
Booms
and Slums
Anyone
who has read Frederick Engels’ The Condition of the Working
Class in England will long remember much of what it says. Page
after page describes the lives of workers in the big cities in 1844.
Two boys in London, for instance, were arrested for stealing a
half-cooked calf’s foot from a shop: the magistrate discovered that
their mother had sold or pawned all the family’s possessions in
order to buy food. Many others had little or no furniture and slept
on the floor, covered in rags.
The
accounts of slum dwellings are sometimes hard to believe. Perhaps the
worst was the Little Ireland area of Manchester, where four thousand
people lived in overcrowded, unsanitary, decrepit cottages and the
filth and stench were all but intolerable. Similar conditions were
found in Liverpool, Leeds, Bradford, Glasgow, and so on. It is
difficult to disagree with Engels’ statement that working people
were enduring ‘a condition unworthy of human beings’.
In
1971 Robert Roberts published The Classic Slum, an account of
his upbringing in Salford in the early twentieth century. In 1910, he
records, his mother cajoled their landlord into installing a
cast-iron bath (which meant an extra shilling a week in rent).
Several neighbours came to look at the bath, its taps and so on: they
had never used or even seen a bath before. Workers scrimped and saved
to afford a rag rug and a couple of framed pictures, let alone
‘luxuries’ such as a watch or a bike. Getting by from week to
week often relied on pawning their Sunday best clothes. In looking
back at his childhood and the lives of his neighbours, Roberts refers
to ‘the spoiled complexions, the mouths full of rotten teeth, the
varicose veins, the ignorance of simple hygiene, the intelligence
stifled and the endless battle merely to keep clean’. Such were the
good old days amid the flourishing of the British Empire.
And
is it all just in the Victorian and Edwardian past? While
homelessness and bad housing still exist, can it be said that slums —
crowded, filthy, nasty — are no longer the lot of most? Mike Davis’
book Planet of Slums describes a world where one in three of
the urban population, mainly in the ‘Third World’, live in slums.
It goes without saying that slum life is bad for your health and life
expectancy. Landslides, floods and earthquakes threaten those who
live in shoddy housing in marginal areas. Fires, whether accidental
or deliberately set by property developers, can spread so fast that
nobody can escape.
Sanitation
is another disaster area, with the situation having changed little
since Engels’ day. Sewage systems are virtually non-existent in
many cities: Davis cites one slum area in Nairobi which had just ten
working toilets for forty thousand people. But there is hope for the
future, as in some places pay toilets have become a hugely profitable
growth industry — though of course they’re not so convenient for
the millions who cannot afford to use them.
Profiting
from poverty is widespread. Such is the population density in slums
that landlords make plenty of money from even the poorest
neighbourhoods. Many cities in Asia and Africa are effectively owned
by small numbers of landlords, and those who rent from them are the
most powerless of all. Squatting becomes increasingly difficult as
vacant land is developed and forcible evictions increase: over
three-quarters of a million evicted in Harare in 2005, for instance.
Slum-dwellers often have little choice but to fight back by building
their own homes or resorting to food riots.
Cities
like Manchester in Engels’ time were essentially the result of the
Industrial Revolution. But in contrast, Davis argues, the growth of
megacities and hence of megaslums over the last twenty years or so
has been marked by deindustrialisation, as factories have closed in
places such as Mumbai, Johannesburg and Sao Paulo. Like Mexico City
and Jakarta, these have enormous populations but far smaller
economies. The new slums are also mostly on the peripheries of the
cities rather than in inner-city areas, and so usually lack any
half-way decent transport infrastructure.
The
financial institutions of global capitalism have played a major role
in maintaining the regime of slum living. The International Monetary
Fund and the World Bank have helped finance slum ‘improvement’
programmes in city after city, via privatisation of housing supply
and the ending of food subsidies. The result has not been to
eradicate slums, of course, but to spread ‘informal’ employment
which lacks contracts and bargaining power. Along with this has come
an expansion of child labour along the lines recorded by Engels and
Dickens.
The
development of capitalism, then, has not done away with the horrors
of slums. Inadequate housing continues to exist in ‘advanced’
countries, with an estimated 100,000 homeless people in Los Angeles
and one child in seven growing up in bad housing in the UK. Perhaps
two million American families will lose their homes over the next
couple of years, as the sub-prime crisis bites. Worldwide, as many as
one billion people live — or do their best to create some kind of
life — in slums. While the rich reside in their gated communities,
the poor dwell in conditions of scarcely-imaginable squalor,
marginalised in terms of work and family life. A Socialist society
would face a tremendous task in replacing slums with decent housing,
but that is a problem that capitalism can never tackle let alone
solve.
PAUL
BENNETT
Page 14