4.6 • 11K Ratings
🗓️ 21 April 2023
⏱️ 77 minutes
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0:00.0 | I'm Ezra Klein. This is The Ezra Conchell. |
0:23.0 | Books about poverty tend to be books about the poor. Matthew Desmond writes at in his |
0:28.1 | new book about poverty, poverty by America. But poverty by America is supposed to be something |
0:34.1 | a bit different. It's a book about everyone who benefits from the poor. Their existence, |
0:40.7 | their exploitation, all the people more comfortable with the perpetuation of poverty than with |
0:45.8 | what would be demanded of them for its abolition. So this is a book, in other words, not so much |
0:50.8 | about the poor as it is about the rest of us. Desmond is a sociologist, Princeton. He's |
0:56.2 | author of the Pulitzer Prize winning a Victed. And a Victed, which was a book about housing |
1:01.5 | markets, particularly for the poor, it was a smash hit. It's beloved by Desmond's fellow |
1:05.7 | social scientists. His new book has been a lot more controversial in part due to |
1:09.7 | disagreements about the way he reads the poverty data. And so we talk about that. There's |
1:14.3 | a good wonky bit here about how to measure poverty, but I also want to keep people focused |
1:18.8 | on the big picture here. America has a lot of poverty. It could, if it shows, have much, |
1:25.4 | less poverty. So the question of why that choice isn't made year after year, that is really |
1:31.2 | a question worth asking. As always, my email is reclineshowatnytimes.com. |
1:41.2 | Matt Desmond, welcome to the show. It's great to be here. So I want to begin with you, because |
1:48.0 | something you say in the book, which I didn't realize from past work, is that you come at the |
1:51.2 | subject from really your own perspective. Tell me a bit about your own history with poverty |
1:57.3 | and how it led you to the inquiry. I grew up in a little rubbed town in Arizona, northern |
2:02.2 | Arizona, Winslow, which is an eagle song. And my dad was a pastor and we never had a lot of money. |
2:08.8 | Things were tight. Our gas got turned off from time to time. And then we lost our home when |
2:14.4 | I was in college. And I think that experience to work this way inside of me made me see how |
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