Wednesday, January 27, 2010

[EQ] An anatomy of economic inequality in the UK

 An anatomy of economic inequality in the UK

Report of the National Equality Panel – January 2010
Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion
The London School of Economics and Political Science

 

Full report [4 MB] Note: This is a large file and may take some time to download.

Please click on the link below to be directed to the National Equality Panel research reports:

·         An Anatomy of Economic Inequaltiy in th UK: Report of the National Equality Panel (Jan 2010)

·         An Anatomy of Economic Inequaltiy in th UK: Summary (Jan 2010)

·         Report of the National Equality Panel: Executive Summary  (Jan 2010)

·         Charts and Statistical Annex (Jan 2010)

“…..The National Equality Panel was set up to document the relationships between inequalities in people’s economic outcomes – such as earnings, incomes and wealth – and their characteristics and circumstances – such as gender, age or ethnicity. How does who you are affect the resources and opportunities available to you?

We map out in detail what these relationships look like in a way never done before. In this summary we bring together the key findings from our main report, and the challenges they create for the development of policy. There are several over-arching themes:

• Inequalities in earnings and incomes are high in Britain, both compared with other industrialised countries, and compared with thirty years ago. Over the most recent decade according to some measures, earnings inequality has narrowed a little and income inequality has stabilised, but the large inequality growth between the late 1970s and early 1990s has not been reversed.

• Some of the widest gaps in outcomes between social groups have narrowed in the last decade, particularly between the earnings of women and men, and in the educational qualifications of different ethnic groups.

• However, there remain deep-seated and systematic differences in economic outcomes between social groups across all of the dimensions we have examined – including between men and women, between different ethnic groups, between social class groups, between those living in disadvantaged and other areas, and between London and other parts of the country………….”

Content
Foreword

•           Overview

•           Aims

•           Overall inequalities

•           The position of different groups

•           (a) Gender

•           (b) Age

•           (c) Ethnicity and religious affiliation

•           (d) Disability status

•           (e) Sexual orientation

•           (f) Occupational social class

•           (g) The impact of social background

•           (h) Housing tenure

•           (i) Nation and region

•           (j) Area deprivation

•           Summary

•           Challenges for policy

•          References



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