the state of one who
lacks a usual or socially acceptable amount of money or material possessions. Poverty is
said to exist when people lack the means to satisfy their basic needs. In this context,
the identification of poor people first requires a determination of what constitutes basic
needs. These may be defined as narrowly as "those necessary for survival" or as
broadly as "those reflecting the prevailing standard of living in the
community." The first criterion would cover only those people near the borderline of
starvation or death from exposure; the second would extend to people whose nutrition,
housing, and clothing, though adequate to preserve life, do not measure up to those of the
population as a whole. The problem of definition is further compounded by the noneconomic
connotations that the word poverty has acquired. Poverty has been associated, for example,
with poor health, low levels of education or skills, an inability or an unwillingness to
work, high rates of disruptive or disorderly behaviour, and improvidence. While these
attributes have often been found to exist with poverty, their inclusion in a definition of
poverty would tend to obscure the relation between them and the inability to provide for
one's basic needs. Whatever definition one uses, authorities and laypersons alike commonly
assume that the effects of poverty are harmful to both individuals and society.
Although poverty is a
phenomenon as old as human history, its significance changed in the 20th century. Under
traditional (i.e., non-industrialized) modes of economic production, widespread
poverty had been accepted as inevitable. The total output of goods and services, even if
equally distributed, would still have been insufficient to give the entire population a
comfortable standard of living by prevailing standards. In the 20th century, however, this
ceased to be the case in the highly industrialized countries, whose national outputs were
sufficient to raise the entire population to a comfortable level if the necessary
redistribution could be arranged without adversely affecting output. Among such countries
were virtually all those of western Europe and some in central Europe, the United States
and Canada, Japan and several smaller nations on the Pacific rim, the oil-rich nations of
the Arabian Peninsula, and Australia and New Zealand. Poverty in these countries tended to
have different patterns of distribution than in much of the rest of the world.
Several types of poverty may
be distinguished depending on such factors as time or duration (long- or short-term or
cyclical) and distribution (widespread, concentrated, individual).