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Class Matters: UK Law Would Require Gov't to Lessen Inequality

By Sam Pizzigati, Too Much: A Commentary on Excess and Inequality. Posted February 3, 2009.


Last week, a Labor Party "white paper" offered a surprisingly novel -- and rather remarkable -- proposal.

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The British Labor Party came to power a dozen years ago with a commitment to attack poverty -- and a willingness to leave rich people alone. Britain's rich proceeded to make the most of that opportunity. By 2007, the UK's wealthiest 1,000 had nearly quadrupled their collective fortune.

The poor would not be so fortunate. In 2007, child poverty in the UK increased -- by 100,000 kids. Brits born in 1970 have less chance of overcoming a lowly economic start in life than Brits born in the 1950s. Among major developed nations, only the United States displays as little social mobility as Britain.

What to do? Last week, in an official "white paper" entitled New opportunities: Fair chances for the future, the Labor Party government offered a surprisingly novel -- and rather remarkable -- proposal.

The absence of real opportunity in the UK, this white paper posits, demands an outright mandate for economic equality: a new law that would make the narrowing of the gap between rich and poor a binding obligation on every level of British government.

"We have already legislated to require public authorities to tackle the inequality that arises from race, gender, or disability," the white paper explains. "But we know that inequality does not just come from your gender or ethnicity, your sexual orientation, or your disability. Co-existing and interwoven with these specific inequalities lies the persistent inequality of social class."

Given this reality, the white paper continues, "tackling socio-economic disadvantage and narrowing gaps in outcomes for people from different backgrounds" needs to become a new "core function" of UK government.

The champion of this new mandate, Labor Party chair and UK equalities minister Harriet Harman, last week spoke in bold strokes to defend her proposal.

It is our task in government to play our part in fashioning a new social order with fairness and equality at its heart," Harman pronounced. "We want to do more than just provide 'escape routes' out of poverty for a talented few. We want to tackle the class divide.

What exactly would that tackling entail? With a mandate to narrow Britain's economic divide in effect, class bias might become grounds for government action against discrimination. Police patrols might be reallocated from wealthy neighborhoods to crime-plagued poor ones. Public sector wages might be raised first, and most significantly, at the lower job grades.

Would Harman's proposed mandate, if enacted into law, also mean an open confrontation with the grand accumulations of private wealth at the summit of the UK economy?

Some government insiders, after the white paper's release Tuesday, pooh-poohed the notion that Harman's proposal would up the pressure for an offensive to level down the British rich.

"This isn't about taking from one group of people and giving to another, more deprived set," one of these insiders insisted to the Daily Mail. "It is about leveling up, improving life for everybody."


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See more stories tagged with: class, uk, u.s., social justice, social mobility, opportunity, labor party

Sam Pizzigati is the editor of the online weekly Too Much, and an associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies.

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View:
Class is more important that race
Posted by: janvdb on Feb 4, 2009 10:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's why the "elites" want to focus on race -- you can fix that without requiring any major change in their privileges. Only 12% of the population is black and at least 30% of those are middle class or higher, so don't need any help.

Still, you can pretend you have done everything that can be expected merely by letting some of that upper-class 30% of blacks into "elite" universities, etc. That requires almost NO adjustment on the part of the rich.

But, now, if you start talking about addressing the inequalities of income, education and opportunity which plague 40% or 50% of the population -- you are talking about something of a scale which would clearly require an actual CHANGE in the lives of the rich.

Just think of Harvard admissions. Is it easier to squeeze in a few blacks, many of whom are the sons of doctors and lawyers and just like the whites, to get them to something like 8 or 9% of the student body, or to completely revamp admissions sufficiently to get 50% of students from the lower 50% of the income distribution (by parents' income)?

The answer is obvious.

Jan VanDenBerg

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Harriet Harmon
Posted by: JSquercia on Feb 4, 2009 5:29 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Boy could we use a Harriet Harmon here in the US of A . Isn't it amazing that whenever you bring up the subject of Inequality you are accused of Class Warfare . Well as Warren Buffet said If there is a Class War MY side is winning . Here as well as in the UK much of the inequlity is exacerbated by the Tax Laws .
As an example the law favors money earned from Money by taxing it at a lower rate than money earned from the Sweat of Ones brow . An example of this is the recent attempt to change the way the Compensation of Hedge Fund Managers is treated . They are currently able to have it considered Capital Gains rather than Wages . This means they pay 15% on it and pay NO Social Security or Medicare .As Warren Buffet again pointed out this allows these Billionaires to pay a lower tax rate than their Secretaries pay . In display of Fielty towards their Masters the Republican Minority
stopped the bill by threatening to filibuster . The Democrats unable to invoke Cloture let the bill Die .

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

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