The UK is a very unfair country. Inequality – whether socio-economic, regional, racial, gender, class-based, or disability-based – has got out of hand. This is morally wrong, but it's also bad for our economy, society and democracy. It's no surprise that 85% of people are concerned about inequality in Britain today. And the bad news is that most experts believe that inequality is going to get even worse over the next few years.
To address this, the next government has to take bold action to reduce economic inequality and build a fairer society. If we don’t make progress on this agenda over the next parliament, the 2029 election result might see the far-right making gains that we have never seen before in this country, as foretold in the results of the recent EU elections. The stakes for the next government, and for all of us, could not be higher.
On 30 June, as we look ahead to the general election, the Fairness Foundation published a report, 'The Canaries', that examines what the evidence tells us about how much more unfair Britain could become over the next five years, why this matters, and what we can do about it. It highlights the warnings made by experts from a range of sectors and disciplines about the trajectory that we are on, and what they think we need to do to get back onto a fairer, more prosperous and safer path.
During this webinar on 1 July, the report’s analysis and recommendations were discussed and situated within the wider context of the debate about inequality and poverty by an expert panel.
Speakers:
- Helen Barnard, Director of Policy, Research and Impact, Trussell Trust
- Shabna Begum, CEO, Runnymede Trust
- Nick Harrison, Chief Executive, Sutton Trust
- Anita Sangha, Fairness Foundation
- Will Snell, Chief Executive, Fairness Foundation (chair)
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Informations
- Émission
- Publiée1 juillet 2024 à 08:34 UTC
- Durée58 min
- Épisode16
- ClassificationTous publics