The Lethal Consequences of Poverty & Exclusion. Göran Therborn University of Cambridge

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Transcription:

The Lethal Consequences of Poverty & Exclusion Göran Therborn University of Cambridge

Poverty & Exclusion Are Driven by Central Institutions of Today s Society Capitalism Boundaries of profitability & solvency Family Boundaries of childhood chances of development Nation Boundaries of citizenship &/or ethnicity

Tendencies of Aggravation Capitalism Family Nation Financialization Post-industrial weakening of labour Income of poorest decile in USA lower than in Greece (before the crisis), & lower than OECD average Social polarization of famly & parenthood instability And of investment in children, in time, emotional energy, & money Income inequality, urban segregation & exclusive school choices reinforce the tendency of exclusion A Stockholm example: in 2014 only 61.%% of of low socioeconomic background qualified for secondary education, a decline of 8% since 2013, while children of high socioeconomic status increased their competence to 95.8 per cent. Ethnic tensions from migration Breakdown of the full employment economies in the East

Need for Inclusive Regulations Supporting decent employment Early compensation of all children for weak parents Prohibiting discrimination & compensation for group disadvantages

Crises produce national divergences 1980s : Gap between the unemployment rate of the three highest & lowest unemployment countries in the OECD : from 5.9% in l976 to 10.3 in l982 2010s: EU28 gap, 6.1% in 2008, 18.2% in 2013 EU crisis management has been extraordinarily diverging, or excluding

Some Peoples Are Less Unemployed than Others, in l984 and in 2014 Low Unemployment Club Members (<5%) 2014» Employment rate Status 1984 Austria High (>70%) Member Germany High Outside Japan High Member Norway High Member Switzerland High Member Club Candidates (<7%) Czech Republic High In different system Denmark High Mass unemployment, >10% Netherlands High Mass unemployment USA High Outside Falling Out of l984 Club Sweden 8% High Member

Unfortunate E2020 exclusive focus on employment rate Employment rates depend also on, education systems & study finance, rules of parental leave, pension systems, family patterns Unemployment rates have also variable meanings, though usually less variation, due to eligibility rules for unemployment benefits, the size of the informal economy, and the frequency of small family enterprise Unemployment has very important effects of exclusion

Poverty Kills The poor die first. Poor parents children are more often sick, & have a twice higher risk of dying (Sweden 1990-2009) The lethal poverty gap is increasing. In Finland, the lives of people of the poorest fifth of the nation were in 2007 12.5 years shorter than those in the highest fifth among men and 6.8 years among women, a gap widened over the latest 15 years by 5.1 and 2.9 years, respectively. Among the London boroughs the life expectancy gap increased from 5 to 8.9 years between l999-2001 and 2006-8 National poverty is more lethal than (many) inter-national gaps of development In Sweden, male life expectancy in the richest municipality and one of the poorest was 8.6 years in 2010, a distance slightly larger than that between Sweden and Egypt The London gap is larger than that between the UK and Paraguay The Finnish gap is larger than that between Finland and Guatemala

The Lethal Effects of Unemployment Unemployment means exclusion from the labour market & from much social life. Its lethal effects are rarely direct (starvation) in developed countries, but mediated by stress hormones & various psycho-somatic illnesses A meta-study of 42 studies covering 15 countries & ca 20 million people found that on average unemployment increases the age-adjusted risk of premature death by 63 per cent.

How many unemployed will die a premature death? Between the pre-crisis low, (2008Q1) and crisis peak, so far, (2013Q1) unemployment in the EU28 increased by 10.4 million. Assuming the EU labour force has an agestandardized mortality rate over a 10-15 yearperiod similar to the Swedish Assuming an average mortal hazard ratio of unemployed in comparison with employed Would yield ca 350,000 premature deaths by 2020/2023.

Conclusions The dynamics of labour markets are remarkably nationally particular, and so far little understood Concerns with social exclusion should first of all focus on children s conditions of development The lethal, life-shortening effects of poverty and of unemployment have to be brought into the limelight. They are massive, causing hundreds of thousands of premature deaths.