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Living in Squeezed Britain

Attitudes to Wealth and Economic Inequality in the New Age of Austerity

Starts on13/06/2012
Start time17:00
Ends on15/06/2012
End time14:00

Even in the most optimistic economic projections, the UK will remain squeezed for at least ten years. At the same time, the large growth in income inequalities experienced since the 1970s has not been reversed. Attitudes to wealth and income inequalities are cast in a new light in this era of austerity. Consumer behaviours and attitudes to money which were fostered by the boom of the Eighties and Nineties are obsolete – and, worse, they will create growing resentment if unchecked

If, as seems increasingly likely, there is no magic bullet to solve the current economic crisis, then we must focus on how to cope with life in squeezed and unequal Britain. Our current social attitudes to wealth, disposable income, savings, owning property, the state, pensions, and even what we expect to inherit from our parents is going to have to change. If these changes happen unthinkingly, social tensions will rise. This is not just about the richest 1% – it is about how children will grow up resenting the fact that they cannot hope to have a life as ‘good’ as their parents. If we don’t change our ideas about the connection between wealth, income and happiness, then riots and social unrest will continue.

But ideas about wealth, earnings, consumption and happiness have undergone this kind of seismic shift before: the conspicuous consumption of the 1920s gave way to a culture of disgust with decadence in the 1930s. We can learn to live in Squeezed Britain - indeed, we have to - and this conference offers the opportunity to find out how.

Speakers confirmed to date

John Bird, Co-founder, The Big Issue

Professor Gordon Brown, Warwick University

Elizabeth Clery, Co-director, British Social Attitudes Survey

Naomi Eisenstadt, Department of Education, University of Oxford

Sir John Gieve, Chairman of VocaLink

Professor John Hills, LSE

Professor John Holmwood, University of Nottingham

Paul Johnson, Director, IFS

Dr Omar Khan, Head of Policy, Runnymede Trust

Professor Peter Taylor-Gooby, University of Kent

Martin Vander Weyer, Business Editor, The Spectator

Karl Wilding, Head of Policy, Research and Foresight, NCVO

Mark Williamson, Director, Action for Happiness

Matthew Whittaker, Resolution Foundation

We are currently approaching speakers and will keep this page updated as confirmations are made.