I’m a tad wary of the relative poverty measurement. Someone will always be poorer but there should be certain things that anyone in Britain should be guaranteed unless they choose to go off grid. The ability to get safe and affordable housing is one for example.Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sat Aug 10, 2024 2:14 pmLevelling up is an ill-defined concept (what else would you expect, it's one of Johnson's) that is related to the idea of regional equality. Which has obviously not been a priority nor a success in the hands of the Tories.Sandydragon wrote: ↑Sat Aug 10, 2024 7:58 am And in the case of inequality, Boris promised to level up which basically didn’t happen. But large parts of the country have been ignored for a long time
But regional equality is of course just one, limited, kind of equality. Having regional equality (depending on how it was done) wouldn't necessarily improve economic equality (although I'm all for it, it's a move in the right direction).
My pont is that it's the poor who are struggling and falling for the easy answers from the right and going after their invented scapegoats as a result. So reducing overall inequality would solve the problem at source.
What do you think? Do you think relative poverty is the underlying problem? If not then what? If you do, but don't think reducing inequality would help then what would you do to reduce poverty and give people better lives?
There is of course inequality in the south east as well as anywhere else. But I’d also argue that the UK is too London centric and if we are going to grow our economy, and if you want redistribution the it helps if there’s more to distribute in the first place, then getting a northern powerhouse established ( and for other parts of the UK) is pretty important. Too
Many parts of the UK are missing the industry which made them what they are today and we need to rebalance that.
That would be my focus, which would include transport, housing education and business development.