The Guardian view on social immobility: time to rebalance | Editorial

As a new report shows elite jobs are still dominated by the privately educated, it’s clear an approach focused on justice, not only mobility, is needed

“For old progressives, reducing snapshot income inequality is the ultimate goal. For new progressives, reducing the barriers to mobility is.” So said deputy prime minister Nick Clegg in 2010. In the decade since, social mobility has been a favourite theme for those on the liberal wing of the government – both in the coalition and the Conservative administrations that followed it. Policies such as school academisation and increasing home ownership were promoted as assisting children from poorer backgrounds to get ahead and breaking the stranglehold of the middle and upper classes on the top universities and jobs. But that doesn’t mean these initiatives were right. When the government’s own experts say inequality is now “entrenched from birth to work”, it could not be clearer that its approach has failed.

A new joint report from the Sutton Trust and Social Mobility Commission is the latest proof that far from becoming a more socially mobile society, Britain remains stuck. The study of 5,000 members of the elite (judges, politicians, top business people and pop stars) shows that private school pupils and Oxbridge graduates continue to monopolise senior positions. The findings come as no surprise, given a plethora of recent evidence pointing to the same conclusions. The previous set of commissioners, led by Alan Milburn, walked out in protest at the lack of progress in 2017.

The report makes useful recommendations. Contextualised school and university admissions, and a new focus on segregation in education, could help break down divisions among children and young people. Such practices should continue in the world of work. Employers should monitor socio-economic backgrounds in the same way that they monitor differences of sex and ethnicity.

Yet while the principle that people should be mobile – in the sense that they can acquire status they were not born with – is sound, the emphasis must shift. This month, Labour promised to abandon social mobility as a policy goal and replace it with social justice. This new and more egalitarian direction is welcome. Equal opportunities and access are important, but insufficient. Justice is more than social mobility with teeth. Policies that attempt to bridge and repair the divisions and rifts that deface British society are desperately needed. Growing inequalities, particularly of wealth and geography, are among the causes of the political crisis brought about by the vote for Brexit – and are now being exacerbated by it. Boris Johnson’s promise of tax cuts for the rich can only make a bad situation worse, even if he has now modified this with a contradictory commitment to prioritise the poor.

The intergenerational lens is a relatively new but essential tool in the policymaker’s toolkit. That’s because millennials (born 1981-2000) have not seen the improvements in living standards – compared with their parents – that previous cohorts took for granted. Home ownership rates in particular have fallen sharply, as has the proportion of younger adults renting from social landlords. The result is many more families trapped in high-cost private rentals, with all the insecurity (including for school-age children) this entails. As inheritances are passed on, including by the 11% of adults who own a share of a second home, the gaps will continue to widen – and an already widespread sense of social injustice will continue to mount.

How a rebalancing is achieved is a key question not just for the next prime minister, but also for the country. The social care crisis means new taxes on wealth are inevitable sooner or later. Far less certain but just as necessary is the kind of political leadership that will enable us to come together again as a society and rediscover some of the common bonds that we are in danger of losing.

Contributor

Editorial

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
The Guardian view on private schools: motors of unfairness | Editorial
Editorial: Social mobility has stalled and inequalities between schools play an important part. It’s time to even things up

Editorial

12, Feb, 2019 @6:33 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on educational inequality: no quick fixes | Editorial
Editorial: The disadvantaged pupils who lost out most during the pandemic will need targeted support to catch up

Editorial

06, Sep, 2020 @5:30 PM

Article image
The Guardian view: please support our 2020 Christmas appeal
Editorial: Covid has hit the younger generation hard. We are fundraising to fight child poverty, and support youth work and mental health

Editorial

22, Dec, 2020 @6:30 PM

Article image
Education needs an overhaul, but closing private schools is not the answer | Lee Elliot Major and Steve Higgins
If Labour really wants to tackle inequality, it should abolish league tables – and make state school admissions a lottery, say academics Lee Elliot Major and Steve Higgins

Lee Elliot Major and Steve Higgins

28, Sep, 2019 @9:00 AM

Article image
Poverty is holding Britain’s young people back. They deserve so much better | Lola Okolosie
As a teacher, I want to inspire my pupils to greater heights. But what chance is there of that if they can’t afford to eat, asks English teacher Lola Okolosie

Lola Okolosie

01, May, 2019 @11:24 AM

Article image
The Guardian view on crowdfunding schools: lessons in unfairness | Editorial
Editorial: Individual acts of philanthropy, however inspiring, are not the solution to the current crisis

Editorial

09, Apr, 2019 @5:26 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on Starmer’s Labour: time to take on the Tories | Editorial
Editorial: The Labour leader must know his party faces existential implications if it suffers a historic fifth election defeat

Editorial

26, Sep, 2021 @4:53 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on private schools: the rich secede from the rest | Editorial
Editorial: Boris Johnson might be the UK’s 20th prime minister from one school, Eton. Time to ask why the elite are blossoming in an anti-elite era

Editorial

14, Jul, 2019 @5:53 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on social mobility: don’t turn it into a culture war | Editorial
Editorial: It is not clear that Katherine Birbalsingh’s achievements as a headteacher have equipped her to address entrenched inequality

Editorial

11, Oct, 2021 @6:05 PM

Article image
The Guardian view on music education: not an optional extra
Editorial: Covid has only exacerbated the loss of music-making in schools. It must be made available to all

Editorial

22, Dec, 2020 @6:25 PM