Hello Keith,

I've taken the liberty of changing the subject, so I include the 
previous header.

Date sent:              Fri, 21 Jul 2000 10:25:00 +0100
To:                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From:                   Keith Hudson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                Re: FW  Genetically Modified Humans
Copies to:              [EMAIL PROTECTED]

> The so-called underclass within a culture is a snapshot, a
> statistical artifact. In actuality, (young) people are generally
> moving out of poverty as they get older and people are descending
> into poverty in old age. I'm not at all suggesting that we should
> be complacent about this, of course. All I am saying is that it is
> not a static phenomenon with a fixed population. Of course, there
> are many pockets of poverty and ... these pockets may persist for
> generations, but this is not the same as saying that there is a
> permanent underclass over the whole of the larger society.* 

I hope I have not distorted your meaning by cutting out a bit of 
what you say. Let me say straightaway that I am no statistician. 

What you say is a point of perennial concern to me, and I regret 
that no one has yet responded to it. I fear that the reasons are 
simple. Everyone knows that, as far as it goes, what you say is true 
-- just as many (not excluding you, yourself, I'm sure) know that the 
migration of individuals in large numbers between income classes 
does nothing to rule out the existence of unacceptable disparity of 
income, as between the partitions of that statistical abstract to 
which you refer.  

What I mean by that can be illustrated by a couple of charts I 
produced several years ago from 1996 data in Canada. One of the 
charts shows that, if you divide the income population by 5ths, the 
richest 5th / quintile -- in which the income average for the top 10% 
is considerably depressed -- earns almost 2x the income of the 
fourth 5th, easily 3x the income of the third 5th, more than 5x the 
income of the fourth fifth, and fully 15x the income of the bottom 
fifth.

According to my figures, the threshold income for the 4th fifth was 
just over $25,000 in 1996, (which means that 60% of Canadians had 
to make do with less). Believe it not, to qualify for entry to the 
richest fifth you had to earn exactly $40,000 or more.

Not surprisingly, therefore, the other chart -- which I call Social Pie 
-- converts that data into income percentages and shows that the 
annual income of the richest 5th was 47% of the whole, compared 
to 3% for the poorest 5th. The three statistical artifactual fifths in 
between earned just enough to take home 50% of total income. 
That is to say, the top 20% earned close to 50% of all market 
income in 1996, as they did every year for the preceding 15 years or 
more.

    http://www.ott.igs.net/~jmclaren/issues/income/

If memory serves, these are market income figures (after tax but 
before transfers), which is sufficient for my point, whatever the 
effect of transfers. My point is that the market system of 
distributing economic wealth is rotten to the root.

I looked back more than 15 years, as I said, plugged in the numbers 
for each year, and discovered that the average annual income in 
each fifth did not fluctuate more than a single point in all that 
time. Of course, when you earn not much more than 0.5% of total 
market income (as I think does the bottom 10%) a fluctation of even 
a fraction of a point can render individual class members absolutely 
destitute, as can the slightest reduction in benefits or qualification 
criteria.

In other words, annual income disparity in this country appears to 
me to be a structural characteristic of the economy and not a 
statistical abstract, despite the truth of what you say. And that's 
my concern. The movement of individuals in significant numbers up 
the ladder and down is an undeniable fact. So, too is the movement 
of people across any of the income borders (deciles and quintiles) 
that are convenient to monitor. But this normal migration has been 
used, I think, to hoodwink Joe six-pack into believing that income 
disparity is not a permanent feature of everyday life for a very 
large number of people and that, as you argue, there is no 
permanent underclass. The conclusion rests simply upon the 
obvious fact that a good many of the faces in any one segment of 
the income spectrum change over time. It does not meet the 
obvious rejoinder that the division between income segments is 
outrageously inequitable.

More important, the natural migration of individuals is used to 
reassure the not-so-rich (who are indeed complacent) that poverty 
and discrimination by financial class is not a sizable permanent 
feature of our economy but, rather, a normal phenomenon caused 
by the progression of some through merit and the failure of others 
on account of their own personal shortcomings, or because they 
have been victimised by social assistance and enervated in the 
process.

The facts are not so comforting. At any one time, 60% of those who 
earn any income whatever from the economic system in Canada, 
take home little more than 1/4 of annual measured income, which 
itself is probably a qualifier of no small importance. And each 
quintile in 1996 represented something close to 22 million people in 
this country -- assuming my spreadsheet doesn't lie to me.

What troubles me, therefore, is the fundamental market 
distribution of income. Statistics Canada, so far as know, claims 
conveniently not to be able to measure wealh, as I believe the US 
does. But imagine, as I'm sure you can, the cumulative advantage 
over time -- over a lifetime, or some signficant part of it -- of 
annual incomes far above the median. Compare the situation of 
those relative few with perpetual discretionary income surpluses to 
that of those living year after year without adequate income, or as 
one of the working poor, or as a member of any one of the first 3 
income fifths who take in little more than 25% of all income, thanks 
to the extra earning capacity of the bottom quintile.

I know that you know this, of course, just as we all know that most 
people don't.

Income disparity in this country looks permanent to me. It makes 
the system that generates it look grossly inequitable. The faces of 
the poor and the working poor may change, but the dispairity, as I 
like to spell it,  persists -- as between income classes -- and it 
multiplies year after year, for the lifetime of all who never achieve 
or cannot maintain a level of earnings that provides them with an 
adequate living, let alone a discretionary income. We need wealth 
statistics to prove this, of course, but where are they? I hope that 
your government does better by its citizens than ours does by 
Canadians in this critically important respect.

At one time, I thought that anyone with a light in the windows 
would simply look at what I call the Social Pie and realise that 
something is radically wrong. I was badly mistaken.

Is it therefore accurate to denominate the financially 
disadvantaged as a "statistical abstract" ? Maybe. But it cannot be 
true that this measure of wealth and power, around which nearly 
all our social relations are built, is the consequence of a few wealth 
laws, as I think you may have suggested earlier. Quite the contrary. 
This is surely the result -- the calculated outcome -- of the 
protection of privilege by an entire economic system supported by 
political institutions of our own creation -- not to exclude tax law -- 
which is designed to ensure a consistent pattern of wealth 
distribution ad perpetuam. Change the faces, if you will. 

Nibbling around the edges of such a system will do little to change 
the look of the pie, a criticism I think one can fairly make of all 
those -- bless them -- who are trying to squeeze such a relatively 
little more from a fiscal system in need of radical reform.

I frankly don't see you as someone who would disagree with any of 
that. But I leave it to those with the requisite knowledge in this 
group -- there are more than a few -- to set the record straight and 
bring us all up to date.

In closing, I found some ominous support for my personal conviction 
in Jeremy Rifkin's latest: The Age of Access, pp. 230-1. So I'll 
append it with judicious excisions. I won't explain access.

----

The disparity in income and wealth between the top fifth of the 
world's population ... is increasing so rapidly that any talk of 
guaranteeing universal access is likely to be greeted with deep 
suspicion and cynicism by most observers.

According to a study conducted by the United Nations Development 
Program, the world's 358 billionaires now have combined assets 
that exceed the total annual income of nearly half the people who 
live on earth. While Bill Gates is now richer than half the American 
people put together, more than a third of the world's 3 billion 
workers find themselves without jobs or underemployed, according 
to a 1998 report of the International Labor Organization.

The result is that while the wealthiest human beings on earth are 
increasingly preoccupied with entertainment and living creative and 
expressive lives, nearly 1 billion other human beings are living in 
poverty and several billion more are barely making ends meet. And 
the projections for the immediate future are even more grim.

More than 100 countries, with a combined population of 1.6 billion 
people -- more than a quarter of the world's population -- continue 
to experience economic decline. 89 countries are worse off now in 
terms of income than 10 years ago, and 35 have experienced a 
greater fall in per capita income than occurred at the height of the 
Great Depresion in the 1930s. In Africa the average household 
consumes 20 percent less today than it did 25 years ago.

Worldwide, more than 600 million people are homeless or living in 
unsafe and unhealthy housing, and the World Bank estimates that 
by the year 2010, more than 1.4 billion people will live without safe 
water and sanitation. Meanwhile, the top 20 per cent of high-
income earners in the world now account for 86 per cent of all the 
private consumption, while the poorest 20 per cent consume only 
1.3 per cent of the global economic output.

The reality is that Americans spend more on cosmetics -- $8 billion 
annually -- and Euorpeans on ice cream -- $11 billion (in US dollars) -
- than it would cost to provide basic education, clean water, and 
sanitation for the 2 billion people in the world who currently go 
without schooling or even toilets.

The growing disparity in income between rich and poor is affecting 
the developed nations as well as the developing countries. In 
Britain, for example, income inequality has risen faster in the past 
20 years than in any other industrialized nation. 

In the US the Census Bureau reports that income disparity between 
rich and poor is higher now than at any time since the end of World 
War II in 1945. Today, the top 20 per cent of Americans receive half 
the income in the country, while 50 per cent of American families 
have less than $1,000 in financial assets. Middle- and working-class 
families have been particularly hard hit. The median household 
income in 1996 was 4 per cent below where it was in 1989.

----

Newsflash. Problem solved. Rifkin's out of date already.

http://cbc.ca/cgi-bin/templates/view.cgi?/news/2000/07/22/g8summit_000722


John McLaren









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