Social mobility cuts two
ways. All the noise we are getting at
the moment about reduced social mobility refers to going up in status, wealth
or both. The mobility down is forgotten
but it is arguable that to have the ups then you need to have the downs.
What is not realised is
that the downward element from the upper classes has been much reduced because
simply they are breeding far fewer children than they once did. Add to that the
ability in the last three or so decades to preserve wealth by all sorts of tax
avoidance, trusts and the rest of most of them this means that acquired or
earned wealth is retained for fewer children.
For those children it can
mean that the crucial first decade of work etc. they are able to gain additional
qualifications, experience and contacts without the worry of incomes, mortgages
and the demands that the great majority have to consider. Moreover, accessible funds enables greater
immediate mobility in both location and employment as well as the ability to
take chances.
There is all this
equality. No longer are the daughters of
the upper levels mostly away from the labour market. They are very much part of it. While at the very top there might be
limitations in the crucial management levels below they are well represented
and especially in the last decade or so at entry levels for the most promising
opportunities.
There is paradox in that
among notably the surplus younger children of elites there were many who formed
a middling group of people with some education and ambitions. One sector here in the past was among the
large families bred by many of the Anglican Parish Clergy, younger sons of
younger sons.
They and others of their
ilk often married where there was some money which then repatriated a minority
of their children into the upper orders.
The boundary between these and the better off professional classes or
business families was never clear cut and allowed a good deal of movement both
ways.
In the mid 20th Century
the expansion of the public sector in areas beyond the traditional meant
opportunities for lower middle or educated working class men to rise as did new
industries and technologies in business and a few made the transition into the
topmost reaches.
The effects of recent
globalisation are complex. On the one
hand if the opportunities are better elsewhere this means a good deal of mobility
may occur for the upward movers outside the UK.
On the other hand it allows the young of the wealthy from elsewhere
ready entry into the top levels in the UK.
The twin effect will impact on the overall figures.
There is also alleged to
be increasing concentrations of wealth with more restricted access to the key
sources of it. If that is the case then
opportunities may be declining in reality. Add to that the squeeze on middle incomes and
the debt loading common to many of the young their chances of progress will
certainly be less.
New technology may confer
advantages to a small number at the peak but seems to be having a limiting
effect at the lower levels in that the pace of change reduces the time period
for becoming rich. Additionally it is
squeezing the structures and may even be creating bottle necks for those
wishing to rise but not for those on the way down.
Basically and to put it simply
the politicians are talking old garbage and we are living in a very different
world that may be impossible to control.
Must go, time to buy the
lottery ticket.
"What is not realised is that the downward element from the upper classes has been much reduced because simply they are breeding far fewer children than they once did."
ReplyDeleteGood point. As long as people feel comfortable, there may be less reason to be socially mobile too. Until things change.