Notes on the Front

Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU

News from Planet Flat Earth

Globe The always readable Richard Delevan has a bit of fun in his recent Sunday Tribune column, tweaking the noses of liberals and would-be radicals (or, at least, Fintan O’Toole and Vincent Browne), suggesting their critique of Irish poverty is a bit stale, a bit passé and, in any event, not borne out by new statistics emerging from the OECD. Mr. Delevan concludes we can finally put to rest the idea that the ‘rich get richer and the poor get poorer’. In fact, if anyone doesn’t bury that ‘trope’ they are in danger of becoming flat-earthers. We are making considerable inroads in reducing inequality in society. In fact, we are almost unique in the OECD in this regard.

However, before conceding all this, we should take careful measurement of the flatness or curvature of these ‘facts’.

The OECD recently published its 2007 Employment Outlook Survey to some fanfare in Ireland for it showed that, unlike the rest of the industrialised world, inequality here had fallen between 1995-2005. Here is what the OECD said and, more importantly, what it didn’t say.

Within that 10 years, Ireland managed to reduce the inequality between the 9th decile group (i.e. the second highest 10%) and the lowest group. Indeed, there was a significant drop. In 1995, the 9th group earned four times as much as the lowest group. By 2005, this gap was reduced to approximately 3.6 times – a fall of 11%. This is a positive trend – in the rest of the OECD inequality increased on average by about 9%. The only other country to experience a reduction was Spain.

It would appear on a surface reading that Mr. Delevan is vindicated and all that Leftist stuff about growing inequality, etc. should be confined to the dustbin. Maybe, but the operative words here are ‘appear’ and ‘surface’. For the closer one examines these figures the less they back up Mr. Delevan’s contention.

First, the OECD figures do not purport to examine income or wealth. This is, after all, an ‘Employment Survey’. They are strictly confined to wages. Even more, they are confined to ‘full-time gross wages’. They don’t reference after-tax income or social transfers (whereby countries with more progressive taxation and redistribution regimes would come out better). They don’t include self-employment or capital income (e.g. capital gains, inheritances, gifts, trusts, etc.). They don’t include households outside of the labour force. And they certainly don’t include wealth such as assets (but few of these income or earnings surveys do).

These are significant omissions. In 2005, nearly 30% of the income received by the top 10% came from self-employment and capital earnings. So high was this that it exceeded the total income of nearly 60% of the population. The Revenue Commissioners statistics puts it even more starkly. While average PAYE income grew by 56% in the period 1994-2003 (the last year for which we have figures) ‘earned’ self-employed income grew by more than two and a half times while ‘unearned’ income also grew by more than twice. Were these figures to be included in the OECD table we might have a substantially different picture – one that we will look at below.

Let’s take the OECD figures in the manner they were intended to be read. What accounts for this erosion of wage inequality? There are a number of factors including general economic growth; changing occupational composition combined with the decline of manual, in particular unskilled, labour; higher educational and skill levels, etc. One could write tomes. But there are two crucial factors which must be included, factors which are not reliant on the ‘free-play of market forces’:

  • The introduction and upgrading of the national minimum wage. This contributed considerably to reducing the level of exploitation in the labour market, increasing wages to, if not an adequate income, certainly to a higher income than if there was no statutory minimum.
  • National wage agreements. Whatever the flaws in the nature of wage agreements they do provide an across-the-board wage increase for sectors which have little bargaining power (e.g. hotel, restaurant, retail sectors, etc.). In the absence of these economy-wide increases it is questionable to what degree some of these sectors would have benefited to the same degree.

What these two factors have in common is that they are public instruments. In other words, a large part of the erosion of wage inequality is due to public sector or partnership interventions. To what extent is open to debate, but that debate must include their important roles.

Now let’s return to the larger picture. Clearly, we cannot infer from the OECD tables that inequality is on the decline for the simple reason that it doesn’t attempt to measure it. Fortunately, there is another authoritative source we can turn to. EUROSTAT – the EU statistical agency – measures inequality through the Gini-coefficient. This attempts to examine all sources of income. So does their ten-year survey vindicate the assertion that inequality is declining in Ireland? Hardly.

Between 1995 and 2005, inequality fell by a mere one point – from 33 to 32. This still puts us above the average for other EU states (about 10% higher) and in the lower (that is, the more unequal) half of the table. In fact, we’re about the fifth worst when it comes to inequality. More disturbing is that while inequality fell between 1995 and 2001, it has grown since then – jumping from 29 to 32. To what extent this reflects the changing dynamic of growth – from export-led to property/consumer spending-led – is something to be explored further.

So where does this leave Mr. Delevan’s contention that the ‘income gap between rich and poor got smaller?’ Not in a very good place. Inequality is growing in Irish society, and the only counter-balances to this dismal and verifiable fact are public (i.e. non-market) interventions.

So, to all you ‘liberals’ and ‘would-be radicals’ and fellow traveling flat-earthers, know this: when you keep on about inequality, you’re not talking trope but fact. The real trick will be to create a progressive politics that will make that fact history. And if a little bit of public sector intervention helps, what could a lot do?

6 responses to “News from Planet Flat Earth”

  1. Richard Delevan Avatar

    Michael,
    Bravo for an excellent riposte. Quite flattering.
    But I do think you may not have characterised my argument quite in the way it was intended – almost certainly a failing on my part to be clear.
    You’re quite right about the inflection point in 2001 – a steep drop followed by a slight increase.
    But there are three things at play here to highlight, I’d argue.
    First, the whole point of the column was that it’s a working assumption amongst some that inequality increased over the Celtic Tiger period. We know now that isn’t true. You can argue that the trend line augurs badly, but you make a move in your 2nd to last para that suggests I claim inequality is currently decreasing – I don’t argue that inequality is currently decreasing. There isn’t data one way or the other at the moment. To be fair, I spend considerable space in the piece pointing out aspects of the OECD report about employer tactics re offshoring and pay negotiations I find worrying.
    Second, why is partnership an inherently ‘public’ instrument? When you read this weekend’s Tribune you’ll see Peter Cassells, the godfather of partnership, talking about the nature of partnership and how he regrets its current association with institutional forms. In fact, partnership work practices according to Cassells look a lot like Google’s management philosophy, and the Darwinian process that sorts the winners will see that those which, like Google, get the most from their people, will survive.
    Third, the 2001 inflection point is worth talking more about, isn’t it? What happened in 2001? Besides a lot of exogenous factors, another, surely, reflected in the export data, is that exports went flat or declined.
    You’re fairly dismissive of the “tome” that could be written about what went right between 1995 and 2001. Surely the urgent question, if we want to see a fair society, is to discern what went right in that period that is repeatable. No?
    In any case, thanks for a great post.

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  2. david Avatar

    Why should government try to reduce inequality?

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  3. Michael Avatar

    Thanks Richard for your detailed comment. On your first point, I take what you say and apologise if I misrepresented your position on the current situation. I only tried to tease out what the OECD stats meant and didn’t mean. And I should have acknowledged your reference to certain emerging employers’ practices which I think all of us should be concerned with.
    As to the second point, I take it that Peter’s comments will be in next Sunday’s edition. If so, I look forward to reading them. As to the ‘public’ nature of partnership, I would argue that it is part of the public realm, acting of course within the constraints of certain market forces. For example, unions participate in the process not just in the negotiations in Government buildings. They go back to their respective unions, debate and then individually ballot their members. Then, they come together and vote as a body within the ICTU. This is a democratic process (to what extent, though, is an argument in the trade union movement). Other social partners may have similar processes. This suggests a wider public involvement in the setting of wage increases, labour standards, etc. That the Government is also involved – and not just as an employer – also gives it a more public flavour.
    On your third point, I certainly didn’t mean to be dismissive of that inflection point. Indeed, throughout my posts I refer to this and have tried to get the Left to become more involved in analysing what was really happening in the different phases of economic growth so that we can intervene in a more constructive way on the debate – rather than cede the entire economic ground to the Right as was done in the last election. It is an extremely important point which I will address in a more head-on way in a further post. Thanks, again, for your comments.
    As to why governments should try to reduce inequality, Dave, well there are a number of reasons. People acting democratically through state policy may want to reduce it for ethical or moral reasons (I note such an argument in today’s Irish Times). They may want to do so because it is an economic cost. In this regard, its worth reading Will Hutton in The State We’re In – his section on the cost of inequality is very strong. It’s also worth noting that the wealthiest most competitive societies are those that have very low rates of poverty/inequality combined with progressive taxation and redistribution systems. They may also want to reduce inequality because the cost of not doing so is very high – if inequality is a factor in, say, poor health, this becomes a drain on the Exchequer. More equality, better health, reduced burdens. Ultimately, its all about the kind of society you want to live in.

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  4. Michael Mc Loughlin Avatar
    Michael Mc Loughlin

    Any views on the latest ESRI reports Michael

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  5. Michael Avatar

    Michael, I’ve not had the chance to read the report (unfortunately, its not available on-line). I’m reluctant to comment on such a wide-ranging survey on the basis of media commentary. However, coming from the ESRI I’m sure it will be a thought-provoking read and if it challenges the notion that there was some ‘golden age’ of Irish values that is somehow lost by people becoming more affluent, all the better.

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  6. Paris 20e Avatar

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Commentary on Irish Political Economy by Michael Taft, researcher for SIPTU