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Date: 2024-05-15 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00003749

Economics
Trends ... Inequality

Liebrary - Does giving the 1% greater rewards benefit everyone? Compare data for Britain and France to see this is not true

Burgess COMMENTARY
This is a comment I have made on this article:

Dear Colleagues

This is a good piece ... UK has some of the same bad characteristics that also exist in USA.

But inequality is a result and not a cause.

What is the cause, and what might be the best way out of this mess?

I argue that the way resources are allocated in the modern economy is based on a wrong premise, that money profit should be optimized. Rather the value flows should be optimized so that value performance is as good as it can be given the critical parameters of modern society.

Decision makers need to organize knowledge, people, and natural, money and material resources so that quality of life is maximized. For this the measure needs to be more than money profit and money wealth.

TrueValueMetrics and Value Accountancy address the question of value flow performance. These incentives and measures may well be the most effective way to change behavior.

Peter Burgess @truevaluemetric


Peter Burgess

Liebrary - Does giving the 1% greater rewards benefit everyone? Compare data for Britain and France to see this is not true

'The price of this financial crisis is being borne by people who absolutely did not cause it…..Now is the period when the cost is being paid, I'm surprised that the degree of public anger has not been greater than it has.' - Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England, March 2011.

Post Credit-Crisis austerity has been about taking less from the wealthy, and taking more from everyone else. Income tax cuts for the rich; wage freezes, pensions and benefits cuts for the rest.

Office of National Statistics Living Costs and Food Survey

Consumption taxes, like VAT, have gone up hitting ordinary Britons harder than the wealthy. Why harder? Because ordinary people spend all they earn to pay their bills, while the rich have surplus income to save. You don't pay consumption tax on what you don't consume. In this post, we reveal data from the Paris School of Economics that show how the 90% had their share of the boom stolen. The same 90% who are now made to endure austerity to pay for the bust.

The business and political elites tell us we must celebrate massive pay and bonuses for the elite for our own sakes. They tell us we must cut top rate income tax, we must not impose a wealth tax, we must allow tax avoidance loopholes for individuals and companies. All because if we did not it would hurt all us ordinary Britons.

They reassure us that it is for our sake that energy companies hike prices, for our comfort that pension companies take up to 50% of our savings in fees, and it is to give us free banking that banks charge us extra. Which coincidentally generate the profits to pay the massive bonuses and pay for the elite we should be celebrating. We are told we ordinary Britons would be worse off if these were not so.

But is this actually true? The lie is exposed by comparing how the income shares of the elites in France and in Britain have changed.

France and Britain have in recent history done about the same in terms of GDP (see graph at bottom of this post). Using Purchasing Power Parity (PPP), which shows the actual buying power of their money, in 2011 British GDP per person was US$36,500 while the French was US$35,200 per person. A difference in sterling of £2.50 a day.

Britain and France: two nations, both alike in dignity as well as GDP. But between 1981 and 2006 British elites sucked up income ten times faster than the French elite. And the lower 90% of Britons saw their share drop five times faster than the equivalent group of Frenchman.

  • Top 0.1%: in France share increased by 40%; in Britain share increased by 362%
  • Top 1% : in France share increased by 18%; in Britain share increased by 222%
  • Bottom 90%: in France share dropped by 3%; in Britain share dropped by 16%
The assertion by the rich that giving more to the rich makes us all richer is a lie. France managed equivalent growth in national GDP without the soaring inequality that has happened in the UK. No need for many more words, just see the graphs:


http://g-mond.parisschoolofeconomics.eu/topincomes/

No, I don't know why there is a gap in the dataset for the UK between 1986 and 1992


http://g-mond.parisschoolofeconomics.eu/topincomes/


http://g-mond.parisschoolofeconomics.eu/topincomes/

And here are the graphs for Gross Domestic Product showing, in spite of what the moneyed elite tell us, the galloping inequality in Britain has left the nation no better off than the more egalitarian French.

For clarity,the drop in share has resulted in a stagnation of income of the bottom 90%.


http://g-mond.parisschoolofeconomics.eu/topincomes/

So, next time someone tells you that great inequality is good for everyone send them a link to this post. Posted by Jake at 07:15



SATURDAY, 3 NOVEMBER 2012
The text being discussed is available at
http://www.blog.rippedoffbritons.com/2012/11/liebrary-see-graphic-proof-that-letting.html?showComment=1354403372118#c1663075103083594250
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