History, asked by upendraprasad600, 10 months ago

describe the discrimination on the basis of economic in india contact what steps have been taken by the government to reduce it

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Answered by deep4323
1

Explanation:

Almost three years to the date since Occupy Wall Street first raised the consciousness of Americans about the wide economic disparities between the richest one percent versus the 99 percent of U.S. earners, new Federal Reserve data confirms that wealth and income inequality in the U.S. is accelerating.

Results from the Fed's 2013 Survey of Consumer Finances show that the top 3 percent own 54.4 percent of America's wealth, an increase of almost 45 percent since 1989 and the bottom 90 percent own only 24.7 percent of wealth, a drop of 33.2 percent over the same time period. Similarly, the share of total income for the top 3 percent of families rose when compared to 2010 but the bottom 90 percent of families saw their share of total income declinePerhaps not surprisingly, the survey found significant disparities by race, class, homeownership status and education; with income and wealth increasing for non-Hispanic whites, the rich, homeowners and those with more education while it decreased for blacks, lower income households, renters and those with less than a college education.

While discouraging, it is important for Americans to understand that inequality is not the inevitable side effect of capitalism. Public policy can help to reduce inequality and address poverty without slowing U.S. economic growth.

Toward this goal, researchers from the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society at UC Berkeley point to the following six evidence-based policy solutions that can have a positive effect on reversing rising inequality, closing economic disparities among subgroups and enhancing economic mobility for all:

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