Tag Inequality

Last-place aversion

The Eco­nom­ist:

A new NBER paper finds evid­ence for an even more intriguing and pro­voc­at­ive hypo­thesis. Its authors note that those near but not at the bot­tom of the income dis­tri­bu­tion are often deeply ambi­val­ent about greater redistribution.

Instead of oppos­ing redis­tri­bu­tion because people expect to make it to the top of the eco­nomic lad­der, the authors of the new paper argue that people don’t like to be at the bot­tom. One para­dox­ical con­sequence of this “last-place aver­sion” is that some poor people may be voci­fer­ously opposed to the kinds of policies that would actu­ally raise their own income a bit but that might also push those who are poorer than them into com­par­able or higher pos­i­tions. The authors ran a series of exper­i­ments where stu­dents were ran­domly allot­ted sums of money, sep­ar­ated by $1, and informed about the “income dis­tri­bu­tion” that res­ul­ted. They were then given another $2, which they could give either to the per­son dir­ectly above or below them in the distribution.

In keep­ing with the notion of “last-place aver­sion”, the people who were a spot away from the bot­tom were the most likely to give the money to the per­son above them: reward­ing the “rich” but ensur­ing that someone remained poorer than themselves.

Which might go some way toward explain­ing why some of the rel­at­ively poor in Amer­ica often oppose rais­ing taxes on the rich.

A broken society, yes. But broken by Thatcher

Richard Wilkin­son and Kate Pick­ett writ­ing for The Guard­ian:

The evid­ence shows that almost all the prob­lems that occur most often in the poorest neigh­bour­hoods — includ­ing those that make us a broken soci­ety — are sys­tem­at­ic­ally more com­mon in more unequal soci­et­ies. Rates are not just a little higher, but between two and eight times higher. Wider income gaps make soci­et­ies socially dys­func­tional across the board.

Last Octo­ber Cameron roun­ded on Labour, say­ing: “Who made inequal­ity greater? No, not the wicked Tor­ies. You, Labour. You’re the ones that did this to our soci­ety. So don’t you dare lec­ture us about poverty. You have failed and it falls to us, the mod­ern Con­ser­vat­ive party, to fight for the poorest who you have let down.”

But the truth is that we are suf­fer­ing the impact of the massive increases in income inequal­ity under Thatcher, which Blair and Brown have since failed to reverse. In the 1980s the gulf between the top and bot­tom 20% widened by a full 60% — much the most dra­matic widen­ing of income dif­fer­ences on record.

Better late than never?

Labour (UK) have had twelve years to do this:

A fierce debate within the gov­ern­ment on how to tackle entrenched wealth inequal­ity … is to be ignited by a report ordered by Har­riet Har­man, the Labour deputy leader and the min­is­ter respons­ible for equalities.

NZ National/ACT government snouts in the trough

No Right Turn on the NZ National/ACT gov­ern­ment giv­ing them­selves a pay rise dur­ing a reces­sion and refus­ing to jus­tify it.

It’s much the same situ­ation here in the UK. Politi­cians have a deep sense of enti­tle­ment and non-accountability when it comes to rais­ing their income and expenses levels, but are quite happy to spend mil­lions of taxpayer’s money on aggress­ive advert­ising cam­paigns demon­ising low-income bene­fi­ciar­ies as a bunch of fraudsters.

Animal Farm: which character is Douglas Hogg?

Douglas Hogg — the Brit­ish Tory MP who included the cost of clean­ing his moat on his expenses—reck­ons:

A par­lia­ment­ary salary does not sup­port the life­style to which most pro­fes­sional and busi­ness classes aspire.

Which got me won­der­ing as to which char­ac­ter Hogg most resembles in Animal Farm. My money’s on Pin­keye.

He car­ries on to suggest:

The salary of MPs is now so low in both abso­lute and rel­at­ive terms as to deter mem­bers of pro­fes­sional and busi­ness classes from enter­ing Parliament.

Sounds per­fect. Maybe MPs salar­ies should be lowered?

But ser­i­ously, my favour­ite, link the National Min­imum Wage to MPs wages in some way.

Want to be bemused?

Then try fol­low­ing the debate pro­pa­ganda war on health care reform in the U.S.

Dar­ing Fire­ball has a couple of pearlers:

You Can’t Make This Stuff Up, Part One
You Can’t Make This Stuff Up, Part Two

Update: Stephen Hawk­ing:

I wouldn’t be here today if it were not for the NHS,” he told us. “I have received a large amount of high-quality treat­ment without which I would not have survived.

The evil legacy of Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and New Labour

Two things stand out as New Labour’s leg­acy: war of aggres­sion (the “supreme” war crime) and the worst inequal­ity of incomes since records began (another supreme crime con­sid­er­ing the dam­age it inflicts on every­body).

Tony Blair, Gor­don Brown and their con­spir­at­ors are little more than wolves in sheep’s cloth­ing and they’ve had much of the Labour Party and its sup­port­ers hood­winked for all these years.

Polly Toyn­bee — one of the hood­winked—may stamp her feet now but all she ends up doing is lay­ing bare how dys­func­tional Britain’s quasi-democracy is.

Because the UK is still stuck in the dark ages of plur­al­ity vot­ing (and New Labour broke its mani­festo pledge of elect­oral reform) con­trol of Bri­tain will simply pass from one wolf to another.

Jade Goody showed the brutal reality of Britain

Johann Hari: Jade Goody showed the bru­tal real­ity of Bri­tain.

In her short life, Jade showed how as Bri­tain has spir­alled into one of the most unequal and immob­ile soci­et­ies on earth, we have begun to openly jeer and sneer at the people trapped at the bottom.