Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The reason America’s poor are richer than most Europeans
The reason America’s poor are richer than most Europeans
Dec 29, 2025 7:37 PM

The U.S. has diverged from the OECD approach to economic and energy issues that critics called this weekend’s G7 Summit the “G6-plus-one.” However, a new study shows America’s less regulated, less regimented economy has generated such abundance that the poorest 20 percent of Americans are more prosperous than the average European.

“If the U.S. ‘poor’ were a nation, it would be one of the world’s richest,” writes Jim Agresti of Just Facts in a new article for the Acton Institute’s Religion & Liberty Transatlantic website. Unlike online fact-checking services that spend their time fact-checking parody websites, Just Facts is renowned for its rigorous and accurate analysis plex data.

Agresti brings his gimlet eye to these global poverty data, noting that statistics of mass Western privation don’t actually measure poverty: They measure e inequality. For instance, the UK government considers anyone making less than 60 percent of median e as living in “poverty.” UN Special Rapporteur Philip Alston even derides the idea of “so-called ‘absolute poverty.’”

Instead of pegging poverty to a certain percentage of average salaries, Agresti measures the value of consumption: the amount of goods and services people actually consume. This is valuable because as our own departing Joe Carter recently noted, consumption is a superior measure of poverty, because “you don’t eat e.”

When Agresti looked at the proper metric, he confirmed previous analyses finding that several U.S. states are richer than leading EU nations. And he found the reason for the difference.

“In direct contradiction to the [New York]Times, a wealth of data suggest that aggressive government regulations harm economies,” Agresti writes. Among them are green energy initiatives, like the one the U.S. sat out at the G7 Summit. “High energy prices, like those caused by ambitious ‘green energy’ programs in Europe, depress living standards, especially for the poor.”

Agresti’s findings about the impact of American exceptionalism should guide those who wish to eradicate poverty by showing which policies create prosperity.

You can read his full article here.

(Photo credit:William McKinley’s 1896 presidential campaign poster. This photo has been cropped and modified for size. Public domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Acton Institute named a top think tank in the world in new report
Acton Institute and Instituto Acton have taken top spots in a new ranking. Earlier today, the University of Pennsylvania’sThink Tank & Civil Societies Program released the 2015 Global Go-To Think Tanks Report which maintains data on almost 7,000 organizations worldwide and creates a detailed report ranking them in various categories. Acton was named in five categories and Instituto Acton was named in one. See the highlights: Acton Institute is 9th (out of 90) in the Top Social Policy Think Tanks...
The Goo-Goo Chorus of Silence
George Soros just donated another $6 million to Democratic Party presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s Super Political Action Committee, raising the total the billionaire has contributed thus far to her 2016 campaign to $7 million. Liberals and progressives who can be counted on to hyperventilate every time the Koch brothers drop a dollar into a Salvation Army drum haven’t made a peep. They’ve also been remarkably silent on other donations to Clinton’s Priorities USA SuperPac, including $5 million from Haim Saban...
7 Figures: Faith and the 2016 Campaign
A new Pew Research Center survey examines how voters feel about the religiosity of presidential candidates. Here are seven figures you should know from the report: 1. More than half of Americans (51 percent) say they would be less likely to vote for a presidential candidate who does not believe in God. (This is down from 63 percent in 2007.) 2. About half of U.S. adults say it’s “very important” (27 percent) or “somewhat important” (24 percent) for a president...
Where Do Good and Evil Come From?
Where do good and e from? Some possibilities that have been proposed include evolution, reason, conscience, human nature, and utilitarianism. But as Boston College philosopher Peter Kreeft explains in the video below, none of these can be a source of objective morality. So where does e from? “The very existence of morality proves the existence of something beyond nature and beyond man,” says Kreeft. “Just as a design suggests a designer, mands suggest a mander. Moral Laws e from a...
Federal Government Handed Immigrant Children Over to Human Traffickers
Enticed by the promise that their children could go to school in America, numerous Guatemalan parents paid to have their children smuggled into the U.S. No one knows how many made it across the border, but some of the children were detained by immigration official and transferred to the custody of Health and Human Services (HHS). Once in the hands of the federal government, the children should have been safe. Instead, the HHS gave at least adozen children over to...
This is No Time to Panic
Today is the official start of the primary season, which which means it’s also the time when many people officially shift into political panic mode. A lot of usare in a panic, fearing that Western civilization — or at least America’s future — is at stake and that something must be done quickly to avert disaster. But what Americans really need is to to heedthe advice of Greg Forster: Don’t panic. With all due respect to baseball, panicking is America’s...
Heaven’s Not Just for Progressives
Any number of meanings are attached to “the Kingdom of God” as an essential element of Jesus’ teaching for Christian praxis. Used as just another slogan for political activism, in which the shade of meaning is usually reconstructing Heaven on Earth along collectivist lines, has me tossing the theological yellow flag. Another way to put this futile and often dangerous exercise is immanentizing the eschaton. This business has raised many skeptics. From St. Thomas More we received the word “utopia,”...
5 Facts About the Iowa Caucus
Tonightthe nominating process for the U.S. presidential elections officially begins when voters in Iowa meet for the caucuses. Here are five factsyou should know about what has, since 1972, been the first electoral event of each election season: 1. A caucus is a meeting of supporters or members of a specific political party or movement. To participate in the Iowa Caucus, political supporters show up at a one of the 1,681 precincts (church, school munity center, etc.) at a specific...
A decade of decline for global freedom
A new report shows that global indicators of economic and political freedom declined overall in 2015, with the most serious setbacks in the area of freedom of speech and rule of law. Freedom House, an “independent watchdog organization dedicated to the expansion of freedom and democracy around the world,” released its Freedom in the World 2016 Report which included some disturbing statistics and worldwide trends, particulary as it concerns the progress made by women in some regions. The beginning of...
Economic freedom increasing worldwide, but not in U.S.
The Heritage Foundation and Wall Street Journal recently released the 2016 Index of Economic Freedom. Despite modest gains in economic freedom worldwide, Americans have, for the eighth time in a decade, lost economic freedom. The global average score is 60.7, “the highest recorded in the 22-year history of the Index” with more than thirty countries including Burma, Vietnam, Poland, and others, received “their highest-ever Index scores.” 74 countries’ ranks declined, but they improved for 97. The least free countries included...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved