Education and decreasing social mobility are certainly factors, Keith, but 
others would include the growing importance of the FIRE (finance, insurance and 
real estate) sector in which salaries and bonuses are high and the outsourcing 
of much of the manufacturing work that used to be done domestically to places 
in Asia where it can be done much more cheaply.

Ed
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Keith Hudson 
  To: [email protected] ; Ed Weick 
  Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2011 2:10 PM
  Subject: Re: The rich are getting richer and the poor poorer


  At 17:39 20/07/2011, Ed wrote:

    From today's Globe & Mail.  The growing gap between rich and poor has been 
a source of much argument and concern in the US.  We, in Canada, have been 
reading about it but smugly thinking that it's their problem not ours.  Well, 
maybe we have little to be smug about.

  No, you haven't. And neither has any advanced country. As we proceed further 
and further into a more specialized world then the gap between the rich 
(generally well educated) and the poor (generally insufficiently educated) will 
grow wider. Social mobility in all advanced countries is declining. Unless and 
until governments shed their educational monopoly for most children, and 
maintain the legalization of protective practices for the professions, then 
there's little hope that there'll be anything like a fairer, more gradated 
income society than now.

  Keith



    Ed
     

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    Do we care that Canada is an unequal society?<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns 
= "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />


     


    JEFFREY SIMPSON




    From Wednesday's Globe and Mail




    Published Wednesday, Jul. 20, 2011 2:00AM EDT


     

    The poor, it is said, will always be with us. Yes, but how many poor must 
there be?

    In Canada, there are too many poor people. The country that often likes to 
congratulate itself can't take comfort from an inescapable fact: We're becoming 
a more unequal society.

    Legislative committees and think tanks sometimes work on poverty, but, for 
the general public, income inequalities are consigned to the dead-letter box in 
this apparently conservative age. Even the NDP, which takes poverty more 
seriously than the other parties, has taken to talking incessantly about the 
"middle class," figuring that's where the voters are and where the poor would 
rather be if they could

    The Conference Board of Canada, hardly a bastion of far-left thinking, just 
reminded Canadians about the growing income inequalities in their society.

    The richest group of Canadians, those in the top fifth of income earners, 
saw their share of national income rise from 1993 to 2008. Within that 
fortunate group, the biggest gainers were the super rich, the top 1 per cent. 
And they got even richer not so much from investments but from basic salaries 
of the kind paid bank presidents and company CEOs.

    From 1980 to 2005, the earnings of the top group rose by 16.4 per cent, 
while middle-income Canadians' incomes stagnated, and earnings for those in the 
bottom group slid.

    There are various ways of measuring inequality. One is the Gini coefficent, 
which tracks inequality on a scale of 0 to 1, with 0 being a world of total 
equality and 1 being total inequality.

    Canada, it turns out, ranks 12 among 17 comparable countries in income 
inequality. Canada's Gini score is 0.32, slightly worse than that of Australia 
and Germany, and far behind Denmark (0.23), Sweden (0.23), Finland (0.26) and 
Norway (0.27) The United States and Britain, two countries against which Canada 
measures itself, are the worst performers - that is, the most unequal societies 
of the 17. Put another way, anglophone countries are the most unequal, at least 
compared with continental European ones, and two of them (the U.S. and the 
U.K.) are also in desperate fiscal shape.

    The U.S. Gini score is 0.38, reflecting the fact that income inequality is 
at a record high, greater even than during the Roaring Twenties. During the 
past decade, the top 10 per cent of U.S. earners took 49.7 per cent of income 
gains.

    In Canada, the top fifth of income earners take 39.2 per cent of total 
income (up from 35 per cent in the 1980s), while the lowest quintile takes 7.2 
per cent. Vancouver has the highest share of people in the lowest quintile of 
earners among Canadian cities; Quebec City has the lowest.

    So why are we a more unequal society? That's the subject of fierce debate. 
Other countries' income inequalities are also growing, albeit to varying 
degrees, and the inequalities in big developing countries such as China, India 
and Brazil are much higher than anything in Canada or Europe.

    It's argued that globalization rewards some of the highly skilled (and 
people who can manipulate other people's money, as in hedge funds, banking and 
financial services), while leaving others behind. Clearly, the struggles of 
manufacturing in North America and Europe have robbed those societies of 
millions of good-paying, often unionized, jobs. Some of these have been 
replaced by better-paying service-sector jobs; most have not.

    The Conference Board notes that government transfer programs flatten out 
some inequalities, but not as effectively as 20 years ago. Unemployment 
benefits go to fewer people; welfare rates haven't always kept up with the cost 
of living.

    Many of the Harper government's tax cuts, for example, have 
disproportionately benefited those better off, since they're not geared to 
income - as in all those itsy-bitsy bribes for sports equipment, the GST cut 
and the child benefit cheques than come through the mail every month.

    Committees of both the House of Commons and Senate have issued reports on 
poverty; neither stirred much interest. Income inequalities are apparently not 
deemed important subjects in this self-centered age.
  Keith Hudson, Saltford, England http://allisstatus.wordpress.com/2011/07/
    
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