Imagine a garden that never gets watered. The plants stay small and weak, no matter how much sunlight they receive. A poverty trap works the same way: people stuck in very low income situations find it hard to climb out because their circumstances keep them stuck. 📉
Key features:
Several mechanisms reinforce the trap:
These factors create a feedback loop that keeps income low over time. 🔄
| Household | Annual Income (£) | Savings (£) | Investment in Education |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 12,000 | 500 | 0 |
| B | 24,000 | 4,000 | 2,000 |
Household A stays in the trap because its savings are too small to fund further education or a business. Household B can invest and increase future earnings. 📈
Consider the Keynesian multiplier:
\$\Delta Y = \frac{1}{1-MPC} \Delta G\$
Where ΔY is the change in national income, MPC is the marginal propensity to consume, and ΔG is a change in government spending. In a poverty trap, MPC is high (people spend most of what they earn), so even a large ΔG may not lift income significantly. 💡
When answering questions about poverty traps, remember to:
Use the PEEL structure: Point, Evidence, Explanation, Link. 📚
“Explain how a poverty trap can limit the effectiveness of a government subsidy aimed at increasing household income.”
Think of the poverty trap like a hamster wheel: the more you run, the more you stay stuck. Breaking the cycle requires a combination of income support, education, and access to credit – the three wheels that can help a person step off the wheel and onto a path of upward mobility. 🚀