Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Poverty in Liberia
What is poverty? To be little is to be underprivileged, to live a lifestyle non deemed a proper and healthy one to to the highest degree, and, as is the main connotation, to have an insufficient amount of money. Fourteen grades of civilian war has left the infrastructure of Liberia in ruin, affecting body of water supply, sanitation, food bail and livelihood in general. This has left Liberia the third poorest country in the world, in terms of GDP per capita. In actuality, there argon only dickens classes in Liberia the very rich and the very poor, with the majority classified as the latter.A reporter from the African Development Bank Group estimated that only 4. 8% of Liberias population could be considered middle class (the lowest part on the continent). There is no middle class, but rather, a excogitateing poor. Infrastructure The civil war decimated the infrastructure of Liberia, go away nigh Liberians nihility of safe drinking water, access to proper sanitation facilities, electricity, and roads. More than half of all Liberians are without access to clean water and functioning sanitation facilities. 8% of all deaths in Liberia are caused by deficiencies in water and sanitation. Hepatitis A, typhoid fever, and bacterial and protozoic diarrhea are very pathogenic diseases that are found in Liberias unsanitary water. As for electricity, most of Liberians live in the dark, with a choice few relying on aloud and unreliable diesel generators. Paved roads are scarce as well, stunting transportation and, in turn, affecting the economy in Liberia. not Enough Money 76% of Liberians are now living beneath the poverty line ($1/day) and 52% live in uttermost(a) poverty ($0. 50/day).Most workers in the middle class, or the working poor in other words, of Liberia earn $100 a month sum total $30 of transportation stipend and a bag of rice. $300 a month is an upper-middle salary, about four generation more than what policemen earns, and 10 times mor e than what half of all Liberians live on. These half of the Liberians live on the dollar-a-day policy. The GDP per capita in Liberia is $392, which is lower than all great deals in the world buy food for Zimbabwe and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This means that the average person in Liberia only makes around $400 dollars a year.Not Enough Food Not bountiful money means not enough food, especially since the previous civil war destroyed the agricultural sector of Liberia. Before the civil war, most Liberians lived off the land, making a living off of agriculture. Since the war attack took up so much of the time and hard work of Liberians, this changed, leaving them reliant upon expensive exported goods. Over 60% of households currently report not being able to afford three meals a day, and 40% of Liberian children experience stunted growth. 20% percent of them are underweight. 35%of Liberians are malnourished.Human Rights In Liberia most poor children work for family bu sinesses. The families sometimes have no money to hire employees and so they use their own family members instead. They may work in farms, or take part in street trading, or domestic work. Some are even trafficked out of the country from awkward areas to urban areas or to diamond mining areas for purposes of sexual exploitation or forced labor. These acts are with the sole purpose of making money. Liberia is the oldest free nation in Africa, is rich in resources, and was a refuge for African American slaves in the 1800s.Friction between the newcomers and natives led to turmoil, eventually landing Liberia in the roll as one of the poorest counties in the world. Poverty paints all aspects of Liberian life, from water and food to human dignity. Is there a brighter future for Liberia? Im sure by the time this man gets your age, he will live a go life than what I have lived said a 55 year old man living int West Point, the poorest slum in Monrovia, to a reporter, as he hugged his gran dson. As long as the Liberian people have hope, there is hope for Liberia.
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