COVID GENERATION FACES ‘DARK AGE’ OF LOW SOCIAL MOBILITY

COVID GENERATION FACES ‘DARK AGE’ OF LOW SOCIAL MOBILITY
May 28, 2020 dmh

YOUNG BRITONS AT RISK OF LONG-TERM DAMAGE TO FUTURE LIFE PROSPECTS

A briefing paper by the Centre for Econo,ic Performance (CFE) at the London School of Economics (LSE) has been released today warning of a decline in social mobility as a consequence of Covid 19. This is one of a series of background briefings on the policy issues arising from the Covid-19 pandemic.

According to the authors, the ‘Covid generation’ – young Britons currently under the age of 25 – face declining social mobility unless bold moves are made to create a fairer society – including a job guarantee scheme for those facing long-term unemployment and catch-up tutoring for disadvantaged children. http://cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/download/cepcovid-19-004.pdf

The unprecedented economic and educational shocks of the Covid-19 pandemic could inflict long-term damage to young people’s prospects in life, a new study finds.

The report – Covid-19 and Social Mobility, points out that before the crisis, younger generations were already facing declining ‘absolute mobility’: falling real wages, fewer opportunities and stagnant or declining living standards.

Now that the crisis has drastically worsened economic and education inequality, young people are even less likely to fare better than past generations, less likely to climb the income ladder and less likely to fulfil their potential regardless of their background. There is a genuine concern that these inequalities could become entrenched for some time.

But, the authors say, rebuilding after the pandemic also offers an opportunity to give serious consideration to radical policies that will create a more mobile society and a better functioning economy.

The report calls for:

• The introduction of job guarantees for people who are unemployed for more than 6 or 12 months.

• A one-off progressive wealth tax on the net worth of the top 1% of richest individuals.

• Living wages for key workers.

• A national tutoring service, with undergraduates and graduates helping children to catch up during the next school year.

• A dual approach to upper secondary schools, with a credible vocational stream alongside current academic routes.

• Random allocation for school and university admissions, where candidates have met a threshold of selection criteria.

Professor Lee Elliot Major, co-author of the report, said: “There are serious concerns that the pandemic will plunge the Covid-19 generation into a dark age of declining social mobility because of rising economic and educational inequalities.

“The effects of the crisis and lockdown vary across age groups: while the coronavirus health shock has particularly affected the over-60s, the longer-term economic and social damage is likely to hit young people disproportionately, especially the under-25s.

“The growing divides in our society were apparent before the crisis. But, as social movements following the Second World War demonstrate, it is possible that fairer and more collective societies can emerge from hard times.”

CEP’s director Professor Stephen Machin, co-author of the report, said: “We need to develop bold policies for now and the longer term to ensure the economic recovery also creates a more socially mobile society that is fairer for all.

“We owe it to our young people to ensure that our post-Covid-19 economy is more local, sustainable, inclusive and productive. There is scope and, we believe, demand and appetite to do it.”

The Centre for Economic Performance is an independent research centre based at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Its members are from the LSE and a wide range of universities within the UK and around the world.

The CEP Covid-19 analysis series provides evidence-based briefings on the economic and social policy issues arising from the Covid-19 pandemic.

For more information contact:
Lee Elliot Major: [email protected]
Stephen Machin: [email protected]
Helen Ward, Communications manager, CEP: [email protected]
Romesh Vaitilingam, press and public relations, CEP: [email protected]

About the authors
• Jack Blundell is a PhD Economics candidate at Stanford University and an occasional research assistant at CEP.
• Stephen Machin is director of the Centre for Economic Performance and professor of economics at LSE.

Professors Elliot Major and Machin’s book What Do We Know and What Should We Do About Social Mobility?, published by Sage, is due out later this year.

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