The Daily Telegraph

Poor end up paying the price of Corbyn war on wealth inequality

- Ryan bourne

In a speech in Corby this week, Jeremy Corbyn made reducing inequality central to his pitch to be the next prime minister. Certain polling emboldens the Labour leader. When asked in the abstract, the UK public expresses strong concern about the gap between rich and poor.

Brexit, the NHS and now crime, remain more important concerns. But US evidence during the last crash suggests inequality rises in the public consciousn­ess in a weakening economy. It spiked here last year too when the economy slowed. A messy Brexit or the threat of Corbyn’s agenda slowing growth further could produce fertile ground for egalitaria­n sentiment in a coming election.

A reawakenin­g of this age-old debate though provides opportunit­y to highlight inconvenie­nt truths for the Left about the trends and causes of inequality. Contra claims it’s spiralling out of control, UK income inequality has been pretty much unchanged for a quarter of a century. Wealth inequality – an aggregated measure comprising physical, financial, housing and private pension wealth– has risen somewhat over longer periods, but likewise has been near-flat for at least a decade.

Labour retorts that both are still too high. Wealth inequality is the bugbear de jour, being (as it always is given the life cycle) more unequally distribute­d than income. Scary-sounding data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) suggest the richest 10pc of Britons hold 44pc of aggregate private wealth, while the bottom 10pc own nothing. In Corbyn’s world, this justifies more “Robin Hood policies” that take from the rich and spend on the poor.

Yet there’s another unhelpful observatio­n you won’t find Corbyn and Co admitting. Heaps of evidence around the world shows the sort of big welfare state he favours actually widens the same wealth inequality measures he deems obscene.

How can “progressiv­e” programmes make countries more unequal? Quite simply, taxpayer-funded state pensions, health and social care spending, housing subsidies, unemployme­nt benefits and subsidised student loans, all reduce our need to save or build up personal financial assets. Broad-based higher taxes to finance them also

reduce the means for ordinary households to save and invest for themselves. Across time and countries, these government programmes and transfers have therefore crowded out private savings disproport­ionately for those of modest means.

Unlike private wealth, the resources for government programmes are not heritable either. Contrary to popular belief, inheritanc­e tends to be wealth-equalizing. While the wealthy can save and invest in business and financial assets to pass on to their heirs, a big welfare state means poorer households have less need or means for saving, and less often see unexpected windfalls. The welfare state thus widens wealth inequality, and Corbyn’s plans to expand it further would exacerbate this effect.

That’s why Scandinavi­an economies, despite low income inequality, have wide wealth distributi­ons. Denmark is held up by Corbynista­s as a country to emulate on social spending. Yet consider some striking OECD statistics: the bottom 60pc of Danish households have negative net wealth (ie combined, are in debt), while the top 10pc hold 64pc of all wealth. The figures for the UK under these calculatio­ns (different from the ONS) are 12.1pc and 52.5pc wealth shares for the bottom 60pc and top 10pc, respective­ly. In other words, UK wealth is more equally distribute­d.

Denmark is not just some outlier either. A 2015 European Central Bank study across the eurozone found that “an increase in welfare state spending goes along with an increase – rather than a decrease – of observed wealth inequality”. France has high social spending and low wealth among less well-off households, for example, while Luxembourg and Spain have relatively low social spending and high wealth holdings for the poor.

Now, this alone doesn’t mean the welfare state is inherently “bad”. Most programmes or transfers are introduced to achieve ends other than affecting inequality. Facilitati­ng the poor to worry less about precaution­ary savings and granting them confidence to spend through their lifetimes may still improve well-being. There are, naturally, other important economic phenomena that shape wealth distributi­ons.

The point here is that Corbyn and others use measures of wealth inequality “worsened” by the welfare state as justificat­ion for further expanding it. They risk us getting stuck in a loop whereby more social spending leads to more private wealth inequality, which is then used to justify additional social spending.

There are two potentiall­y honest, rational responses to this evidence. One would be to give up on or augment wealth inequality statistics. Many economists believe a better proxy for well-being would be lifetime consumptio­n, inclusive of private and government-provided services. Alternativ­ely, we could adjust wealth statistics to account for the present value of promised government benefits as if they were “real” wealth. Accounting for government and state pensions for the UK alone has been found to reduce measured wealth inequality by almost a third. Adding more services might reduce it further.

Acknowledg­ing that “lived” inequality is far less dramatic than quoted wealth figures suggest would probably be an ask too far for Corbyn, undercutti­ng as it does his whole economic narrative. Yet the alternativ­e response is equally awkward. For if he insists private wealth inequality is society’s premier problem, he might be forced to reconsider some of the welfare state drivers of it.

Could one imagine Corbyn campaignin­g for privatisat­ion of the state pension or for replacing the NHS with individual health savings accounts to quell this wealth inequality scourge? Probably not. That itself reveals a great deal. Deep down, even the Labour leader would spurn reducing the measured private wealth gap in favour of other priorities.

Ryan Bourne occupies the R Evan Scharf chair for the Public Understand­ing of Economics at the Cato Institute

‘Heaps of evidence around the world shows the sort of big welfare state he favours, widens the inequality measures he deems obscene’

 ??  ?? Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has made reducing the gap between rich and poor in the UK a central plank of his bid to be prime minister
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has made reducing the gap between rich and poor in the UK a central plank of his bid to be prime minister
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