Sunday, July 11, 2010

Social Mobility in England and U.S.?

I seek the forum's assistance with a question that I have.





It has long been my understanding that we in the U.S. move up and down the economic ladder frequently. However, in England, one is "born" into a "social class." I guess this is what is referred to as the aristocracy. Can someone please help me understand this?





In England, is a person born into a certain class stuck in that class? Forever? Is there a law prohibiting people from moving through the classes? Is there a way to move out of that class? Is this a concept from feudalism that still exists?





I'm asking this question because I often read comparisons between the U.S. system and the English economic system and this lack of social mobility usually comes up as a difference. I understand what is meant by social mobility, I just don't know exactly why it is not existant in England.





Thank you very much.

Social Mobility in England and U.S.?
Get rich quick schemes in the capitalist business world, (buyouts, IPOs, conglomerates, acquisitions, mergers, and the stock market), do not actually work. Remaining solvent does not actually exist within false economics capitalism.





Profit existing in the capitalist business world, or millionaires existing within capitalism, is pathological deception committed by the 21 organizations spying on the population with plain clothes agents, (with covert fake names and fake backgrounds).





Actual economics is the persons that are paying the business loans of companies voting at work in order to control the property they are paying for.





Capitalism is the psychology of imaginary parents, false economics, and the criminal deception of employees that are paying the bills (including the stocks and bonds, or shares) of companies.





Anti-Democracy republicanism is the psychology of imaginary parents, and false government.
Reply:There use to be more social mobility in the US than Europe but recent evidence indicates that this is no longer true. The US has become less mobile and Europe more mobile in the last generation.


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