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Ritzer, Introduction to Sociology, Second Edition Chapter Summary Chapter Eight Summary Social Stratification Social stratification involves hierarchical differences and inequalities. In the American money-based stratification system, wealth and income are the main determinants of social class. However, social stratification also, as Weber argued, involves status and power. Since the 1970s, the United States has experienced increasing income inequality. However, the greatest economic differences in American society are due to differences in wealth. People with great wealth often have high class, status, and power as well, and they can usually pass along most of those advantages to future generations. Those with less or little wealth are not able to pass much onto future generations, who in turn have a difficult time amassing their own wealth and increasing their status in the stratified hierarchy. At the very bottom of the spectrum are those who live in poverty. In the United States, the measure of absolute poverty is the poverty line, the level of income that people are thought to need in order to survive in our society. Members of minority groups, women, and children are overrepresented among the poor. Many more Americans feel themselves to be poor relative to others in this society. However, the American poor, even when measured in absolute terms, are far better off than are the poor in some other parts of the world. Social mobility is a concern for all people in a socially stratified system. While individuals in the United States throughout the twentieth century generally experienced upward mobility intergenerationally and throughout their own lifetimes, it seems likely that individuals in the twenty-first century are more likely to experience downward mobility. Sociologists are also concerned with structural mobility. A main characteristic of the social stratification system in the United States is its emphasis on individual achievement. However, social positions can also be obtained through inherited characteristics such as wealth or caste. Structural-functional theories of stratification argue that all societies are, and have been, stratified and, further, that societies need a system of stratification in order to function properly. Conflict theorists challenge this assumption, particularly the idea that positions at the higher end of the stratification system are always more important. Several globally focused critical theories address colonialism, imperialism, and postcolonialism and their effect on the stratification of Ritzer, Introduction to Sociology, Second Edition Chapter Summary nation-states. Finally, symbolic interactionists view stratification as a process or set of processes involving interactions among people in different positions. Social stratification is related to consumption in a number of ways. Those in the higher classes can afford expensive items that those in the lower classes cannot, and the elite use their patterns of consumption to distinguish themselves, sometimes conspicuously, from those beneath them. Stratification also occurs on a global level. Most often, analysts talk about a divide between the Global North and the Global South. However, we can further distinguish a very poor bottom billion. Many nations with these dire economic conditions engage in a “race to the bottom” to attract investment by multinational organizations and hope to eventually move up the global hierarchy.