The UK government’s welfare cuts and changes to taxation have encouraged economic inequality so intensely that they amount to ‘speeded-up Thatcherism.’ The divide between rich and poor is widening faster than in the 1980s, according to a new report.
Working-age families with children will be particularly hard-hit in the coming years, according to the report, written by economist Howard Reed. He laid out the impact of Conservative / Liberal Democrat coalition policies on household income, drawing the conclusion that the poorest families in the UK are on a path to losing some 12 percent of their average income.
However, the UK’s second wealthiest income bracket are set to lose a mere three percent of their net income, illustrating the backwardness of the set of policies. Council Tax is used as an example in the report, which points out how it charges low-to-middle income families a considerably higher percentage of their disposable income than the richest British households.
It is “quite possible that the impact of the coalition’s tax and benefit measures would be as bad for inequality as the Thatcher government’s record, despite the fact that, by 2015, David Cameron will have been Prime Minister for less than half as long as Margaret Thatcher was,” said Reed, comparing it to a“speeded-up action replay of Thatcherism.”
Thatcher’s premiership was renowned for high unemployment and social unrest, while being criticized by opponents for promoting a culture of greed.
Reed went on to underline the Liberal Democrat’s complicit role in the disparity of wealth.
“This may come as a particular shock to Liberal Democrats in the government, many of whom spent the 1980s railing against [this] kind of increase in inequality,” Reed said.
The Liberal Democrats enabled the Conservative Party to form a coalition government in 2010. At the time, they set out the party’s general election manifesto promises, telling a London audience that “our manifesto will hardwire fairness into British society.”
“Faced with a Thatcher-style inequality boom, Labour must rediscover its egalitarian core and never forget that redistribution must be part of the answer,” he said.
Economic optimism - just on the surface?
Optimism about the UK economy has been increasing in recent months: at the beginning of July a British Chambers of Commerce survey showed a strong rise in firms’ domestic and overseas sales and high business confidence in the face of increasing exports. The major business poll also published figures at the end of May forecasting that the economy would grow 0.9 percent this year.
A bi-annual Lloyds TSB survey published last Monday also showed a leap in the UK confidence index by 11 points to 30pc over the past six months, while the latest GDP figures, to be published in the coming week are also expected to display modest growth.
British Prime Minister David Cameron and Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne are expected to seize the GDP figures to show evidence of improvement. Osborne has already said that Britain is“moving from rescue to recovery” and David Cameron stated in an interview on Sunday that the economy is “healing.”
However, living standards and household income remain under pressure.
The Which? Consumer Insight Tracker has demonstrated that a third of families – totaling some 9 million – are feeling financially constrained. This compares to only 7.5 million from July 2012. Food prices have increased 4.3 percent in the year. It was revealed at the end of May that some 500,000 people in the UK are resorting to food banks because of squeezes on benefits, wage cuts and the continuing economic downturn.
“Consumers may be aiding our fragile economic recovery, but using savings and getting into debt is not sustainable, and more people are now feeling the squeeze. The Government must do more to keep spiraling housing, food and energy prices in check,” Richard Lloyd, executive director of Which? told the Independent.
Opposition politicians have criticized the present government’s policies for their divisiveness.
“While this may feel like a recovery for those at the top, life is getting harder for middle- and low-income families. Wages after inflation are now down by an average of £1,300 since David Cameron got into Downing Street, yet bank bonuses soared to £4bn in April, as high earners took full advantage of the top rate tax cut,” Chris Leslie, shadow financial secretary to the Treasury told the paper.
Earlier this month, official Office for National Statistics (ONS) figures showed that the least well off households have been coughing up 36.6% of their income to the Treasury while the wealthiest have been paying less – 35.5% as VAT duty on goods and fuel hits poorer families harder than the rich, as it stays at the same rate, regardless of earnings. The figures took into account both the tax bills of the poorest 20 percent and the richest 20 percent.
“What more evidence could anyone need that this Government is piling higher costs on lower and middle-income households while cutting taxes for the wealthy?” Leslie told Britain’s Mirror after learning of the ONS figures.