James Bloodworth writes:
There are two pernicious myths
in British politics. One follows on from the other and both concern inequality.
The first is that inequality
only matters to the left. The second accepts this while emphasising the greater
importance of equality of opportunity.
The first assumption is
relatively easy to counter: just
5 per cent of the public think large differences in wealth are necessary
for Britain to be prosperous.
Inequality is no longer just an issue for the
poor (if it ever really was), but is hitting the middle classes too.
The five
richest families in Britain now own
more than the poorest 20 per cent combined while the middle classes are
increasingly falling behind.
Property prices are entrenching
the wealth of homeowners while simultaneously making it harder for others to
get on the property ladder.
Average wages lag behind inflation and even prior
to the 2008 financial crisis only the richest 10 per cent of households saw
significant benefit from economic growth.
As to the second myth, social
mobility is subverted by the inequality of outcome that meritocracy legitimizes
– for the obvious reason that the privileges of the parents tend to become the
privileges of the children.
Countless studies show that social mobility
improves in more equal societies. Egalitarian Norway has the highest level of
social mobility, followed by Denmark, Sweden and Finland.
Britain and the US
are the most unequal developed societies and, unsurprisingly, have much lower
rates of social mobility.
All talk of equality of
opportunity without considering inequality of outcome is little more than cant.
This provides a huge
opportunity for Ed Miliband if only he chooses to grasp it.
The Conservatives
are ideologically opposed to reducing the gap between rich and poor.
The
Liberal Democrats want the dish of fried snowballs that is a meritocracy with
large discrepancies in wealth.
Miliband is reportedly
convinced that the gap between rich and poor is the defining issues of our
time.
As he put it in his Hugo
Young Lecture earlier this year, “tackling inequality is the new centre
ground of politics”.
So why doesn’t he talk about it
more often?
There is a suspicion that, like
Gordon Brown before him, Ed feels that he must to some extent hide his true
beliefs through fear that Britain is at heart a small-c conservative country.
But on inequality this is a
mistake.
The novelist John Steinbeck once said that socialism never took root
in American because the poor saw themselves not as an embattled proletariat,
but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires.
This sense of economic optimism
has never existed in Britain and is light-years away from the country’s current
predicament.
People are thinking about how they are going to pay this winter’s
gas bill, not whether or not they will be able to rent a yacht in San Tropez in
the summer.
When Ed Miliband won the Labour
leadership back in 2010 he did so on the claim that, during the financial
crisis, Britain’s political compass had shifted decisively to the left.
In
terms of wealth inequality he was right – inequality is now as much a middle
class problem as it is a working class one.
The rich are buying up, snapping up,
the properties the middle classes once lived in and their offspring
increasingly dominate the most prestigious professions.
Just
7 per cent of Britons are privately educated yet 33 per cent of our MPs, 71
per cent of our senior judges and 44 per cent of people on the Sunday
Times Rich List went to private school.
The middle classes want to know
that their children will be able to get on. Inequality is a barrier to that.
One of Miliband’s problems is a
lack of congruency – there is a perceptible gap between what he says and what
people think he truly believes, especially on issues like immigration and
Europe.
On the issue of inequality there is no such problem – Miliband is in
tune with our increasingly unfair times.
Talk about inequality again,
Ed.
Get angry about it.
You may be surprised just how many people are with you.
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