Free and Equal by Daniel Chandler review – the road to fairness

A stirring call to make justice and equity a reality by applying the ideas of liberal philosopher John Rawls

If members of the shadow frontbench seek inspiration on how to differentiate their future administration from the mendacious nonentities who have run the country for the past 13 years, they could do worse than read this book. Free and Equal is a stirring call by an LSE philosopher and economist for egalitarian liberalism based on the ideas of John Rawls. The late Harvard professor wrote a book 50 years ago that saw him feted as a political thinker of the calibre of Plato, Hobbes and Mill, but, as far as I can tell, he had precisely zero impact on the real world. Maybe now his time has come.

In A Theory of Justice, Rawls invited us to imagine what a just society would look like by means of an elegant thought experiment. Suppose, Rawls suggested, that we are all behind what he calls a “veil of ignorance”, with knowledge of our talents, income and wealth, as well as our core values, temporarily erased. In this “original position”, what principles of justice would we agree to be bound by? What kind of social contract would we devise to ensure the society we lived in was a good one? Rawls argued that we would choose a set of basic liberties necessary for flourishing, including freedom of expression and of conscience, and a free choice of occupation.

On top of these we would also want some principle of fairness; and so Rawls’s “difference principle” asserts that any inequality in society can be justified only to the extent that it benefits the worst off. If, for example, the estimated £2.4m paid in bonuses to Thames Water bosses in 2021 could be shown to improve the lot of its poorest customers – perhaps by encouraging them to run it with such skill that they could cut prices and improve standards – then it would be justifiable. But the fact it was handed out despite rising bills and millions of litres of water leaking from its pipes every day suggests it wasn’t.

The insights from the original position experiment, which Rawls imagined would be so inspiring as to bind fractured societies together, are what Chandler thinks we need now, not only to make societies more equal, but to fill the moral vacuum at the heart of our politics. It is this, he argues, that “has made space for the rise of illiberal, antidemocratic populism”.

The first part of his book is a fine elucidation of Rawls’s ideas and critical responses to them, which will be familiar to most philosophy undergraduates. It is the second part, though, in which Chandler applies Rawls’s ideas to our current plight, where things get exciting. He derides Jeremy Corbyn’s 2019 manifesto as a wishlist rather than a coherent programme, but his ideas are also a wishlist, albeit underpinned by the Rawlsian conception of justice as fairness, and more committed to the continuation of market economics and capitalism than Corbyn would countenance.

That wishlist includes a universal basic income sufficient to eliminate poverty (costing about 25% of GDP) awarded to everyone irrespective of wealth, any other income, or whether they’re employed; tertiary education funded by a mix of free tuition and income-contingent loans, and a transfer of wealth to every citizen when they reach adulthood (a reform historically endorsed by the two Thomases, Paine and Piketty, and similar to Gordon Brown’s child trust fund).

I found Chandler’s suggestions inspiring, not least his call for the abolition of private schools. But surely that measure contradicts the freedom of people to spend their money as they wish? Rawls’s basic liberties, Chandler writes, are necessary preconditions to fairness and so take precedence over equality of opportunity. “But,” he argues, “the freedom to spend large amounts of money on a private education, or indeed to pass on unlimited amounts of wealth through gifts and inheritances, simply doesn’t have the same importance.”

Chandler’s programme of reforms amounts to a much-needed rebuttal of the idea that existing income and wealth distributions are unobjectionable. But it comes with an eye-watering price tag. He estimates that taxes at around 45-50% of national income would be needed (the UK tax take is currently about 33%). “Building support for higher taxes is a long-term political project,” he says with heroic understatement. Who’s going to vote for massive tax hikes? Not, cynics might retort, the “red wall” Tories who Labour needs to seduce.

In any case, as we know from economic geniuses Kwasi Kwarteng and Liz Truss, low taxes stimulate growth and high ones scupper it. Not so, counters Chandler: Belgium, Denmark and Finland have experienced similar long-run economic growth to the US since the 1960s, despite having an overall tax rate that is 10-15% higher. Just possibly, voters would pay more to create something that has seemed out of reach since at least 1979, the year Margaret Thatcher was elected to enact an anti-state platform predicated on free market ideology, rather than anything John Rawls would recognise as just or fair.

If we are really serious about creating a free and equal society, at least some of the ideas Chandler suggests are necessary. Whether the next Labour government has the bottle to put them into practice is another matter.

• Free and Equal: What Would a Fair Society Look Like? by Daniel Chandler is published by Allen Lane (£25). To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

Contributor

Stuart Jeffries

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Party Lines by Ed Gillett review – the politics of dancing
A buzzing study of how the cat-and-mouse game played by partygoers and the state shaped contemporary Britain

Sukhdev Sandhu

04, Aug, 2023 @6:30 AM

Article image
The Gardener of Lashkar Gah by Larisa Brown review – Afghanistan abandoned
A deeply moving book that lays bare the human cost of the 2021 western withdrawal

John Simpson

30, Aug, 2023 @6:30 AM

Article image
Doppelganger: A Trip Into the Mirror World by Naomi Klein review – a case of mistaken identity
An insightful and subtle exploration of truth in politics, prompted by constantly being confused with Naomi Wolf

William Davies

09, Sep, 2023 @6:30 AM

Article image
Bad Data by Georgina Sturge review – figures of derision
A parliamentary statistician lays bare the use and abuse of numbers in public life

Katy Guest

14, Dec, 2022 @7:30 AM

Article image
The Patriarchs by Angela Saini review – the roots of male domination
A scientific and historical survey of patriarchy shows that there’s nothing inevitable about it

Alex von Tunzelmann

08, Mar, 2023 @7:30 AM

Article image
The Price of Life by Jenny Kleeman review – what’s it worth?
A riveting examination of the value we place on human life – from healthcare to hitmen

Eliane Glaser

27, Mar, 2024 @7:30 AM

Article image
The Sister by Sung-Yoon Lee review – North Korea’s propaganda queen
A biography of Kim Yo-jong goes beyond personalities to examine the Kim dynasty’s roots and its possible future

Rachel Aspden

10, Jun, 2023 @11:00 AM

Article image
The Secret Diaries of Charles Ignatius Sancho by Paterson Joseph review – a Georgian Black Briton
The actor’s first novel brilliantly conveys the life and times of an 18th-century composer, from his birth on a slave ship to thriving in London society

Natasha Pulley

07, Oct, 2022 @6:30 AM

Article image
The Identity Trap by Yascha Mounk review – ‘PC gone mad’ revisited
A befuddled takedown of progressive thought

Zoe Williams

13, Sep, 2023 @10:00 AM

Article image
I’m Black So You Don’t Have to Be by Colin Grant review – where are we ‘really’ from?
An important contribution to the story of British-Caribbean identity, told with loving scrutiny

SI Martin

04, Feb, 2023 @7:30 AM