To end inequality without redistribution of wealth, we should pay a living wage

Duncan Exley argues the lessons we should draw from the British Social Attitudes Survey are to push for a living wage and retain the 50p top rate of tax.

 

Duncan Exley is the campaign director for One Society

It has been widely reported that the latest British Social Attitudes Survey found that although three quarters of the British public think the gap between rich and poor is too wide, only 35 per cent thought the Government should engage in redistribution.

This raises a question of how a progressive government could reduce the UK’s high, growing and unpopular levels of income inequality if the public distrusts tax-and-spend solutions.

There are two answers to that question.

The first is to recognise that although the public may not be enthusiastic about redistribution in general, they do favour redistribution away from the top one per cent. The majority of voters, including Conservatives, support the 50p top tax rate.

The popular support for the idea of reversing the rocketing pre-tax levels of top pay has also been recognised in statements by Conservative, Labour and Liberal Democrat politicians.

But progressives should also recognise that inequality at the bottom end of the income scale can be tackled at the same time as seeking to reduce spending on benefits. This could be done by focusing on the huge cost to taxpayers and the wider economy of companies which pay their low-paid staff at such levels that substantial benefit subsidies are required to make ends meet.

The cost of in-work poverty is huge: The IFS estimates that sub-living wage pay costs taxpayers £6 billion each year. If we examine the wider taxpayer cost of in-work poverty, the picture is even bleaker: child poverty costs us £25 billion each year, even though 57 per cent of children in poverty have working parents.

Politicians have been relatively quiet about the living wage recently (perhaps distracted by the staggering increases in top-end pay). This is a shame – there are certainly many more companies who can afford to pay a living wage than presently do so (we could start by looking at those who can afford to pay their senior staff unusually large amounts).

While some private sector companies pass the costs of their low pay policies onto taxpayers, some public sector employers are also complicit. For example, there is an increasing trend towards local authorities outsourcing services.

It would be helpful if public sector employers published an assessment of the full taxpayer cost of major contracts, so that “taxpayer savings” can be scrutinised, to see if they are what they claim to be.

See also:

50p tax: Still a Tory obsession, still not that exceptionalAlex Hern, November 24th 2011

Inflation is worse for the worst offAlex Hern, November 6th 2011

Citizens UK: “The Big Society is flawed if people have to work two jobs”Peter Carrol on Neil Jameson, October 21st 2011

Only quarter of voters want to scrap 50p taxWill Straw, August 1st 2011

Tesco (profits: £3.8bn) under fire for failing to pay cleaners living wagePeter Carrol, June 21st 2011

41 Responses to “To end inequality without redistribution of wealth, we should pay a living wage”

  1. Prateek Buch

    The British don't like #inequality or redistribution. Fair pay policies can help to square that circle: http://t.co/FQZ91Xfn

  2. Bristling Badger

    To end inequality without redistribution of wealth, we should pay a living wage http://t.co/iad4JMwl |#WiUnion #Occupy #OWS #OO #Capitalists

  3. Paulo Querido

    To end inequality without redistribution of wealth, we should pay a living wage http://t.co/33YFJzl9 (a pobreza custa imenso em impostos)

  4. Paulo Querido

    To end inequality without redistribution of wealth, we should pay a living wage http://t.co/33YFJzl9

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