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Are Walmart's Chinese Factories As Bad As Apple's?
Illustration: John HendrixOn a warm, sticky winter morning, I waited nervously in a parking lot in Foshan, a city in southeastern China's smog-choked Pearl River delta, for a man I'd never met. His…
AUTHOR:Andy Kroll
SOURCE:Mother Jones
LENGTH: 6 minutes (1560 words)
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'Nickel and Dimed,' Ten Years Later
At the time I wrote Nickel and Dimed, I wasn’t sure how many people it directly applied to—only that the official definition of poverty was way off the mark, since it defined an individual earning $7 an hour, as I did on average, as well out of poverty. But three months after the book was published, the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C., issued a report entitled “Hardships in America: The Real Story of Working Families,” which found an astounding 29% of American families living in what could be more reasonably defined as poverty, meaning that they earned less than a barebones budget covering housing, child care, health care, food, transportation, and taxes—though not, it should be noted, any entertainment, meals out, cable TV, Internet service, vacations, or holiday gifts. Twenty-nine percent is a minority, but not a reassuringly small one, and other studies in the early 2000s came up with similar figures.
AUTHOR:Barbara Ehrenreich
SOURCE:TomDispatch
PUBLISHED: Aug. 9, 2011
LENGTH: 15 minutes (3933 words)
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