In my column in this week’s Cornish Guardian, I have addressed
the growing inequality in UK
society. It is as follows:
One Coalition MP recently wrote about the manner in which central
government makes its political decisions, commenting on the “back-room deals”
and the “dark arts of the whips.”
He said he yearned for a return to “genuine evidence-based
policy-making,” while admitting that this “was something which ministers claim
to do but rarely achieve.” According to the MP, ministers prefer civil servants
to come up “with a case” to justify whatever position the minister wishes to
promote.
As a local councillor, I have often seen how the very same
statistics can be used by different individuals to argue opposing standpoints –
often with more thought given to the argument than the actual evidence itself.
I make these points because there are a number of
independent reports which show that inequality is increasing throughout the United
Kingdom . And that is regardless of the crass
claims by David Cameron, George Osborne, Iain Duncan Smith and others that, in
this age of austerity, “we are all in it together.”
The Resolution Foundation recently reported that the gap
between the wealthiest in society and everyone else is widening. The top 1% of
earners (the super-rich) share one tenth of national income – significantly up
from the 1990s. By comparison, the poorest 50% have to collectively make do
with 18% of national income.
The UN’s 2013 Human Development Report has also noted that
the “gap between rich and poor in UK
society has risen sharply” since the Coalition government took power. The UN
reports that there is greater inequality in the UK
than in other countries in Western Europe .
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
has meanwhile used its annual report to warn about the growing income gap
between “full-time employees” and those individuals in “part-time, insecure and
low-wage jobs.”
And a study by Loughborough
University for the Child Poverty
Action Group, has reported that more than 18,000 children in Cornwall
are living in poverty.
It seems to me that if the Coalition did practice genuine evidence-based
policy-making, it would prioritise tackling the growing inequality in the United
Kingdom by reversing their austerity
policies which are impacting most on the less-well-off.
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