My article in this coming week’s Cornish Guardian, once
again focuses on the inequality in British society. In particular, it contrasts
the increasing use of foodbanks with the clamour from certain right-wing
politicians for a tax cut for individuals in higher tax brackets. The article
will be as follows:
The famous socialist Aneurin Bevan once wrote that he was inspired
by a “burning hatred” of injustice and inequality, which he described as “capricious,
unsanctioned by usage and, most important of all, senseless.”
His determination to build a better and more equal society
led him, as Minister of Health in Clement Atlee’s reforming government of
1945-51, to create the National Health Service and play a leading role in the construction
of the “modern welfare state.”
One can only speculate what Nye Bevan would think of British
society in 2014 but I would suggest he would be alarmed at the growing inequity
in the UK
today.
The super-rich are getting richer and, over the last couple
of years, the number of millionaires in the UK
has almost doubled.
In contrast, the wages of ordinary people are not keeping
pace with inflation and many are struggling to meet the rising costs of basic
staples such as food, fuel and housing.
Cuts in funding to local government and other public
services are also impacting most heavily on the less-well-off and the
vulnerable.
The food bank charity, the Trussell Trust, has meanwhile
released new figures which show that it provided 600,000 emergency parcels,
each containing three days food, between April and December 2013 – a massive
increase on the whole of the preceding financial year.
The Bishop of Truro, who is co-chairing a parliamentary
inquiry into the rise in food banks has rightly warned central government that
it cannot “ignore the reality of this phenomenon,” adding “how is it that in
the 21st century in a developed country, we need to have people asking for
vouchers which give them access to emergency food?”
Even a think-tank with links to the Conservative Party, the Policy
Exchange, has criticised the government’s approach to benefits, pointing out
that 68,000 people have their benefits taken away by mistake every year, which
they believe has “contributed to the rise in the number of people using food
banks.”
Yet last week, I was very surprised and saddened to see a number
of politicians, including two former Conservative Chancellors (Lord Lamont and Lord
Lawson) and the leadership of UKIP, calling for a tax cut for individuals
earning over £41,450.
It is my view that such priorities are totally wrong.
I believe that today’s politicians need to share the values
of people like Nye Bevan. They should be working to protect our public services
and to improve the lot of the less-well-off – not giving tax cuts to individuals
in higher tax brackets.
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