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Cooking
the Books 2 |
What
classless
society? |
At one time, a
long time ago now, when the Labour Party still retained
some sort of vague commitment to being opposed to the workings of
capitalism it used to say that it favoured the redistribution of wealth
from the rich to the poor. They were going (they said) to establish a
more equal society by taxing the rich and using the money to provide
better public services for the rest of us.
Actually, in the last century there was a long-term trend towards a
less uneven distribution of wealth ownership. But this did not
result
from any deliberate policy on the part of governments (the wealthy soon
found ways of minimising or avoiding taxes on their existing wealth and
on their accumulation of more wealth), but rather from a majority of
people coming to own more consumer goods, etc. resulting in the total
amount of wealth owned by the non-rich sections of society rising
faster than the total amount owned by the wealthy.
The rich still got richer – and, in absolute terms, each one of them
got more than each of the rest of us – but, proportionately, together
they got less than the rest of us as a group. There was no
redistribution from them to us; which would have gone against the logic
of capitalism involving as it does the accumulation of more and more
capital in the hands of a capitalist class.
In the 1990s this long-term trend (which continued even under Thatcher)
was reversed. Since 1991 the rich have been getting richer faster than
the rest of us – despite a Labour government. In December the Office
for National Statistics published the figures for the latest available
year, 2002. Two sets of figures are published, one for all marketable
wealth and the other for ““marketable wealth less value of dwellings”.
Since capitalism is based on the concentration of the ownership of the
means of wealth-production in the hands of a tiny minority, and
since
houses are not means of production, it is the second set of figures
that are the more relevant (even if they still include other items of
wealth such as cars and hi-fi equipment that are also not means of
production),
These figures (published on the ONS website at http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget_print.asp?ID=2
show how things have changed since 1996, as the situation inherited
by the present Labour government when it came into office:
1996 1999 2000 2001 2002
Top 1%
owned
26 34
33 34 35
Top
5%
49 59
59 58 62
Bottom
95%
51 41
41 42 38
Bottom
50%
6
3
2
2 2
As can be seen, whereas in 1996 the top 5 percent owned as much as the
bottom 95 per cent - or one out of every 19 persons owned as much as
the other 19 (of whom half owned virtually nothing) taken together - by
2002 the top 5 percent owned nearly 40 percent than the rest of us.
Who says that we’re living in a classless society? Who says that the
capitalist class have died out? Who says that the Labour Party can
deliver a more equal society or is even trying to?
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Contents Page
The
Socialist Party
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