Although many appear resigned to life under this dysfunctional capitalism, there is a way to make the system less inhuman
Britain is on the move,
says George Osborne, from
"rescue to recovery". But not if you're young: this
week's unemployment figures showed joblessness among the 16-24s rising to
973,000. Not if you're the north-east,
the north-west
or Wales,
where the out-of-work numbers have also risen. And if you've been on the dole
for more than two years, heaven help you: despite the millions blown on the work
programme and Osborne's alleged green shoots, the numbers of people suffering
long-term unemployment jumped by 10,000 to 474,000, the highest figure in 16
years.
Some recovery, then. At
the same time there are even more signs of the ongoing pinch affecting those
people once thought to be safe, in the aspirational middle. In the Economist
this week there is a
very incisive graph plotting median real earnings and the retail price
index. It shows the former keeping pace with the latter until 2005, when they
began to split. From 2009, moreover, the earnings line began to drop, while
prices carried on rising: the UK, we now know, has one of the worst
recent records on real wages of any country in Europe (worse even than
Spain, which is saying something).
"The plate tectonics of
the labour market offer the best explanation for this," said the accompanying
text. "With a declining industrial base, the British economy needs fewer
mid-level skilled workers. Most new posts are low- or high-paying ones … Many in
the middle lack the skills to move up and are pushed towards the low-wage end of
the economy. Machinists and tradesmen become cashiers and call-centre workers." They do, and when that happens, they are ushered into that fragile part of the
labour force we now know as the Precariat,
where zero-hours contracts are becoming the norm, and a return visit to the
jobcentre is never far away.
Meanwhile, the cost of
living continues to soar, not least in the parts of the country held up to be
the recovery's heartlands. In the last year, food
prices have risen four times as fast as average pay. There are now plans to
make water meters compulsory for people served by nine of the UK's water
companies, which could lead to some family bills doubling. This week also
brought news of more increases to train fares, some of which could go up by as
much as 9%.
And who will that hit?
Among others, commuters who have often fled from London's impossible house
prices – which, according to this week's headlines, have lately risen by 8.1%,
the biggest jump in two-and-a-half years. Entirely unsurprisingly, the share
of Londoners renting on the private market is up from 18% in 2011 to 25%
today. And an increase in demand colliding with flatlining supply means only one
thing: the average share of income devoted to rental costs is now a jaw-dropping
27%, up from 21% a decade ago.
This is what a completely
dysfunctional version of capitalism looks like. The crudest, most stupid,
completely self-destructive formula for maximising profits – cutting wages while
pushing up prices – is extended over the entire economy. An ever-increasing
dependence on the service sector drives out skilled jobs in the middle, and
offers no hope to those places which are still a byword for the end of heavy
industry and manufacturing. The nation's capital becomes the playground of the
people at the very top, serviced by young people who can live cheaply(ish), and
people from overseas who are just about able to cope, on the basis that they
might eventually go home. Housing, surely any worker's most basic need, is in
permanent crisis. And for a lot of people trying to keep pace with forces that
are out of anyone's control, there is only one option: residence in what
the economist Ann Pettifor this week called Wongaland, where people borrow
unsustainably while saving absolutely nothing (see right).
And so to an interesting
question: what are the politics of all this? On my office shelves, there are two
books whose titles – both of which include the word "great"– neatly encapsulate
the most important developments of the last 30 years. One, titled The Great
Divestiture, is by Italian economist Massimo Florio. It chronicles the
revolution that took industries and services once delivered by the state into
the private sector, and thereby relieved politicians of accountability for their
machinations, not least when the monopoly capitalists in charge started to
endlessly push up prices. The other is The
Great Risk Shift, by US academic Jacob S Hacker, a very prescient look at
how employers, with the complicity of governments, have spent the past few
decades shoveling responsibilities on to the narrow shoulders of their
workers.
Yet perhaps something is
stirring. This week's big thing has been the carpeting – and egging – of Ed
Miliband. Certainly, Labour should be doing much better. But its people have been talking
for quite a while about a cost of living crisis. Their proposed
solutions still look flimsy, but that is perhaps down to the fact that when
faced with a hegemonic economic model – one, moreover, in which they have long
acquiesced – most Labour people understandably do not even know where to start.
Not that long ago, it looked like their leader might: he was at least talking
about the squeezed middle, responsible capitalism and Hacker's ideas about
"pre-distribution". If it's not too late, they are themes worth reprising –
though whether people might be perplexed by the spectacle of a politician taking
issue with things they see as invincible forces of nature is a very interesting
question.
Guardian