SOCIAL CLASSIFICATION
Social classification in any community often focuses on the lifestyle, economic class, and other attributes that determine an individual’s relationships with others. From the categories offered, the ideal visual that showcases the trends in the social class today is the fourth one (type D). The fundamental reason for selecting this category is that it offers valuable insight into the different classes of the society where very few people from the pyramid’s apex. The high net-worth individuals in the topmost social class in the pyramid often have different attributes like high revenue streams and considerable political influence on society’s direction. The modern society is represented by the type D visual as there are very few high-net-worth individuals who indirectly influence the direction that other society members take. For instance, the few wealthy individuals who now multinational companies often determine a given community’s economic prospect by regulating the supply of their services or commodities.
The visual is also accurate as it shows that society has a relatively high number of people in the middle class. Many countries in the global sphere have their population concentrated in the middle class, as shown in the pyramid. These categories’ social trait is that most of these people have acquired satisfactory literacy levels because of the ability to meet the desired tuition fees in different learning institutions. Besides, most people in the middle class have small and medium enterprises or work in government agencies or multinational cooperation. The sufficiency of their income enables them to multiply at a high rate, making them be the majority in any social trend. The pyramid gets it right by asserting that the bottom part comprises a few people in the low-income category. Most societies have a few people at the bottom of the pyramid with various social and economic struggles. Thus, one can accurately assert that the