Up to 25 million more Europeans at risk of poverty by 2025
if austerity drags on
“Europe’s handling of the economic crisis
threatens to roll-back decades of social rights.”
Natalia Alonso
Head of Oxfam’s EU Office
Published: 11 September 2013
It could take up to 25 years to
regain living standards prior to the economic crisis
If
left unchecked, austerity policies could put between 15 and 25 million more
Europeans at risk of poverty by 2025 – nearing the population of the
Netherlands and Austria combined. This would bring the number of people at risk
of poverty in Europe up to 146 million, over a quarter of the population, warns
international agency Oxfam as EU Finance Ministers meet in Vilnius tomorrow.
Oxfam’s
new report, A Cautionary
Tale, finds that austerity measures introduced to balance the
books following the €4.5 trillion bank bail-out are instead causing more
poverty and inequality that could last for the next two decades.Meanwhile,
austerity is failing to cut debt ratios, as it was supposed to, or trigger
inclusive economic growth.
Oxfam
says that there are alternatives to austerity policies by drawing lessons from
the calamitous periods of austerity cuts to social spending in Latin America,
South East Asia and Africa throughout the 1980s and 90s. Some countries in
these regions took two decades to claw their way back to square one.
Natalia
Alonso, Head of Oxfam’s EU Office, said: “Europe’s handling of the economic
crisis threatens to roll-back decades of social rights. Aggressive cuts to
social security, health and education, fewer rights for workers and unfair
taxation are trapping millions of Europeans in a circle of poverty that could
last for generations. It is moral and economic nonsense.”
Living
standards down, inequality up
It
could take Europeans up to 25 years to regain the living standards they enjoyed
five years ago.
“The
only people benefiting from austerity are the richest 10% of Europeans who
alone have seen their wealth rise. Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, Spain and
the UK – countries that are most aggressively pursuing austerity measures -
will soon rank amongst the most unequal in the world if their leaders don’t
change course. For example, the gap between rich and poor in the UK and Spain
could become the same as in South Sudan or Paraguay,” added Alonso.
Three
years on, leading proponents of austerity such as the International Monetary
Fund and many respected economists are starting to recognise that these
measures have not only failed to achieve their objective to shrink government
debt and budget deficits, but have also increased inequality and stunted
economic growth.
Unemployment
in many European countries is hitting record highs. Women and young people are
being hit hardest. In the UK, more than 1 million public sector jobs will be
cut by 2018, and twice as many women than men will lose their jobs. Wages are
falling fastest in countries facing the harshest austerity prescriptions.
Almost one in ten working households in Europe now live in poverty and it could
get much worse. For example, tough mortgage laws in Spain let banks to evict
115 families from their homes every working day. Even those in work will be
significantly poorer than their parents. Child poverty across Europe is set to
rise.
Lessons
from the past“
History
is repeating itself. Our leaders are ignoring the profound pain that austerity
cutbacks had for many years on people in Latin America, South East Asia and
Africa in the 1980s and 90s. Their economies shattered and the poor continued
getting poorer even when growth made a come-back,” Alonso said. Basic services,
such as education and health, were cut or privatized, excluding the poorest and
hitting women hardest. As a result, the gap between rich and poor widened.
In
Indonesia, it took 10 years for poverty to return to 1997 levels, while in some
Latin American countries it took 25 years to bring levels of poverty back down
to where they were before their crises began in 1981. “Europe is heading in
this direction now,” Alonso said.
Alternatives
to austerity
“There
are alternatives to austerity. Ahead of tomorrow’s EU Finance Ministers’
meeting, we’re calling on European governments to champion a new economic and
social model that invests in people, strengthens democracy and pursues fair
taxation. Governments could raise billions for public services, such as health
and education, by taxing the wealthiest and cracking down on tax
dodging.”
“A
new model of prosperity is possible. Investing in schools, hospitals, housing,
research and technology, millions of Europeans could be put back to work and
support a sustainable economy,” Alonso said.
Notes to Editors
The
report, A Cautionary Tale: The true cost of austerity and
inequality in Europe, is available in English, Spanish, French,
and Italian.
·
Oxfam’s analysis is based on the EU’s official definition of poverty. In 2011, there were
121 million people at risk of poverty in the EU representing 24.3 per cent of
the population (source). The Institute for Fiscal Studies predicted that
poverty rates in the UK would increase by between 2.5 and 5 percentage points
among various groups over 2010-2020 if austerity policies continued on current
track (source/pdf).
If the EU were to see a three per cent increase over the next twelve years to
2025, this would bring the number of people at risk of poverty to 14.963
million. If poverty rates were to increase by five percentage points across the
EU this would represent an increase of 24.939 million.
·
Bolivia witnessed an increase of 16
percentage points in its net income inequality (after taxes and social
transfers) over a period of six years following its structural adjustment
program in the 1990s. Some countries have already experienced an increase in
inequality since the implementation of austerity policies. If Greece, Ireland,
Italy, Portugal, Spain and the UK saw an increase similar to Bolivia, their net
inequality would rise to 0.47-0.51 points, making these countries amongst the
most unequal in the world. The most recent
estimate for Gini coefficients, which is an indicator of
inequality, in South Sudan and Paraguay is 0.45 (2009) and 0.52 (2010)
respectively.
·
Since the financial crisis hit five years
ago, many of the countries deeply affected by austerity measures – Greece,
Italy, Spain, Portugal and the UK - have seen one of two impacts: either the
richest tenth of the population has seen their share of total income increase,
or the poorest tenth has seen their share decrease. In some cases both impacts
occurred. In other words, the richer are taking more, whilst the poor are
taking less (source).
·
In the UK and Portugal, real wages are
reported to have fallen by 3.2 per cent over 2010-2012 (source). The real value of wages in the UK is now at 2003
levels, representing a lost decade for the average worker (source). Italy, Spain, and Ireland all recorded decreases
in real wages over this period. Greece has recorded a fall in real wages of
over 10 per cent (source).
Notes to Editors
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου