The Equality Trust and High Pay Centre has average pay for
UK workers calculated as £26,500. However, average pay conceals the reality for
millions.
For instance, the top 0.1% are earning a few pounds over £1
million a year and the top 1% are earning an average £271,888. What this figure
hides is the fact that the top FTSE chief executives are earning an average of
£4.3 million and it takes them just 2.5 days to earn the average annual workers
pay. These statistics do not include other successful groups such as self
employed entrepreneurs.
The top 10% of UK workers earn £79,196. But the truth here
is that this also includes the earnings of the top 1%, meaning the next 9%
don’t really earn that figure.
What is grotesque is the next number that should shock
everyone. The average pay of the next 90%, (by stripping out all earnings of
the top 10%, including the 1% and 0.1% groups) leaves an annual income of just
£12,969. Yes, you read that right. Stripping out the top 10% of average pay,
leaves just £12,969 average pay for the remaining 90% of the population. Many
people in that 90% category earn considerably more than £12,969, leaving the
bottom 20% earning around £5,500 per annum.
So how are British
workers and families really doing?
Since 2008, just one in every forty jobs created is
full-time. By 2014, this was the equivalent loss of nearly 700,000 full-time
jobs.
In 2013, there were more working families living in poverty
in the UK than non-working families for the first time since the birth of the
welfare state. In fact, in that year (2013) alone there were 500,000 more
families added to this over-stretched group.
According to an article in The Independent quoting the
Joseph Rowntree Foundation, out of 26,400,000 UK households there were “6.7
million families with adults in employment who meet the worrying criteria of
living in poverty compared with a combined 6.3 million of retired and
unemployed families living in poverty.”
If true, these figures combined clearly shows that about 45
per cent of all households in Britain are now living in what is defined as
poverty and require some form of state aid to survive.
According to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, the largest
group in poverty are working age adults without dependent children and there
are 4.7 million people in this situation alone, the highest on record – ever.
According to the same charity and the New Policy Institute
who worked together on a report, they found another 4.3 million families who
were in work but need state support just to survive (data could only be
collated from 2012).
Oxfam says 1 in 5 of the total UK population now lives below
the official poverty line, meaning that they experience life as more than just
a daily struggle.
A new report finds that up to 1.5 million benefit claimants
may be facing destitution after disappearing from the welfare system.
Government is failing to track why all claimants have
dropped off the roll meaning it has no idea how many people are being left
penniless, according to Frank Field, the Work and Pensions Committee chairman.
Field went further to say “Benefit sanctions are being applied on a scale
unknown since the Second World War and the fate of those penalised is anyones
guess.” The government department responsible does not count them and HM
Revenue and Customs doesn’t count anyone earning less than £8,500.
At the end of the 19th century about 25% of the population
was living at or below subsistence level. Around 10% were living in total
poverty and 15% were living just below the poverty line.
At the beginning of the 20th century, surveys showed 25% of
the population still lived in poverty, with 15% struggling just below and 10%
in abject poverty – so no change in 100 years.
Just after the First World War and before the Second World
War, abject poverty (people unable to feed themselves) fell to 4% of the
population and by 1950 this category had all but disappeared.
Yet, as Britain became wealthier, now the sixth richest
nation on earth, Oxfam reports that we have over 2 million estimated to be
malnourished and another 3 million at risk of becoming just that. Over one
third of the population are just one heating bill from hardship with 1 in 6
parents across the country going without food themselves in order to feed their
own families.
Over one million people use Trussell Trust food banks today,
with experts warning figures showing a 19% rise year-on-year is just the ‘tip
of the iceberg’ of UK food poverty. In 2009, the same charity only distributed
food to 41,000 people.
Official government statistics confirms that one third of
the entire UK population experienced poverty between 2010 and 2013 with overall
poverty sitting at a staggering 16% – four times the level just after the First
World War. The ONS tries to justify these figures by comparing the UK with the
rest of Europe – including poor countries with a long history of poverty such
as Moldova (lowest average income £2,300/$3,500), then Kosovo, Ukraine,
Albania, Herzegovina and Bosnia, Serbia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania and
Bulgaria – the highest average income of all these, Bulgaria at £9,450.
During the Blair years, overall poverty declined 20% with
dramatic falls for children and pensioners (both groups falling 36%). Under the
Coalition and now Conservatives, overall poverty has not got officially worse
but that depends on the statistics.
There are 500,000 more children in ‘absolute poverty’ since
David Cameron became PM. The total number of Britain’s youngsters living below
the waterline is now over 4 million.
In 2015, 100,000 additional pensioners reached this poverty
stricken group alone and this is all before the latest huge axe to the national
welfare fund is fully felt.
From all this, it appears that at least 20% of the UK
population are living in abject poverty and another 20-25% very close to it. The
clock has been turned backwards. The government target of no child poverty by
2020 is no longer even an aspiration. In fact, the government even went as far
as to scrap the 2020 child poverty targets for obvious embarrassing reasons.
1 comment:
This is an outstanding example of a rather old quote:
"He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lamp-posts... for support rather than illumination."
- Andrew Lang (1844-1912)
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