While
the new Prime Minister Boris Johnson praises the country’s golden future as
soon as Brexit has been accomplished by 31 October, increasing social
inequality in the UK has dropped off the agenda. However, nine years of
Conservative and Conservative-led governments have left their mark with many
people stranded in abject poverty. The UN special rapporteur on extreme poverty Philip Alston recently
referred to government policy as "designing a digital and
sanitised version of the 19th Century workhouse, made infamous by Charles
Dickens" (BBC, 22
May 2019). In this blog post, I will look at precarious employment
as one of the key causes of inequality.
Showing posts with label poverty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poverty. Show all posts
Saturday, 21 September 2019
Wednesday, 27 March 2019
Labour’s woes over Brexit or No Brexit: don’t lose sight of the real problem - inequality!
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Photo by ChiralJon |
Saturday, 9 December 2017
In whose interest? The need for a new economics.
The global financial
crisis shook the global economy in 2007/2008 and its fallout can still be felt
in the form of high unemployment, permanent austerity and wage stagnation. In
the immediate aftermath, many started to question the neo-liberal assumptions
about the benefits of the ‘free market’. Had it not been the deregulation of
financial markets and here in particular the financial markets in the US, which
had caused the crisis in the first place? And yet, almost ten years later, neo-liberal
economics continues to reign supreme. In this blog post, I will assess the
strange non-death of neo-liberal economics and its implications for the
politics of the British Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell.
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