Winstonm, on 2014-January-24, 14:19, said:
A used t.v. doesn't have much value. The thing to remember is that $1 or $2 a day is not a salary but an average - the earnings usually come in clusters. Most of us splurge a bit when we feel flush, no matter how temporary that condition may be.
Myself, living on $1/day, if i had a little extra money I might buy an apple. Or some meat. Not a tv.
Suppose a guy goes out on the lake in the morning and brings home some fish. Enough to trade an extra bass for a sweater for his kid. In the afternoon he picks some wild berries and then works in the garden. In the evening he gathers some branches for heat for his shack. Not a bad day. His income is $0 is it not? might he have a tv? I suppose, but it seems low priority. Maybe he trades a pig for the electricity. No income there either.
If someone says that life is tough for many in the world, very tough, I agree at once. If someone says that many people who are living on less than $1/day have a television set, I wonder just how they are coming by their numbers. Statistics can be very misleading, even when everyone is trying to play it straight. And, often, they aren't.
The real problem with such data is that it is irrelevant. Virtually no one disagrees with the statement that there is a lot of poverty in the world. So why jazz it up with a lot of (in my view phony) data? It's a distraction. If we want data to measure progress, keep track of malnutrition. Lowering it indicates success.