“Can the Middle Class be saved” by Don Peck provides a lot of very useful information about America’s current financial situation. In particular, it highlights the severe need to save America’s middle class workers. A claim is a position that an author takes on an issue, and Peck claims that the middle class is in serious danger. Peck uses a lot of statistical evidence and reasons to support this claim, which provide for a very convincing argument. One of the major points that Peck is trying to get across is that the middle class is slowly being whittled away, and may eventually disappear entirely. Peck claims “Arguably, the most important economic trend in the United States over the past couple of generations has been the ever more distinct sorting of Americans into winners and losers, and the slow hollowing-out of the middle class.” I think Peck uses some very persuasive evidence to convince the reader of how crippling the disappearance of the middle-class could be to America’s economy. Peck points out that without a middle class, it would be much more difficult for the poor to ever become wealthy. The middle class serves as the bridge between the upper and the lower class, and is essential to making our economic system function as a whole. It is indisputable that the middle class is in trouble. Peck provides us with a plethora of data to demonstrate this fact. Now it is just a matter of figuring out how to go about saving them. I find Peck’s idea of expanding career-academy programs to be a great solution. Peck claims “Career-academy programs should be expanded, as should apprenticeship programs (often affiliated with community colleges) and other, similar programs that are designed to build an ethic of hard work.” Surely this will not solve all of our economic problems, but it is certainly a step in the right direction. Giving the youth an opportunity to see the different career opportunities available to them would help give them a
“Can the Middle Class be saved” by Don Peck provides a lot of very useful information about America’s current financial situation. In particular, it highlights the severe need to save America’s middle class workers. A claim is a position that an author takes on an issue, and Peck claims that the middle class is in serious danger. Peck uses a lot of statistical evidence and reasons to support this claim, which provide for a very convincing argument. One of the major points that Peck is trying to get across is that the middle class is slowly being whittled away, and may eventually disappear entirely. Peck claims “Arguably, the most important economic trend in the United States over the past couple of generations has been the ever more distinct sorting of Americans into winners and losers, and the slow hollowing-out of the middle class.” I think Peck uses some very persuasive evidence to convince the reader of how crippling the disappearance of the middle-class could be to America’s economy. Peck points out that without a middle class, it would be much more difficult for the poor to ever become wealthy. The middle class serves as the bridge between the upper and the lower class, and is essential to making our economic system function as a whole. It is indisputable that the middle class is in trouble. Peck provides us with a plethora of data to demonstrate this fact. Now it is just a matter of figuring out how to go about saving them. I find Peck’s idea of expanding career-academy programs to be a great solution. Peck claims “Career-academy programs should be expanded, as should apprenticeship programs (often affiliated with community colleges) and other, similar programs that are designed to build an ethic of hard work.” Surely this will not solve all of our economic problems, but it is certainly a step in the right direction. Giving the youth an opportunity to see the different career opportunities available to them would help give them a