You complain about the Heritage Foundation, but then you counter with "Slate." LOL. Good one.
Also, Heritage was one of the sources I cited. I have also cited The Economist, and the OECD, which are rather good sources, don't you think?
Note the qualification in your Slate article - "Some of the figures from Europe and Australia predate the Great Recession, which put a dent in incomes worldwide." Thus, they were comparing pre-Great Recession number in Europe and Oz with post-Great Recession numbers in the US. The Slate article also examines only one statistic, the LIS stat re "income." My numbers from The Economist and the OECD involved an array of different stats.
Also, even using your Slate article, it does not correct for the ridiculousness of calling the US an "outlier" from "the rest of the world." Even based on your Slate article, the US is at worst toward the bottom of the first world countries. But we are still in that grouping. So, even taking it at face value, the US is certainly not doing bad compared to "the rest of the world."
But, the reality is that the poor in the US are not experiencing poverty like the "rest of the world." If your family income is $10,000 a year, you are wealthier than 84 percent of the world. If it's $50,000 or more a year, you make more than 99 percent of the world. The average American is a 1%-er in the world.
http://www.oregonlive.com/hovde/index.s ... ricas.html
Here's the Pew Research Center -
But how does the well-being of the American family compare with the well-being of people in other countries?
The U.S. still fares very well on that score. On a global scale, the vast majority of Americans are either upper-middle income or high income. And many Americans who are classified as “poor” by the U.S. government would be middle income globally, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis.
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/20 ... dle-class/ In other words Dutchy - you are using biased sources, and when compared to the sources that I've presented, this is no contest. I have provided not just Heritage, but The Economist, the OECD's numbers, and Pew Research, and below you'll find Forbes too.
Here's an article by Forbes, all due respect to that neutral, moderate, unbiased "slate" source --
https://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstal ... b6a6d25cb5
By those same World Banks standards the definition of globally middle class is a consumption possibility of $2 to $50 a day (there's two different possible definitions, $2 to $13 which we might better regard as "not in poverty but not yet middle class" and $12 to $50 which is perhaps "middle class"). Even those reporting no income at all in the US have consumption possibilities roughly equal to those reporting incomes of $20 a day. And to repeat, yes, this is adjusting for the different value of money in different places and countries.
Thus we can say that by global standards there are no poor people in the US at all: the entire country is at least middle class or better. We seem to have fought and won that War on Poverty.
This still leaves us with the war in inequality of course but then that's a rather different matter.
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar