Poverty Pandemic

The UK’s Poverty Pandemic (AKA ‘Cost of Living Crisis’) was already coursing through the lifeblood of society long before COVID-19. Over the past decade, the Poverty Pandemic has been more damaging than COVID-19 and far less easily treated. Indeed, many who promoted Poverty Pandemic’s root causes may dismiss the inequities as collateral damage in the cause of the Conservative’s economic treadmill — a heartless Darwinian devotion to the survival of top dogs.
To excuse this Poverty Pandemic as ‘a crisis’ as if it might one day pass away is ‘deflective marketing’ where ‘problems’ are progressively reframed as ‘challenges’, and ‘challenges’ become ‘opportunities’, and imagined opportunities become the elusive ‘sunlit uplands’ in the search for infinite compound growth or some such supposedly faster-spinning hamster wheel, further fuelled by Brexit. Foodbanks, Pantries, and ‘charity shops’ were well established before that Brexit twist of the economic knife and before Covid-19 preyed upon endemic poverties that lacked insulation against escalating energy prices.
Any treatment for this Poverty Pandemic must inevitably be based on understanding the root causes. As our King, the UN, Climate Activists, and Extinction Rebels across the Planet have long maintained, ‘we cannot go on like this’. The world economy is based on fossil fuel extraction and conversion into the giddy creation of consumer crap, fast fashion, and consequent pollution — we have chosen to choke on, or sink into, a mess of our own making. Reliance on imaginary hi-tech solutions would be ‘displacement activities’ — further spins of the roulette wheel gambling on good fortune — another pull on fruit machines programmed to profit from addiction.
Effective treatments for addictions can only begin when patients are no longer in denial. Political leaders find that tricky — even London Mayor Sadiq Khan came under fire from supposed friends when combatting air pollution — and the re-education of entire populations is even trickier, especially when the media is beholden to ‘the way things are’. Change is inevitable but is oft assumed as being ‘for the worst’. The whole apple-cart upheaval is beyond imagination and can only be tackled in small progressive steps. But we must know where we are headed.
A wholesale re-ordering of priorities is a long-term investment project. There are no overnight solutions. Even celebrities toil for years before stardom. But there is no shortage of ‘get well’ plans (see footnote 1). It may at first seem unfair, but I’d start with a radical reform of consumer advertising. Objectors may shriek ‘economic harm’ and ‘liberty’, but the short-term collateral damage — the ‘nasty medicine’ and fractious ferment — could turn out to be massively educative. Real/severe sector regulation guided by strong moral imperatives can foster a debate that’s long overdue. This may seem quite a distance from the pressing and pervasive inequalities of our Poverty Pandemic, but, in the context of a series of such reforms, the messages would gather strength and might even become guiding lights for our peaceable survival.
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Notes:
- A useful guide for ‘the wholesale reordering of priorities’ may be found in the work of Prof. Mariana Mazzucato where in, ‘Governing the economics of the common good’, five principles (pillars) are discussed.
- This article is archived in the Groupe Intellex Governance list as a potential prompt for students.
- This article has also been published by LibDemVoice.
- For more on UK poverty read the Joseph Rowntree Foundation’s report: The Essential Guide to Understanding Poverty in the UK’.





