In the U.S., social classes are graded a 1.5 because of the gap between the classes and how different lives it leads: it is unhealthy for the U.S. Social classes in the U.S. are mainly financially based because money equals power. And in 2010, the top 10 percent had around 46% share in the national income (Yglesias, Matthew). If someone was in the top 1 percent in America in 2012, they had about 23% of the total wealth in the U.S (Yglesias, Matthew). These statistics explain the inequality amongst the social classes which is not healthy for the lower classes because it’s hard for them to move up. It’s also not healthy to have an economy that is dependent on big cooperations and people with lots of money. If only the %0.1 go down because of something, the entire country …show more content…
For example, there are a lot of divisions between how people live as a lower class all the way through the upper class. There’s not only lower, middle, and upper classes but within those there is a lower and upper. An example of how it can be dividing is the fact that the upper-middle class could be in one neighborhood because of how expensive everything is (Reeves, Richard V). They would exclude poorer people or people who couldn’t afford it so they’d gentrify it. It’s interesting to know that 50% of U.S. citizens are considered in the middle-class while there are 29% living the lower class (Fry, Richard, and Rakesh Kochhar). If the majority is not upper class, why is it so hard to distribute money amongst everyone or have less of a physical and metaphorical divide? In Toledo, OH with a family of four and an average salary of 44,000 a year, you are considered middle-class (Fry, Richard, and Rakesh Kochhar). If the family was moved just to Columbus, OH, they would be in the lower class (Fry, Richard, and Rakesh Kochhar). What someone’s social class is dependent on their location when talking about generally what class you’re