Taking a day off from cheering on the every move of his hero
Michael “Oiky” Gove, the loathsome
Toby Young has hit on another morale-boosting wheeze for all those out there on
the right who share the same unique view of the world as Himself Personally
Now, and that is to claim that capitalism is better than any other system
because it has made such a significant impact on poverty.
Lay off the collapso before writing, eh?
To this end, he has sought solace from across the North
Atlantic, and particularly the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), which
sounds relatively benign until you realise that it is just
another neocon front which numbers among its alumni such centrist and
inclusive people as Paul Wolfowitz, Newt Gingrich, and John “Wiggy” Bolton. Its favoured speakers
include “Dick” Cheney.
This does not deter Tobes, although for some reason he fails
to mention any of the above-named. “The
chart that proves capitalism is better than socialism” he
announces, continuing by quoting Mark J Perry: “one of the most remarkable achievements in human history
– the 80 per cent reduction in world poverty in only 36 years”. Your
bullshit detector may now be sounding.
And there is a very good reason for that sounding off: that
reduction in poverty is “from 26.8 per
cent of the world’s population living on $1 or less (in 1987 dollars) in 1970
to only 5.4 per cent in 2006”. The thought enters that those living with
the benefit of ample incomes pretending that getting more than one 1987 US
Dollar a day lifts you out of poverty is just a teensy bit incongruous.
That is certainly not how poverty is defined
in the UK, or in the wider EU. The European Commission definition begins
thus: “People are said to be living in
poverty if their income and resources are so inadequate as to preclude them
from having a standard of living considered acceptable in the society in which
they live”. That, it is screamingly obvious, means more than $1 a day.
What the AEI proves is that, providing you set the bar low
enough, you can pretend that poverty has been all but eradicated, whereas it
has not. In the UK, for instance, by the definition of poverty generally
accepted, around 20% of
the population are considered to be in poverty. The national poverty rate
in the USA, using a different definition, was
around 15% last year.
To no surprise at all, these figures are rather higher than
the AEI and Tobes would have us believe. Even in third world countries, one
1987 US Dollar a day will most likely not provide food, shelter, clothing,
clean water, education and transportation. So before Toby Young tries to
pretend that capitalism has achieved the goal he says it has, he should take
his head from up his arse and do a reality check.
His contention is the most shameless bullshit. No surprise there, then.
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