This exposé of poverty the world over reveals its shocking extent, the forms it takes, and its results. It probes the origins of poverty in attitudes and ideologies, norms and structures, and explains how statistical techniques and government subterfuges can hide poverty‘s real extent. It examines privatization and globalization as the most recent and widespread causes of poverty and looks at the divisive impact of the market-driven economy on medical services, education and social welfare. It illustrates international, national and local efforts to reduce or eliminate poverty, and considers the prospects for a drastic reduction in worldwide poverty in the future.
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'Macarov‘s cogent, revealing and constructive book ... does not minimize the enormity of the problem, its complexities, and the power of the vested interests who profit from the persistence of inter-generational poverty. While he does not hesitate to forecast the long continuation of poverty amidst comparative wealth, he insists we can make affordable gains. Must reading for all committed to reinventing our social and economic order.' Arthur B. Shostak, Professor of Sociology, Drexel University 'What the Market Does to People ... offers a brisk review of an astonishing range of issues raised by the global sweep of the free market. It explores the free market‘s grim consequences for people, especially for poor people.' Dr. Alvin Schorr, Case Western University 'David Macarov‘s latest book is broad in coverage, rich in insights, and both thoughtful and thought provoking. He confronts us with the challenge of understanding poverty. He demands that we should care.... This is a book that must be read by anyone interested in the human condition and its future fate in a world dominated by material desires and acquisitiveness, where there are some winners but many more losers.' John Dixon, Professor of International Social Policy, University of Plymouth 'An engaged, thoughtful and illuminating contribution to the debate on poverty. Based on an enormously rich body of empirical information, it contains critical, sometimes ironic, views which raise the basic question of the human condition under capitalism.' Piotr Salustowicz, Professor of Sociology and Social Work, University of Applied Sciences, Bielefeld
David Macarov is Professor Emeritus of Social Work at the Hebrew University in Israel. He is the author of numerous internationally published books in the field of social welfare, employment and poverty, and is on the editorial boards of several journals.
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