The Chronicle

Food parcels point at where the power lies in our country

- The North of Tyne Mayor writes for you

YOU’LL have seen photos of the meagre rations meant to feed schoolchil­dren. You might have read that corporate chief executive pay has rocketed to 120 times that of their average worker. You’re probably aware that people are volunteeri­ng to help with Covid jabs. What links them all?

Some cheese slices, tin of beans, loaf of bread a little bit of veg and not much else is supposed to provide 10 meals. Meant to come to £30 worth of food. Even at retail prices, it’s about £5.22. The real Scrooge part was seeing that penne pasta had been removed from its original packaging and doled out in little plastic bags. How tight is that? Even at supermarke­t prices, it only costs £1 for a kilo of brand-name pasta.

The companies get an administra­tion fee and packaging and shipping fee. The parcels are supposed to contain £15 worth of food per child per week.

Let’s not forget free school meals are taken up by kids of all ages. My eldest son is 14 now. That food parcel wouldn’t last him 10 minutes, never mind 10 meals. Like most teenage boys, he’d trough the lot in one go. Chartwells is the corporate profiteer in this case. Owned by British catering giant the Compass Group, it won’t be paying supermarke­t prices for food. Last year it posted a profit of £1.2bn. Its chairman was Paul Walsh, a multi-millionair­e Tory party donor and member of David Cameron’s Business Advisory Group.

And let’s not fall for the idea that its profit is paying for the free school meals. Corporatio­n tax contribute­s only 6% of UK tax revenues. Payroll taxes and indirect taxes (VAT, fuel, etc.) raise most of our public expenditur­e. Tax comes out of the pockets of ordinary citizens, and into the pockets of the mega-rich.

On the subject of wealth inequality, ‘High Pay Day’ was January 6. It’s the day when the typical FTSE 100 chief executive has already been paid what the average worker gets for the whole year. After just 34 hours.

The pay gap between executives and workers is particular­ly acute in the retail sector. Ocado, the online supermarke­t, paid chief executive Tim Steiner £57.8m last year – that’s 2,605 times the £22,500 Ocado’s delivery staff get on average. It’s those staff who are doing the work, generating the profits. Meanwhile, Mr Steiner paid £50,000 to the Conservati­ve Party. How long would it take those delivery drivers to save up £50,000?

It’s easy to be outraged when kids have their food stolen by profiteers. There’s noticeably less outrage that the rich are getting richer while real wages fall and unemployme­nt rises.

And hardly anyone is asking why we’re not paying people for giving life-saving vaccines in a pandemic.

It’s great when people volunteer – I encourage it. Less great is the shortage of medical staff caused by the Government raiding their pensions to pay for the banking crisis the billionair­es never paid for. In fact it’s egregious that many of these volunteers are suffering a pay freeze – a real-terms pay cut. Yet £22bn was thrown at conglomera­tes with a track record of failure to run a failed test-and-trace system. Funny that it was a Tory MP’s wife who got the gig.

No one is connecting these issues because British public debate is banal. It distracts from the real question: who has power? Perhaps you’re OK with that. Or resigned to it. It’s hard not to become numb when we see homeless people, hungry kids, small businesses folding, public servants burnt out from overwork, our elderly relatives dying from Covid in care homes and our kids accruing debt before they can even afford a deposit for a home.

The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn’t exist. There’s no vast internatio­nal conspiracy, run by a shadowy figure. But there is an establishm­ent that maintains a legal, political and economic system based on property rights. It has been shaped for centuries, with mechanisms to ensure wealth flows from ordinary people to rich people. And it is out of control. Britain is run in the interests of a kleptocrac­y.

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