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Fonte: The Economist 26-09-2019 Clique na imagem para ampliar |
After the demographic changes over the past decade, there
are now more poor people in Chicago’s southern suburbs than in the city itself.
The same is true for the rest of America: a poor person is now much likelier to
be found in the suburbs than in the big cities. According to the census taken
in 2000, 10.5m, or 31%, of all poor people lived in the suburbs of America’s
largest cities. The most recent estimates from the Census Bureau show that the
number of poor people living in those suburbs has exploded to 16.3m, an
increase of 56%. Unlike urban poverty, which has long been associated with
destitute blacks, suburban poverty is more pronounced among poor whites and
Hispanics. (..)
2019-09-30