By Barry Mason
Last
month the government quietly published the latest measure of income
inequality, the Gini coefficient, for the UK. The figure tells a story
of growing exploitation and mounting poverty in Britain.
The
Gini coefficient can range from 0 to 1 and provides an objective
measure of income inequality, which allows every country to be ranked
against others and against its own past performance. A coefficient of 0
would mean income is shared equally between all individuals, whilst a
coefficient of 1 would mean one person within the population has all
the income and everyone else none. So a higher Gini coefficient figure
indicates a higher level of inequality.
Britains Gini
co-efficient is now 0.36, beyond the normal bounds of inequality seen
in developed countries. In the United States the figure is 0.408,
putting the largest economy in the world on a par with Mexico in terms
of income inequality. But by European standards, the UK figure is
exceptionally high. Sweden has a Gini coefficient of 0.23, Germany
0.283 and in France the figure is 0.327.
For the last three
decades the Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS) has produced a report on
the UK Gini coefficient. The latest IFS report shows that the figure
has increased from 0.25 when Thatcher came to power. The report also
notes that the number of those in relative poverty, which is defined as
those with an income less than 60 percent of the median, has risen over
the last three years. The figure initially fell when the Labour
government came to power in 1997, but is now rising consistently year
on year.
Poverty for working-age adults without dependent
children is now at its highest level since the start of our comparable
time series in 1961, according to the IFS report.
Median income
was £394 a week. This represents a rise of just £1 on the previous
year. Median income is the level which 50 percent of the population is
above and 50 percent below.
For the last six years there has
been only a slow average rise in take home pay. But the IFS predict a
bleak outlook for income growth in the near future, because of rising
unemployment and stagnant earnings. Income inequality has risen (on
most measures) in each of the last three years and is now at its
highest level since our comparable time series began in 1961.
The
contrast between rich and poor is even starker when the mean or
arithmetical average is considered. The mean earnings figure for
2007-08 was £487 a week. It is calculated that 65 percent of the
population earn less than this sum.
A small proportion of the
population, 1.2 million, has earnings above £1,500 a week. The incomes
of Members of Parliament range up to £1,100 a week, putting them above
91 percent of the population. Only nine percent of households in the UK
have a higher income. If their expenses are included in the calculation
they have a higher income than 96 percent of the UK population. If they
have a working partner, their household income is in the very top
income bracket.
Even before the government issued the latest
Gini coefficient, a Joseph Rowntree Foundation Report concluded that
the measures brought in by the Labour government to address inequality
were stalling.
The report issued in February stated that child
poverty remains amongst the highest in Europe, despite the fact that
the government had focused on this area. Health inequalities continued
to widen, as did the gap between the top and bottom of the income scale.
The
UKs experience in the 1980s and 1990s showed that the strategy of
hoping that growth in living standards at the top would trickle down
to those at the bottom did not work. The last decade has shown that a
more interventionist pump up strategy is hard in an unequal society.
The author of the report, Professor John Hills, director of the Centre for the Analysis of Social Exclusion, said in a Financial Times
article of February 25 that the report will disappoint those who might
have hoped that a Labour government in power for over a decade would
decisively reverse the gaps in society that had widened over the
previous two decades.
In 1999 the Labour government set a
goal to lift three million children out of poverty. Even the government
acknowledges that this target will not be reached. Meeting the 2010
target is very difficult, Beverley Hughes, childrens minister told
the Guardian. Asked about the likely impact of the recession
she said, It is very difficult to model the impact of the recession on
child poverty.
Even before the recession, charities
specializing in child poverty were deeply concerned about the situation
in Britain. Ten years ago the government committed to eradicating
child poverty but these figures show progress has stalled, Hilary
Fisher, director of End Child Poverty said. In the previous two years,
child poverty actually rose. Progress has been made on child poverty,
but the UK is way off track on its targets. Budget 2009 invested less
than a pint of milk per week per child in family incomes and did
nothing to narrow the gap.
The IFS report concludes, Over
the past three years, average living standards have continued to
stagnate, though poverty and income inequality both rose. We expect
that the current recession will again lead to a change in the course of
poverty inequality and average living standards. Unfortunately, the
only thing we can be near-certain of is that average living standards
will fall, but we cannot be sure how this pain will be shared.
Judging
by past experience it is all too clear how the pain will be shared. It
will be inflicted on working people and income inequality can only get
worse. There will be even less attempt on the part of government,
Labour or Conservative, to assist those in financial difficulties.
Money used to bail out the banks has increased government debt levels.
The demands are now coming from the representatives of the financial
elite that wages must be cut and savage cuts in welfare provision and
public services pushed through.
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