The Poverty Trap(s)
Why Poverty Feels Impossible to Escape
Have you ever noticed how someone struggling with money still manages to buy a $7 coffee? (The average cost of a cup of coffee in Singapore in 1998 was 70¢...1000% more.) Or spend their last paycheck on a new phone, or a designer bag, or some over-the-top skincare that promises glow and purity but delivers nothing but guilt when the bill hits?
It’s easy just to say, “That’s why they’re poor.” But it’s not that simple. Those decisions aren’t always irrational. They’re emotional. They’re social. Sometimes, they’re the only power someone feels they have left.
Poverty is not just an economic state; it is a trap. A set of interconnected illusions, distractions, and routines that keep people stuck. And how, even when you’re aware of them, it’s still hard to break free.
Trap 1: Chasing the Illusion of Wealth
There’s a Starbucks near my old office in Singapore. You’d think it would be packed with corporate types. But most of the customers were students, copywriters (like me), or hospitality workers. They’d sit with a single coffee for hours, headphones in, eyes on their phones. Why?
Because Starbucks sells more than just coffee, it sells an identity, a feeling. For a few bucks, you can sit where the “cool people” hang out. It’s a place to be seen, even if just for a while.
This is aspirational consumption. Buying into the image of success because…everyone wants to feel like they matter.
These are usually small things: A fancy dinner. Another pair of shoes. Designer’s hand soap. $25 LV paper clips (each). A lifestyle that looks richer than it is. The latest iPhone, Italian crockery, and branded jeans.
But guess what: the wealthy don’t do that. Studies show that millionaires tend to live well below their means. They pay cash, buy used cars, and cook at home. They skip the labels. They protect their money because they know how hard it is to keep it.
Meanwhile, those who are struggling spend to appear as if they’ve made it.
It’s a carefully designed trap intended to perpetuate the illusion. Marketing doesn’t just sell you things; it creates desire, it sells the idea that you’re not quite enough without all this stuff. And when you buy in, you find that you’ve just got onto the treadmill.
Trap 2: The Distraction Machine
After a long day’s work, you’re exhausted. You just want to switch off. You binge on Netflix, Stan, or both, flipping through countless options without actually watching any. You scroll through TikTok, check in on Instagram, and watch silly shorts on YouTube. Before you know it, the evening has passed. Your mind is full, but you feel empty.
Amusement is a drug. It numbs you to your situation, your reality, your own life.
Lower-income groups spend significantly more time on social media than wealthy folks do because it’s accessible. And free. It’s an escape they can afford. A $20 streaming subscription is more manageable than a $500 self-improvement course. It’s also more fun than the discipline it takes (and a chance) to break the poverty cycle.
But everything comes at a cost. While you’re glued to screens, your energy to change anything about your finances, your health, and your education leaks away. Life goes quietly by in the late hours of the night.
The Roman Empire had “bread and circuses” to keep the masses pacified. Today, it’s influencers and politicians. An endless drama of fake news and content: sports, sitcoms, computer games, and cat videos. Colosseums evolved into stadiums. Distraction keeps people from realising how things are. It’s the “boiling the frog” strategy.
If you’re too tired, too busy, or too entertained to think, you’re too numb to take any action to improve your life.
Trap 3: Work Hard, But Stay Poor
“Just work harder.” That’s the advice people give when they see someone struggling. What if hard work doesn’t work?
In cities like Sydney and Melbourne, the cost of maintaining a modest lifestyle, including secure housing, food on the table, basic healthcare, and possibly raising a small family, has become increasingly unmanageable. Median weekly rents in Sydney are pushing A$775, and nearly half of all renters now spend over 30% of their income on housing alone. Wages haven’t kept up. They’ve grown by just over 4% in the past year, while rents in major cities jumped more than 11%.
For many Australians, especially those born after the 1990s, the math doesn’t work. So they take on second jobs. Drive Ubers, deliver food, take weekend shifts in retail or hospitality, doing whatever it takes to keep the lights on. By the end of 2024, over one million Australians were working multiple jobs, with 20 to 24-year-olds the most likely to do so. These side gigs aren’t for saving. They’re for surviving.
Debt is another weight. The average Gen Z Australian now holds around A$11,300 in personal debt, and roughly one in five carries at least A$8,000 in credit card balances. Many are repaying student loans, with the average debt amounting to approximately A$28,000. The pressure is constant. Rent’s due, groceries cost more, and even a 0.25% interest rate increase on a 750-thousand-dollar mortgage is crippling. There’s no margin. No cushion. No rest. Just the slow erosion of financial security, one direct debit at a time.
Trap 4: The Comfort Zone
That sounds…deceptively comforting, like a blessing. Stability. Routine. Familiarity.
But the comfort zone is a prison.
In the movie The Shawshank Redemption, Brooks Hatlen spent 50 years in prison. He was an elderly, gentle man, known for tending the prison library and feeding his pet bird. When he was abruptly paroled, he couldn’t cope with the outside world. He didn’t understand it. Couldn’t adapt. Eventually, he took his own life.
He’d been “institutionalised.” Ultimately, unable to adapt to the overwhelming freedom and uncertainty of the outside world, he penned a heartbreaking suicide note to his friends. He confessed, “I don’t like it here. I’m tired of being afraid all the time. I’ve decided not to stay.” He then tragically hung himself from a beam in his room, carving “Brooks was here” above his head.
This is real for many who remain in the same job and follow the same patterns for decades. Not because they love it but because it’s familiar. It’s safe. However, when change comes suddenly, as with the introduction of new technologies (such as AI) or the collapse of old industries (such as the automotive manufacturing sector), layoffs can leave them unprepared.
Growth doesn’t happen in comfort. And when you’ve spent years avoiding risk, the idea of starting over can feel impossible.
There’s a way out
These traps aren’t about personal failure. They’re structural, cultural, and psychological. But it is possible to escape them.
1. Learn the Game
Capitalism thrives on ignorance. It wants you to consume, to work, to stay tired and distracted. When you understand how it manipulates you, how it sells identity, fear, and desire, you begin to see through it.
Know why you want what you want. Who benefits when you buy? What is the true price?
2. Invest in Knowledge
A car depreciates. A skill appreciates.
Courses, books, and intelligent conversations are long-term assets. They grow with you. They open doors, give you leverage. Always be learning.
If money is tight, focus on free resources. There are plenty. There’s never been a better time in history to access knowledge. The internet can be a sinkhole or a ladder, depending on how you use it.
3. Don’t Numb Your Mind
Mindlessness, through work and consumption, will erode your capacity to think critically. So stop every now and then. Read something difficult. Challenge an idea. Write a blog. Talk to someone who disagrees with you.
Thinking deeply is revolutionary. Especially in a world that profits from your passivity.
4. Get Uncomfortable, On Purpose
Take the class. Switch the job. Move to a different city. Try something you’re bad at or scared of. Fail, let yourself struggle. Keep pushing and encourage others to do the same. That’s where growth lives.
You don’t need to overhaul your life overnight. But you do need to move; one small step at a time.
A Final Thought
We often discuss poverty in terms of numbers. Income brackets. Budgets. Economic policy. But the deeper poverty is one of imagination. Of possibilities. Of time, space, and energy to dream of something different.
Escaping poverty isn’t just about earning more. It’s about thinking differently. Acting differently. Refusing the script you’ve been handed, and writing a new one, even if it’s messier, slower, harder.
The system will not make it easy. That was never its intent. But systems can be hacked. And the first hack is being aware.
If this resonates with you, or if you know someone who has fallen into one of these traps, please share it. Start the conversation.
Get off. You don’t have to stay on the treadmill.


Thanks Francis, a lot of my existential dread at the moment comes from earning more than I've ever earned in my life, but still barely being able to afford rent. I feel like the dice are loaded, and not in my favour!