
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
A recent graduate from Harvard medical school is the first child in his economically disfranchised home to receive a college degree. His talents have allowed him to enter a prestigious medical practice where he earns a large income. This is an example of ______.

A) oligarchy
B) meritocracy
C) democracy
D) socialism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
What is a critique of meritocracy theory?

A) Income does not reflect education levels.
B) Careers that fulfill functional roles are not adequately compensated.
C) One's social and economic advancement is due to family relations.
D) It assumes a level playing field for everyone in society.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
According to Marx, what is the key to wealth?

A) investing wisely
B) controlling the means of production
C) making a good living
D) a large inheritance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Karl Marx argued that members of the proletariat class are convinced, through the control of media, that the bourgeoisies deserve their wealth and that if they work hard, they too can become rich. Marx termed this which of the following?

A) False consciousness
B) False dichotomy
C) False social construct
D) False ideology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In Marx's conflict theory, those who owned the means of production were called ______.

A) the elite
B) the bourgeoisie
C) the proletariat
D) the capitalists
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Karl Marx cited the existence of two social classes in the modern society: the ______ who belong to the working class and the ______, or the wealthy owners of the means of production.

A) nouveau riche; serfs
B) proletariat; bourgeoisie
C) aristocrats; peasants
D) patricians; plebeians
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Max Weber's theory about class position focused on ______.

A) control of the means of production
B) salary and benefits
C) a person's own skills and social standing
D) inherited status
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
According to Weber, the three traits that determine socioeconomic status are prestige, party, and ______.

A) wealth
B) income
C) family
D) class
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A student in an inner-city school works hard and gets good grades, but is not accepted into a prestigious college. A student in a wealthier school district does not work as hard or earn better grades, but is accepted to the prestigious college. How would Marx explain this?

A) Acceptance into a prestigious college is based on meritocracy, not grades.
B) Acceptance into a prestigious college is based on how well each student would function in that environment.
C) Acceptance into a prestigious college is based on which student most identifies as an honor student.
D) Acceptance into a prestigious college is based on social class.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Society is based on a hierarchy organized according to social status and prestige, called ______.

A) social stratification
B) forced inequality
C) structured advantage
D) meritocracy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
All social institutions have advantages and disadvantages that create social stratification. These advantages and disadvantages are called ______.

A) systemic accumulation
B) fixed organization
C) structured inequalities
D) structured variables
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
What is the most extreme form of stratification in that it offers no chance for mobility?

A) the estate system
B) slavery
C) the serf system
D) the class-based system
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
A form of stratification in which individuals own other individuals as property and have the legal right to dispense with that property as they wish is called ______.

A) the estate system
B) slavery
C) the serf system
D) the class-based system
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
In Elias's society, laws give people power based on social standing and there is limited social mobility. Most people have the same social position as their parents. This is ______.

A) the estate system
B) slavery
C) the serf system
D) the class-based system
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The form of social stratification prevalent in the United States is the ______ system.

A) estate
B) caste
C) serf
D) class-based
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which social system confines individuals to a social group for life and sets strict parameters for relationships between these different social groups?

A) caste system
B) estate system
C) class-based system
D) gender stratification system
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
A country has an estate system in place. How would social mobility occur in this country?

A) The lower levels of the system would likely remain in the same social position as their parents with little opportunity for advancement.
B) The lower levels of the system would be able to gain status with hard work and opportunity.
C) The lower levels of the system would have the freedom to vote and choose their professions.
D) The lower levels of the system would be confined to a specific lower class without the ability to improve.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
What term is defined as distinctions among people in terms of their income, occupation, and education?

A) class profiling
B) social structure
C) social class
D) status
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Members of the corporate community who dominate politics in Washington, D. C. are of which class?

A) middle class
B) power elite
C) upper class
D) entrepreneur class
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
In a(n) ______ class, children are not typically exposed to people from other social classes.

A) lower
B) middle
C) upper-middle
D) upper
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The wealthy parents of two young children have enrolled them in private school, provided them with a private tutor, and offered many opportunities for extracurricular activities. This process is referred to as ______.

A) homogamy
B) social stratification
C) social class reproduction
D) economic equality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
How does the power elite impact the United States?

A) They have the strongest buying power and influence which products are sold.
B) They influence political decisions by influencing the politicians and their voters.
C) They make the most charitable contributions and have the greatest impact on lower status as a result.
D) They work to equalize the distribution of wealth in the country.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Today, the middle class in the United States is ______.

A) in poverty
B) growing
C) shrinking
D) remaining steady
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The ______ class encompasses those who earn between $24,003 and $45,600 and comprises 20% of households.

A) working
B) poor
C) middle income
D) lower middle income
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
To be considered "near poverty," you are earning ______ of the poverty level.

A) 101%
B) 110%
C) 150%
D) 200%
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Oscar Lewis's term ______ describes the beliefs, values, and attitudes of those living in poverty.

A) social regression
B) deep poverty
C) cycle of poverty
D) culture of poverty
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
What theory suggests that the poor could move out of poverty if they just worked harder and changed their attitudes, or as some say, "pull themselves up by their bootstraps"?

A) conflict theory
B) feminist theory
C) culture of poverty
D) structural functionalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Which example demonstrates intergenerational mobility?

A) A young female graduates from college and gets a high paying job at her mother's law firm.
B) A young male grows up in poverty and eventually becomes CEO of a large company.
C) An older male is laid off due to a recession.
D) A female is promoted to CEO after working for the same company for 25 years.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Which of these is an individual experiencing upward mobility?

A) A college graduate from a working-class family becomes a supervisor in a factory.
B) A woman works in business management until she has children and decides to stay home.
C) A man graduates from law school so he can become an attorney like his father.
D) An individual from a working-class family loses his factory job, but goes back to school to become an accountant.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
A company moves most of its production to another country in order to cut costs. As a result, most of the factory workers lose their jobs. What has occurred?

A) structural mobility
B) intergenerational mobility
C) upward mobility
D) downward mobility
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Which statement about college achievement is true?

A) There is an achievement gap between students at the top and the bottom of the economic pyramid.
B) The most important factor for achievement is the willingness to work hard; it's not where you start, it's where you finish that matters.
C) Test scores for high and middle income students are comparable, but they fall off for lower income students.
D) Students from middle income families are the most likely to attend and graduate from good colleges.
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44
Almost a third of students who take out loans for college ______.

A) complete their degrees
B) end up borrowing from their parents to pay it back
C) go on to add to their debt with graduate school
D) fail to complete their degrees
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45
One reason for historically high housing costs is ______.

A) the recent federal tax cut favoring the wealthy
B) policies that favor renters over homeowners
C) more landlords with fewer properties
D) the decline in public housing
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46
How does the neighborhood you live in affect your life expectancy?

A) It has very little effect; the geography you live in matters more.
B) The safer and healthier your environment is, the better chance you have to live a longer life.
C) The people you choose to surround yourself with impact your lifestyle, and hence your longevity.
D) Better neighborhoods offer more economic opportunity, which impacts life expectancy.
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47
Which of these nations is considered an upper middle-income nation?

A) the United States
B) Canada
C) Mexico
D) India
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48
Ronald Reagan's economic policies that cut corporate taxes and weakened regulations on businesses in the belief that it would benefit workers was called ______ economics.

A) laissez-faire
B) capitalist
C) trickle down
D) welfare
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49
The Trump administration's $2.3 trillion tax cut mostly benefited ______.

A) small businesses
B) middle income families
C) the top 1%
D) single parents
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50
Globally, even if individuals work hard to achieve, this success is largely impacted by ______.

A) trade practices
B) government policies
C) outsourcing
D) inherited wealth
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51
President Johnson carried out which of these programs under his War on Poverty?

A) the federal work study program
B) the Peace Corp
C) the right of unions to bargain with employers
D) the federal minimum wage
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52
What president established federal programs that established a safety net for the needy and put millions of people to work?

A) Roosevelt
B) Reagan
C) Truman
D) Obama
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53
What program, enacted in the 1930s, established unemployment insurance, social security, and the federal minimum wage?

A) the Great Experiment
B) the War on Poverty
C) the Great Society
D) the New Deal
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54
Two ways the text suggests for reducing inequality in the United States are raising the federal minimum wage or establishing ______, as Canada and Finland have implemented.

A) universal healthcare
B) Medicaid expansion
C) a universal basic income
D) mandatory early childhood education
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55
The poverty rate has ______ for the past 40 years, and economic inequality has ______.

A) remained low; decreased
B) remained high; increased
C) remained high; decreased
D) decreased; decreased
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56
Wealth refers to all earnings during a lifetime.
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57
Members of families with generational wealth and income have advantages over families with only income.
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58
The income gap in the United States is more significant than the wealth gap.
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59
According to the structural functionalist perspective, inequality impedes the ability to get the work of society done.
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60
In a meritocracy, movement to upper social classes occurs through hard work.
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61
Structured inequalities are the advantages and disadvantages built into social institutions.
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62
In an estate system there is no possibility of movement from one class to another.
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63
Intergenerational mobility occurs as an individual experiences a change in social class during their lifetime.
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64
Structural mobility occurs as a result of changes in the economy that create or end jobs for workers.
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65
Millennials are the only generation in which income has kept up with increasing rental and housing costs.
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66
The small number of people who are considered the richest in the world hold about half of the world's wealth.
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67
National and global policies can mitigate or increase inequality.
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68
Reagan's economic policies were successful in moving wealth from businesses to workers.
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69
More than half of taxpayers did not see any benefit from the Trump administration's changes in the tax laws.
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70
Nations in the EU have higher tax rates but better social support programs than the United States.
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71
What is one negative implication of wealth concentration at the top of the income pyramid?
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72
According to Marx, how does ideology influence inequality?
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73
Describe and give an example of the caste system.
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74
What are the five social classes delineated in the text, and which one has the most members in the United States?
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75
How does the United States compare to other nations in terms of potential for upward mobility?
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76
Compare Marx and Weber's views of inequality. How do these theories compare to those of structural functionalists?
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77
Define and explain the impact of structured inequalities on stratification systems.
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78
There is a diversity of opinion in the United States about whether the culture of poverty thesis is accurate. Describe the culture of poverty, and explain what your stand is on this debate. Support your position.
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79
What are some things that have increased structural mobility in the United States, and what is the impact of this?
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80
The United States has a higher rate of income inequality than many other nations. Using the information from the chapter, why do you think this is true? What can be done about it?
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