America’s Homeless Industrial Complex: Manhattan Tents Expose a Policy Trap
Published: · Source: mk.co.kr
In the middle of Manhattan, New York, often described as some of the most expensive land in the world, there are tents, and people live inside them. For those seeing the scene for the first time, it can be deeply shocking. The image condenses America’s homelessness problem and points beyond street poverty to the debate over a “homeless industrial complex,” in which money and systems intended to reduce homelessness may instead coincide with its growth. The central issue is a structural trap: even with spending, the problem on the ground does not visibly shrink. Manhattan’s tents expose both urban inequality and questions over policy efficiency. Maeil Business Newspaper highlighted this contradiction in U.S. homelessness policy. Source: mk.co.kr
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