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POVERTY COSTS: THE PERSONAL AND SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF POVERTY

NCJ Number
146173
Journal
Corrective and Social Psychiatry and Journal of Behavior Technology Methods and Therapy Volume: 38 Issue: 1 Dated: (January 1992) Pages: 9-14
Author(s)
E F Vacha
Date Published
1992
Length
6 pages
Annotation
This literature review summarizes the research on the personal, social, and economic effects of poverty on physical health, mental health, crime, and education.
Abstract
Although much remains to be learned about poverty costs, they are clearly high. When both indirect and direct economic costs, as well as personal and social costs, are examined, the evidence shows that poverty is a serious drain on the Nation's economic, social, and personal resources. Also, because poverty is linked to higher health care costs, loss of worker productivity, higher crime rates, lost tax revenue, and the under use of many talented youth, its costs are experienced by all citizens. Poverty costs must also be measured in terms of the human misery associated with physical and mental illness, violence, and shattered dreams. The poverty costs borne by children -- crime victimization, illness, child abuse and neglect, lost educational opportunities, and impaired mental and physical development -- are very high. 49 references

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