Hunger, homelessness and sickness are all things that most people would associate with a third world country. This is however the underground society of the U.S. There are hungry and homeless people here at home and the worst thing about it is they are not bums on the street. They are hard working people with full time jobs and quite often an extra part time job on top of that. To just get a glimpse of this is one thing but one girl decided to take it one step further and she joined the life of these people for a short time and then she wrote a book about it. After a thorough reading of her book Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich very clearly conveys the sad state that these minimum wage workers are living in. .
There are many hardships on these people working minimum wage jobs. First there is the problem of getting a job. Take applying at Wal-Mart for example. When Barbara went undercover in Minnesota she applied at Wal-Mart. The application process is overly painstaking. They first make you go through the application process which includes an aptitude test. Then you are given an interview in which your "unacceptable" answers are inquired about. After that you must wait a week for a drug test which takes around an hour and forty minutes. And after all of this you still might not even get the job as was the case for Barbara. She was solely put on a waiting list after all the time and money (gas is two dollars a gallon she say's) she put into the application process. .
The second problem that they face is getting a place to live. Housing is hard to find as it is. Add to it the fact that you cannot get enough money together to put a down payment on an apartment. All the money you make goes to where you are staying from day to day, perhaps a motel, and food. If you can even manage to get a job and a place to stay the quality of living is unbelievably low. The places that Barbara was able to afford were so small and dilapidated that they should be considered unlivable.