“There have been huge gains in life
expectancy worldwide,” the OECD finds, “but large disparities remain
among socio-economic groups.…everywhere, the richest and the most
educated are in better health: at age 30, people with the highest level
of education could expect to live six years longer than people with the
lowest level of education (53 years versus 47 years). Differences in
life expectancy by education level are particularly large in Central
European countries, especially among men.”
The health-inequality comes from many
factors that include differences in living and working conditions, and
access to and quality of health care. Access to quality health care is
influenced by financial and non-financial reasons. And, both – financial
and non-financial reasons – are connected to politics of dominating
classes, which are not identified by mainstream academia.
The power that defines living and working conditions is not identified although the differences are mentioned. The two conditions – living and working – are constructed by none else, but profit. The poor, the multitude is pressed into the conditions, part of competition, by capital.
Studies conducted in Australia, New
Zealand and the US found that in many poorer neighborhoods healthy food
is neither available nor accessible nor affordable.
Doesn’t it echo Engels?
“The workers get
what is too bad for the property-holding class. In the great towns of
England everything may be had of the best, but it costs money; and the
workmen … cannot afford much expense. … The potatoes which the workers
buy are usually poor, the vegetables wilted, the cheese old and of poor
quality, the bacon rancid, the meat lean, tough, taken from old, often
diseased, cattle, or such as have died a natural death, and not fresh
even then, often half decayed.”
(The Condition of the Working-class in
England)
(New Age, Dhaka, October 16, 2014,
“Hunger stalks millions despite growth in food production, World Food
Day today”)
The inconsistent “picture” is not only from Bangladesh and
from England. It’s in India, and it’s in Nepal and South Africa also.
It’s the overall reality in the world system.
Don’t the facts reaffirm the reality of
inequality, and the demands the working people struggle for: affordable
better food, affordable better health care, affordable better
environment, safer life, affordable leisure-time? The inequality turns
cruel if one compares this with profit-stories of health care and food
industries.
The cited facts are fresh but the reality
of inequality is old. It’s an old narration of the triumphal march of
capital with its devastating power.
taken from much longer article by Farooque Chowdhury here
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