Answer
Yes, it's a trilogy, yet the title of the third book is yet to be known.
So far there are two books available, The Hunger Games and Catching Fire. The third book is slanted for release in 2010. For more information on The Hunger Games: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunger_Games
Also Chapters from the series:::
Chapter ONE of The Hunger Games
http://software.libredigital.com/bookrdr/dp-live/BookBrowse.html?a=YUnEsA1MHiuqOFXoog3w1KTeQpPTCc5lRpgnFQnHrkFuUSVlhUZ4nbRkaIn6oJWoKyLflXTZeu2f7znCKmfgdPgH36rbt0PtTYxAwZXGCeI7TVOtxvsdUMQX0YrFB0VZ&z=sch
Chapter ELEVEN of The Hunger Games
http://www.scholastic.com/thehungergames/videos/chapter-11-audio.htm
Chapter ONE of Catching Fire
http://www.scholastic.com/thehungergames/media/CatchingFireChapter1.html
Chapter TWO of Catching Fire
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=112216387
Yes, it's a trilogy, yet the title of the third book is yet to be known.
So far there are two books available, The Hunger Games and Catching Fire. The third book is slanted for release in 2010. For more information on The Hunger Games: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunger_Games
Also Chapters from the series:::
Chapter ONE of The Hunger Games
http://software.libredigital.com/bookrdr/dp-live/BookBrowse.html?a=YUnEsA1MHiuqOFXoog3w1KTeQpPTCc5lRpgnFQnHrkFuUSVlhUZ4nbRkaIn6oJWoKyLflXTZeu2f7znCKmfgdPgH36rbt0PtTYxAwZXGCeI7TVOtxvsdUMQX0YrFB0VZ&z=sch
Chapter ELEVEN of The Hunger Games
http://www.scholastic.com/thehungergames/videos/chapter-11-audio.htm
Chapter ONE of Catching Fire
http://www.scholastic.com/thehungergames/media/CatchingFireChapter1.html
Chapter TWO of Catching Fire
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=112216387
What effect will increasing income inequality have on American society?
Wiseguy
http://mobile.nytimes.com/2010/11/18/opinion/18kristof.xml
Answer
An unstable economy, for one. The inequality in wealth and income reached an all-time record high right before the great depression started. The gap between the rich and everyone else has been creeping back up again. What's scary is a few years ago, we finally reached - and even surpassed - the level of inequality that existed right before black Tuesday.
The economics of a top-heavy society are not very stable. Rich people depend on stocks and investments for their income. They may spend lots of money if they expect to get rich in the future, but spend far less if the markets don't look as good. It means that if the economy goes into a recession, the more top-heavy a society is, the more it tends to collapse like dominos. A society with less rich people doesn't have this problem. The middle class simply spends 95% of the money they earn, and spends it in ways that keep other middle class people employed. And they spend it within a month of when they earn it. They may save a small percentage of their income, but they aren't going to hoard the majority of their income just because they don't expect a raise next year.
Inequality has surpassed the time before the great depression. The top 1 percent of the population now earns 24% of the income. A society this top-heavy is inherently unstable. When 24% of a society's income flows into the hands of people who don't really spend their money in ways that directly creates jobs, you can kind of expect to see high unemployment.
The economist Robert Reich has suggested that the economy won't get moving again until inequality is addressed. He explained to NPR exactly why."People at the top are taking home so much that they are almost inevitably going to speculate in stocks or commodities or whatever the speculative vehicles are going to be. ... Unless we understand the relationship between the extraordinary concentration of income and wealth we have this in country and the failure of the economy to rebound, we are going to be destined for many, many years of high unemployment, anemic job recoveries and then periods of booms and busts that may even dwarf what we just had." He also wrote a book laying out his arguments in more details.
This question could better be worded "what effect IS increasing income inequality HAVING on American society". But it was a valid and a good question. And the answer is - just turn on the TV or open a newspaper and there's your answer.
An unstable economy, for one. The inequality in wealth and income reached an all-time record high right before the great depression started. The gap between the rich and everyone else has been creeping back up again. What's scary is a few years ago, we finally reached - and even surpassed - the level of inequality that existed right before black Tuesday.
The economics of a top-heavy society are not very stable. Rich people depend on stocks and investments for their income. They may spend lots of money if they expect to get rich in the future, but spend far less if the markets don't look as good. It means that if the economy goes into a recession, the more top-heavy a society is, the more it tends to collapse like dominos. A society with less rich people doesn't have this problem. The middle class simply spends 95% of the money they earn, and spends it in ways that keep other middle class people employed. And they spend it within a month of when they earn it. They may save a small percentage of their income, but they aren't going to hoard the majority of their income just because they don't expect a raise next year.
Inequality has surpassed the time before the great depression. The top 1 percent of the population now earns 24% of the income. A society this top-heavy is inherently unstable. When 24% of a society's income flows into the hands of people who don't really spend their money in ways that directly creates jobs, you can kind of expect to see high unemployment.
The economist Robert Reich has suggested that the economy won't get moving again until inequality is addressed. He explained to NPR exactly why."People at the top are taking home so much that they are almost inevitably going to speculate in stocks or commodities or whatever the speculative vehicles are going to be. ... Unless we understand the relationship between the extraordinary concentration of income and wealth we have this in country and the failure of the economy to rebound, we are going to be destined for many, many years of high unemployment, anemic job recoveries and then periods of booms and busts that may even dwarf what we just had." He also wrote a book laying out his arguments in more details.
This question could better be worded "what effect IS increasing income inequality HAVING on American society". But it was a valid and a good question. And the answer is - just turn on the TV or open a newspaper and there's your answer.
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