Amongst the comments to my earlier post, several people have raised questions about the definitions of poverty and their validity; especially that covered by Oxfam, which defines poverty as less than 60 of the national median disposable income.
According to the national office of statistics, after rent, bills and necessities are paid, this figure is £194 per week per household. If you're living on less than that, Oxfam says you're living in poverty; they don't appear to differentiate between households of people living alone and households with a dozen squalling children crammed into the front room because, as we all know, there's no difference in living costs between the two.
According to the national office of statistics, after rent, bills and necessities are paid, this figure is £194 per week per household. If you're living on less than that, Oxfam says you're living in poverty; they don't appear to differentiate between households of people living alone and households with a dozen squalling children crammed into the front room because, as we all know, there's no difference in living costs between the two.
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(Anonymous) 2006-01-10 03:55 pm (UTC)(link)Dear David's readers,
This year, let's all help to "Make Poverty History."
Armbands whose sale will go to a fairer redistribution of the world's wealth can be obtained from this Livejournal, price £10 each. [note to David, I'll run these up from old yoghurt cartons if you deal with the distribution side, we'll split the proceeds*] And you too can do your bit towards eradicating hardship in the UK!
Thank you for your support.
The Wade Towers "Make Poverty History" Campaign
*80:20 to me
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(Anonymous) 2006-01-10 04:09 pm (UTC)(link)Fagin
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For them as is rich enough to afford them, that is.
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Anyone smart enough to spend time calculating their statistics is smart enouh to realise that any mathematical measurement of poverty is meaningless in face of the complexity of the issue of poverty, and that some statistics should not be poked.
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I believe in truth in advertising myself.
And it's not the people who are smart enough to do the maths I'm worried about; it's the ones who aren't, and who are instead emotionally blackmailed into supporting something based upon false premises.
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What strikes me as odd about the UK poverty debate is that the vast majority of people raising it as a problem are not themselves poor.
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(Anonymous) 2006-01-10 04:23 pm (UTC)(link)H
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And you fail basic economics, with an additional failure in elementary web page reading, subcategorised as "the small writing at the bottom".
Disposable income is gross income minus taxes, NI contributions and pensions contributions, plus interest from savings, plus or minus some other, comparatively insignificant and uncommon things.
It _does not_ include rent/mortgage, utilities, food, clothing or transport.
I quote (from the page
The income data in the distribution of income chart are adjusted to 2002/03 prices using the Retail Prices Index less local taxes and are before the deduction of housing costs.
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(Anonymous) - 2006-01-10 16:33 (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
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(Anonymous) - 2006-01-10 16:50 (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
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As
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(Anonymous) - 2006-01-11 08:53 (UTC) - Expandno subject
As he got off the train he was accosted by students collecting for "The starving miners in Yorkshire"
He replied "I've just come from Yorkshire, and they're not starving. They're all fat."
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(Anonymous) 2006-01-10 05:23 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
I remember a load of my mates whose fathers were striking miners getting VAST amounts of Xmas pressies. i mean shit loads that year.
SO much bloody cash collected for the starving children of the striking miners... my best mate got a fookin' ten speed racer!!!
Best bloody pressie he'd ever 'ad!
Twat!
And that ponce Springsteen was writin' bloody huge cheques for 'em!
Wasn't bloody fair!
My dad were lecturer!
And he were workin'...
..and I didn't get no fuckin' ten-speed racer that Crimbo!
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(Anonymous) - 2006-01-11 08:55 (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
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(Anonymous) - 2006-01-11 15:13 (UTC) - ExpandI've changed my mind
(Anonymous) - 2006-01-11 16:24 (UTC) - Expandno subject
The truth is like a mirror - what you see depends on where you stand.
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