Inequalities in pay and
opportunities in the UK are becoming so extreme they are threatening
democracy, an Institute for Fiscal Studies study has said.
The
think tank warns of runaway incomes for high earners but rises in
“deaths of despair”, such as from addiction and suicide, among the
poorest.
It warns of risks to “centre-ground” politics from stagnating pay and divides in health and education.
The report says such widening gaps are “making a mockery of democracy”.
The
Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) is launching what it says is the
UK’s biggest analysis of inequality, which will be chaired by Nobel
Prize-winning economist Prof Sir Angus Deaton.
‘Taking rather than making’
Sir Angus said “people were troubled by inequality” more than at any time since the 1940s – and the impact was so serious that it suggested “democratic capitalism is broken”.
He warned of the dangers of disillusionment if people did not feel fairly rewarded for their work – and that extreme wealth seemed to be gained by “taking rather than making”.
Sir Angus said “people getting rich is a good thing” but not if it meant “enriching the few at the expense of the many”.
At the outset of this review, the IFS has published indicators of
inequality – such as the average chief executive of a FTSE 100 company
now earning 145 times the average salary, up from 47 times in 1998.
It
suggests pay inequality in the UK is high by international standards –
with the share of household income going to the richest 1% having
tripled in the past three decades.
The middle classes are also under pressure, particularly younger generations, with stagnant pay and unaffordable house prices.
The long-term decline in trade union membership is identified as another factor in wages not increasing.
As well as inequality in income, the think tank highlights divergence in health.
It
says there is almost a 10-year gap in male life expectancy between the
richest and poorest areas – and the IFS warns of “deaths of despair”,
with a rise in early deaths from drug and alcohol abuse and suicide
being linked to factors such as poverty, social isolation and mental
health problems.
Patterns of relationship are also affected by inequality, the study suggests.
Over recent decades, wealthier people have become more likely to be living in a couple, either married or co-habiting, the IFS says.
But among the poor, declining numbers are living with a partner, a
pattern attributed to increasing job insecurity, a lack of financial
independence and more “chaotic lives”.
The big picture, says the
IFS, is the UK is becoming more like the US, with a concentration of
wealth at the top and pressure on working families lower down the pay
scale.
It says that in the US, increases in life expectancy have
stalled and that for non-graduate male workers, pay has not risen in
real terms for five decades.
“The risk is that the UK may follow a similar path,” says the IFS study.
The IFS warns of the social tensions that will come with an economic landscape built on widening inequality.
As
economic think tank the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) reported recently, this is likely to put pressure on the middle classes as well as those on low incomes.
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