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Monday 19 June 2017

The widening wealth gap: "Shifts in who owns what property are now fuelling the wealth gap between rich and poor, while also creating sharp wealth divides between young and old."

It seems we are not particularly bothered about 'inequality' as such - but more about 'lack of fairness':
Futures Forum: Fairness and/or equality

But how do you measure 'inequality'? 

By differences between the poorest and the richest? Or by differences between what we have now compared to what we had yesterday?
Futures Forum: Measuring poverty
Futures Forum: Absolute vs relative poverty

Alternatively, do we measure 'inequality' in terms of income? Or the assets you own?

The Resolution Foundation (led by former Conservative MP David Willetts) 
Home - Resolution Foundation
Resolution Foundation - Wikipedia

... reports that fewer of us own more and more of us own less - whereas the current government points to how there has been a narrowing of the pay gap:
Wealth gap rises as home ownership falls, says study | Inequality | The Guardian

Besides, is it 'fair' that the young can't afford to get onto the property ladder?

UK wealth gap 'widening over past decade' says report

18 July 2017 

From the section Business

The UK's wealth gap has been widening over the past decade, a report says.

Think tank the Resolution Foundation estimates 1% of adults, some 488,000 people, own 14% of the nation's assets - worth about £11 trillion. At the other end of the financial scale, 15% (7.3 million people) either own no assets at all, or are in debt.

The government has responded to the findings by insisting that income inequality is at its lowest level since the mid-1980s.

The Resolution Foundation says it is non-partisan and was founded in 2005, with "the goal of improving living standards for the 15 million people in Britain on low and middle incomes".


'Wealth gap'

The foundation says the spreading of property wealth in the mid-1990s and mid-2000s fuelled a decade-long fall in wealth inequality - but that progress has since gone into reverse. The proportion of property wealth owned by the bottom four-fifths of adults grew from 35% in 1995 to 40% in 2005.

However, the foundation warns "that with home ownership steadily falling since its mid-2000s peak, the proportion of property wealth owned by the bottom four-fifths of the population has started to fall again".

"Given the hugely unequal distribution of wealth across Britain, it's time we looked into how the nation's wealth is divided up and what the consequences are for those who never build up assets of any significance," said Conor D'Arcy, policy analyst at the Resolution Foundation. "Falling levels of home ownership mean that, having once been a great force in driving down inequality, shifts in who owns what property are now fuelling the wealth gap between rich and poor, while also creating sharp wealth divides between young and old."

'More homes'

A government spokesperson said: "We want to build an economy that works for everyone. Income inequality is now at its lowest level since the mid-1980s and the lowest paid saw their wages grow faster than for 20 years.

"The next step is to get Britain building more homes and halt the decline in housing affordability. The Housing White Paper which sets out a bold package of reforms, following a £7.2bn investment at Autumn Statement, will help ensure more working people have the security of a decent place to live."


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