My article in today’s Cornish Guardian addressed global
inequality. It is as follows:
The respected charity OXFAM has launched a campaign titled
“Even It Up,” which seeks to pressure governments to do more to tackle
inequality.
I believe it is a very important campaign of great relevance
in the 21st century, both for the United Kingdom and wider World.
Here in the UK ,
the austerity measures of the Conservative and Liberal Democrat Coalition are
certainly hitting the less-well-off much more than the wealthy.
One recent study shows that in 2000, the richest 10%
controlled 51.5% of Britain ’s
wealth, but this has now risen to 54.1%.
One broadsheet newspaper summarised the report as follows:
“Wealth inequality has risen four times faster in the seven years after the
crash compared with the seven years before. The rich in the UK are becoming
richer faster than ever. Wealth inequality rose under Labour; it rose faster
under the Coalition.”
OXFAM itself states that “economic inequality has reached
extreme levels,” while many of its statistics are truly shocking.
In 2013, “seven out of ten people lived in countries where
the gap between the rich and poor is worse than thirty years ago.”
In 2014, the “richest 85 people on the planet owned as much
as the poorest half of humanity,” and these 85 individuals, last year, “saw
their wealth increase by half a million dollars every minute.”
Since the financial crisis, “the number of billionaires has
more than doubled and in that same period at least a million mothers died in
childbirth.”
There are “sixteen billionaires in sub-Saharan Africa , alongside the 358 million people living in
extreme poverty.”
OXFAM want the “Even It Up” campaign to be the “start of
something special.” The organisation
states that it knows “we can't solve the inequality crisis overnight,” but has
pledged that it will take on “governments and big business to make sure they
deliver the real change needed to reverse the trend of rising inequality.”
Specific proposals include sorting out the tax system so the
richest and huge corporations “pay their fair share,” spending more on “public
health and education to give the poor a fighting chance,” and ensuring “fair
wages for everyone.”
It is my hope that the British Government, and other
governments around the globe, actually listen and put fairness at the heart of
their future policies.
No comments:
Post a Comment