Re: No More Arguments: Austerity is Working! : Fri Jan 31, 2014 10:12 am
Mintball wrote:
Only if you think that, say, 10% of an income of £1m is equal, in its impact, to 2% of an income of £12,000.
Reminds me of a situation I came across recently, of a vice chancellor at a university in the south west of England, who, after several years of massive pay awards, leaving them on something like £250K, had decided, as a show of solidarity with the university's lowest-paid staff – who have been offered a below-inflation pay cut of 1% this year – to take a rise this time around of 'just' 2%.
Reminds me of a situation I came across recently, of a vice chancellor at a university in the south west of England, who, after several years of massive pay awards, leaving them on something like £250K, had decided, as a show of solidarity with the university's lowest-paid staff – who have been offered a below-inflation pay cut of 1% this year – to take a rise this time around of 'just' 2%.
OK so we have a businessman with a 1m a year salary and an unskilled worker earning 15k the wealth gap is 985k
If said businessman has a 9% drop off in his standard of living his 1m becomes 910k and unskilled worker has a 3% drop his 15k he is 14,550 therefore the wealth gap is £895,450, a reduction in the gap of £89,550 or 9%
I appreciate this is a very simplistic model but is that not what the report is saying?