Open poverty in the U.S. entered the public consciousness in 1962 with the book by the left-wing Catholic
Michael Harrington The Other America. He found 50 million poor people in a country of then 200 million inhabitants, who had also escaped
social science because it had assumed that they simply could not exist. With the strengthening of the
civil rights movement and the slogan of the
Great Society under President
Lyndon B. Johnson, this previously overlooked aspect of U.S. society finally entered the consciousness of politicians. For example,
Gabriel Kolko's thorough study of income and wealth distribution over several decades found a stable persistence of poverty, and even rather a tendency for the poorer class to grow. Accordingly, Kolko considers the thesis of a middle-class society to be empirically refuted. The work of
Simon Smith Kuznets had often served as the basis for the latter thesis. This study, however, was limited to the 5 percent of the population with the highest
per capita income. Critics of the affluent society, such as the Indian Germanist
Saral Sarkar, see
economism (dominance of the economy) as the basis for the processes of the affluent society. Sarkar calls for
refusal to consume as a
countermeasure. == Literature ==