Monthly Archives: April 2011

Divide and conquer

Congratulations! Disability has just become a “lifestyle choice”.

We saw it coming, with the government’s aggressive briefing on “benefits as a lifestyle”, but with the Department for Work and Pensions today releasing figures showing that 80,000 people claim Incapacity Benefit because they are addicted to drugs or alcohol, or obese, it is now official – we have “good disability” and “bad disability”. (Hey, that sounds familiar!)

Gay rights campaigners, particularly those following gay rights issues in the US, will be familiar with the rhetoric. The implication is that if being gay – or having an addiction – is a choice that you made, that should not be the state’s business and you do not deserve any support, regardless of whether it’s Incapacity Benefit or equal marriage rights. And no, Chris Grayling hasn’t come out and said in as many words that addiction or obesity is a choice, but the implication is very much there. Why else single out those groups and release the numbers, if not for the rabid coverage you’ll get from the Telegraph and the Mail?

Let’s take this logic a little further then. Who’s next on the DWP’s hitlist? Cervical cancer sufferers? It’s linked to HPV which is sexually transmitted – perhaps they should have remained pure and virginal. People with mental health conditions? After all, if the expectation is that you bootstrap yourself out of addiction or obesity (“Just pull yourself together!”), why not out of depression? Or perhaps the DWP’s approach will spill over into Andrew Lansley’s territory – maybe next we’ll classify treatment for addictions in the same category as cosmetic surgery. It’s a lifestyle choice, isn’t it?

Nevermind the fact that scientists are beginning to hunt around for other causes of our obesity epidemic than the simple “moral failure” story we keep being fed, or the biology of addiction – 40-60% of what makes us susceptible to addiction are our genes.

It’s a lifestyle choice. So, do you have a good disability or a bad disability? Ultimately, though, this divide and conquer approach only works if we let ourselves be divided. I for one don’t buy the rhetoric. Do you?

[Elsewhere] Education, education, education

In an attempt to take education back to the 19th century enhance discipline in schools, Education Secretary Michael Gove is proposing a variety of new measures and powers for teachers, including the power to confiscate pupils’ mobile phones, search for objectionable content on them and erase it. This is the latest in a series of education policies designed to make today’s children as ill-prepared for the future as possible. Other proposals include the move to “fact-based teaching” and the rewriting of history to fit into a particular, ideologically sound world view.
Read more at ORGZine.

Can I have my “good immigrant” sash now, please?

I woke up this morning to find I had been branded “good immigration” by the government. What a relief.
In his speech to Conservative Party members today, the Prime Minister said he believed politicians’ role should be to “cut through the extremes of [the immigration] debate and approach the subject sensibly and reasonably.” He wanted, he said, “good immigration, not mass immigration”. He even went so far as to acknowledge that immigrants made a huge contribution to Britain. I should be happy, right?
Not so much. Cameron wants us to believe that he has a holistic, joined-up policy on immigration, but his rhetoric on the subject is as disjointed, confused and pandering to the lowest common xenophobic denominator as the next guy’s.
One often-brandished key word in what passes for a debate on immigration is “integration”; and the favourite way of measuring “integration” is whether/how well someone speaks English. In the Prime Minister’s own words,

when there have been significant numbers of new people arriving in neighbourhoods, perhaps not able to speak the same language as those living there, on occasions not really wanting or even willing to integrate, that has created a kind of discomfort and disjointedness in some neighbourhoods.

And yet, this government which claims to be so keen on us immigrants learning English is cutting crucial funding for ESL classes, meaning many immigrants will no longer be able to to afford to learn the language.
This same government, which has a stated ambition of being the most family-friendly government in UK history, is now proposing to clamp down on the family immigration route. If you are under 21, you will not be able to join your spouse in the UK; if your spouse is an undergraduate student, you won’t be able to join them; if your English is judged to not be satisfactory, tough luck – you’re staying at home, and nevermind the fact that you’d learn it so much faster if you were in this country! One can’t help but wonder if that last restriction will apply to the spouses of people coming in on the new entrepreneur visa – essentially a “buy yourself into Britain” scheme. It seems the government gets to pick and choose which families it wants to be friendly to.
The section on permanent settlement is particularly… unsettling. Having harped on about how we should all integrate or else, Cameron suddenly turns around and says that “it cannot be right that people coming to fill short-term skill gaps can stay long-term”. Combined with the stated aim to “select and attract the world’s brightest to our shores”, this should give you a good idea of how the Conservative party regards immigrants: not as human beings with emotions, lives, attachments to people and places, but as spare parts who can be shipped in and out of the country as and when the “market” sees fit. Huge contribution or not, we’ve been put on notice – we can be kicked out any time our skills are no longer deemed sufficiently rare or useful. Does this give immigrants an incentive to integrate; to form relationships and contribute to British society? Hardly, if next time your visa comes up for renewal you may be told to leave all that behind you.
The coup de grâce of the speech, however, is the assertion that

immigration and welfare reform are two sides of the same coin. Put simply, we will never control immigration properly unless we tackle welfare dependency.

And there we have it, the two mortal enemies of the Daily Mail reader – filthy foreigners and benefits scroungers – inextricably linked for all to see. Only a Conservative government can rid us of both.
How is an immigrant – “good” or otherwise – supposed to feel about this speech? Happy that our contribution to British society has been at least acknowledged, however briefly and fleetingly? Motivated to continue contributing, to “integrate”? Perhaps Mr. Cameron secretly hopes that none of us speak English well enough to understand what he said.
If the Conservative Party really finds us so loathsome, I would like their leader to come out and say it. If, however, the contribution immigrants make to this country on a daily basis is truly valued as Mr. Cameron claims, and if “integration” is truly desired, then I have a few suggestions for the government:

  • Cut the anti-immigrant rhetoric. You dedicated ten lines out of a seven-page speech to our contribution, and the rest of it to how to keep others like us out and ship some of those of us already here off this island again. Either I am valued or I am not. This tells me I am not.
  • Bite the bullet and educate the public. Stop pandering to the lowest common denominator – that is easy. Challenging prejudice, taking the time to explain what immigrants do, how they contribute and why immigration is important to this country is hard. But in the long run it might lead to the kind of social cohesiveness you claim to value.
  • It is easy to say immigrants should integrate. Some of us find this easier than others. Reaching out a helping hand, being proactively inclusive, can only make this process of integration easier for everyone involved. That includes funding ESL tuition, but there are also other things you can do. Mr. Cameron is apparently fond of street parties. Maybe we can have some street parties to celebrate immigrants’ contribution to the UK and get to know our immigrant neighbours? Go on, I’ll even make baklava!
  • Finally, how about creating a vision of a Britain that immigrants find inspirational and want to contribute to and be integrated in? A Britain that is open, tolerant, and inclusive? Maybe one day, I guess.

Market failure: some practical examples

This is a bit of a drive-by blog post – a collection of short thoughts with a common theme: market failure (and in one case, success). Remember, out of my three-year economics degree, we spent about a week learning how the market worked, and the rest of the time learning about all the entertaining failure modes.
Let’s start with the banks.
The Independent Commission on Banking has made some recommendations in its interim report, including firewalling retail banking from casino banking, and increasing the cash reserves required for the retail side of the operation to 10% of capital. According to Robert Peston on the Today Programme this morning, the banks’ first reaction was to complain that these measures would increase costs. I find bankers’ lack of a grasp of basic economic principles (We’re talking Introductory Microeconomics here!) both amusing and disturbing.
Let me introduce you (probably not for the first time on this blog) to the concept of externalities. Externalities are costs or benefits which for some reason are not reflected in the market. The Introductory Microeconomics textbook example of a negative externality (a cost) is pollution. Say you run a factory which makes some sort of chemical. You pay for your raw materials, for your staff, transport, electricity, water, etc. However, your factory’s waste is leaking into my local river, killing the fish and giving me cancer. I can no longer fish for a living, and I have to pay for cancer treatment, but because this has no direct cost impact on you, you have no incentive to clean up your act. Essentially, I’m picking up a part of your production costs because the market by itself has no way of making you pay up for the damage you’re causing.
Now imagine you’re a banker. You run a bank which includes a retail operation and an investment operation. There’s very little regulation on what you can and can’t do. You can promise all sorts of things without having the cash to back it up, you can take unreasonable risks on your investment side and absorb the impact on the retail side, and if you fail, the tax payer will pick up the bill, because you’re so vital to the economy that you’ve got them by the balls. The true cost of the risks you’re taking is not reflected in your operating costs – it’s picked up by the tax payer when you fall flat on your face, and then the rest of us suffer a spectacular hit to our disposable income while you still wave your £10-notes in our faces. Now, here’s a textbook externality if I ever saw one.
What that new proposed regulation would do is not increase costs. It would simply help you internalise your cost, correcting a market failure, so that you can make informed choices about how you run your business without holding a gun to my head. There’s a minor difference here.
Who do you trust more – Nick Clegg, or the guy who fixes your car?
My car’s at the garage today, having its break fluid changed and its handbrake looked at. The way such adventures invariably go is that halfway through the morning I get a call from the garage, and someone babbles at me in a thick Geordie accent and deliberately throws incomprehensible words at me trying to get me to panic and ask them to do more work than I originally intended. I’m getting better at stopping them, asking some questions and trying to sort out what actually needs doing from what they would simply like to charge me some money for because they’re having a quiet day. But I still suspect they’re getting away with way more than is strictly speaking necessary.
This is a classic example of a different kind of market failure: asymmetric information. See, when Conservatives and Libertarians tell you how great and efficient the market is, what they mean by the word “market” has nothing to do with what exists in the real world. A theoretical, efficient market relies on a whole house of cards of entirely unrealistic assumptions, including the one that states that all parties have perfect information.
As, however, I am not a car mechanic, the actors in this particular market have far from perfect information. I know nothing about fixing cars, while the mechanic knows everything. What’s even worse is that he knows perfectly well that I know nothing, and is willing to exploit this fact. So he gets to tell me all sorts of horror stories and I’m left there trying to work out which of these things will kill me if I don’t pay him to fix it. Today is one of those days when I wish we lived in the Tory Utopia of Market Efficiency. Instead, I find myself in the paradoxical position of trusting Nick Clegg, a man known for breaking promises, more than I trust the guy who’s supposed to make sure my car doesn’t malfunction in an entertainingly fatal sort of way.
And finally, thank you, Rupert Murdoch!
This one’s a story where arguably the market has worked. For those who haven’t noticed, the Times paywall is down today. I don’t know whether this is a glitch – there certainly has been no formal announcement – or if they’ve decided to quietly drop it. The universal reaction I’ve seen on the web, however, has been a resounding “Meh…”
You see, for the last six months or so, Rupert Murdoch and the Times have been persistently training us not to click on any Times links, and not to link to the Times. Any fool who clicked was asked for money, while anyone who linked risked a barrage of abuse from their readers who did not appreciate being directed to the paywall.
Humans, therefore, do appear to respond to incentives. And the incentive in this particular case has been to quietly let the Times online presence fade into digital obscurity. I am amused by how well this has worked.

[Elsewhere] Music industry fails to exhibit learning behaviour

The long legal struggle on the part of the music industry to kill yet another P2P filesharing platform – LimeWire is slowly coming to an end. In May last year, Judge Kimba Wood at the Manhattan Federal District Court ruled that LimeWire and its founder Mark Gorton were liable for copyright infringement and inducement to copyright infringement. In October last year, the court ordered LimeWire to stop distributing its software. Over the next few months, the trial will continue to determine the damages due to the 13 suing record companies.
Read more at ORGZine.