Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
3 reasons economic ‘inequality’ is misleading
3 reasons economic ‘inequality’ is misleading
Nov 22, 2025 4:37 PM

Society praises equality as an absolute good. Certainly, equality before God and the law are pillars of a free society. However, measuring economic equality is often misleading for three key reasons.

I was reminded of this by a new Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) report on e inequality in Great Britain released on Wednesday. The BBC’s headline “UK inequality reduced since 2008” typifies the media coverage.

However, the study reveals that much of the leveling came about because the wealthiest British citizens are worse off after the Great Recession.

es at the 90th percentile have fallen by over 10%,” the report says. While low es have risen by about the same amount, losing 10 percent of the wealth in the top e bracket far exceeds gaining a tenth at the bottom. The UK’s Office for National Statistics (ONS) specifies that e for the richest fifth of households has fallen by £1,900 (or 3.4%) in real terms” since the Great Recession.

The fact that wealth destruction reduces inequality is one indication that “equality” is the wrong measure of economic well-being. The loss of the well-to-do does not improve the lot of the struggling – or those “just about managing,” in the UK’s government’s favored parlance. It merely depletes the pot of wealth available for use within a society.

Inequality is misleading for a second reason: It does not reflect people’s economic conditions or trajectory. The IFS report gets closer to a helpful metric when it notes, “Absolute poverty (according to the government’s official measure) has changed little.” However, this is less helpful than it would seem. The UK government defines poverty as “equivalised disposable e that falls below 60% of the national median in the current year.” That is, the UK’s definition of poverty does not measure privation; it measures inequality.

Surely, someone making 60 percent of the current UK median e would not be considered prosperous by transatlantic standards. However, linking “poverty” to a floating measure like median e muddies the waters because, as a nation es richer, so do “the poor.” Imagine a country in which the national median e is $1 million. Someone making $590,000 a year may fall below 60 percent of the median, but that person would hardly be impoverished. Similarly, those making more than $168, the actual median per-capita e of Burkina Faso, are no better off for their neighbors’ poverty.

The British have long understood this. Margaret Thatcher once responded to an accusation that inequality had grown under her tenure by saying, “What the honorable member is saying is that he would rather that the poor were poorer, provided that the rich were less rich. … So long as the gap is smaller, they would rather have the poor poorer. You do not create wealth and opportunity that way. You do not create a property-owning democracy that way.”

This hints at the third reason that economic “equality” is misleading: It assumes the wealthy e wealthier at the expense of the poor. Experience tells us that the fortunes of every citizen are tied together. A poor person loses ground if a wealthy person lacks the funds to pay his salary, chooses not to invest in his start-up, or does not buy the goods offered by his employer. And the poor person has less ground to lose. The latest ONS statistics reveal empirically how rich and poor have risen together over the long term:

The median disposable e for the richest fifth of households in 2015/16 was 2.3 times higher than in 1977 parable records began). The median e of the poorest fifth of households has also grown over this time, but the rate of growth has been slower (2.0 times higher in 2015/16 than 1977).

For this reason, the Catechism of the Catholic Church upholds the need for “solidarity …between rich and poor … between employers and employees in a business,” and its social teaching condemns “the class struggle.”

Finally, the most important reason that focusing on economic inequality is misleading – which I buried in this article – has nothing to do with economic charts or data sets. Variable annual es reflect the differing gifts, characteristics, personalities, circumstances, exertions, and productivity levels of each unique individual as he or she was created by Almighty God. No two individuals are alike; therefore, their life’s work, and the remuneration it is able to fetch on the free market, differ. The wonderful diversity with which the Lord graced the human race is no mistake. It in some sense reflects His own many-faceted glory and allows for some to exercise their spiritual gift by providing for the needs of others. For the human race to thrive, once must appreciate human anthropology as lovingly fashioned by its Creator.

This photo has been cropped. CC BY 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Audio: Kishore Jayabalan on Pope Francis’ Installation
Kishore Jayabalan, Director of Instituto Acton in Rome, joined host Michael Patrick Shiels on Michigan’s Big Show to discuss the mood in Rome on the day of Pope Francis’ Installation Mass. The theme of the day, according to Jayabalan, was one of “quiet, faithful, obedient service.” The Vatican estimates that between 150,000 and 200,000 people turned out for the event. Listen to the full interview here: ...
Rev. Sirico on ‘The Blaze’ to Discuss Pope Francis
The Blaze TV will be featuring the Rev. Robert Sirico and Rabbi Daniel Lapin on Wednesday, March 20. The hour-long program will focus on the election of Pope Francis, formerly Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina. Pope Francis has already made several statements regarding the Church’s relationship with the Jewish people, and the Chief Rabbi of Rome, Riccardo di Segni, plans to attend the papal inauguration. Carol Glatz, of The CatholicHerald UK, writes: Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation...
Can Pope Francis Deal With Toxic Contamination?
The bureaucracy of the Roman Curia is nothing new. When Pope John XXIII was asked how many people worked at the Vatican, he replied, “About half.” A great chuckle, but an unfortunate truth. The National Post’s Scott Barber shares the mess that Pope Francis is going to have to deal with: A bination of corruption, petence and tradition could stifle Pope Francis’ ability to rid the Catholic Church of scandal, Vatican analysts say. “This whole mess needs to be excavated...
Video: A Humble Pope
Last week, Acton president and co-founder, Rev. Robert Sirico, and operations manager of Istituto Acton, Michael Severance, were featured on Reuters TV discussing Pope Francis’ humility and frugality. ...
Michael Miller: Pope Francis Says Human Person is at Center of Economy
In today’s American Spectator, Acton’s Michael Matheson Miller focuses on Pope Francis’ “street smarts“: a man who knows poverty and economics at the most important and basic level. It’s a counter-intuitive tale of one of Latin America’s most significant bishops living in modest lodgings, cooking his own meals, and riding the crowded public transportation system in Buenos Aires. Even the small but telling gesture of paying his own hotel bill after the Vatican conclave drew media attention. As a priest...
Sen. Warren: Why Isn’t the Minimum Wage $22 an Hour?
In the United States we have approximately 314 million citizens. In the United States Senate, the upper house of our country’s bicameral legislature, there are exactly 100 senators. That means only 1 senator is selected for every 3.14 million people in the nation. Because two e from each state and the population is spread unevenly, the ratio of citizens to senators isn’t exact. Still, you’d think out of a pool of millions the chances are high that people selected for...
The Hart of the Matter on Trade With China
Today at Ethika Politika, I critique David Bentley Hart’s recent (non-)response to the critics of his attack on natural law in public discourse last month, appearing in the most recent issue of First Things. My article, “Hart’s (Non-)Response to His Critics: Trying to Have It Both Ways?” is a response to Hart’s recent article,“Si Fueris Romae.” While Hart’s most recent article may seem unrelated, it starts to sound remarkably similar to his article on natural law from last month about...
Does International Child Sponsorship Work?
In 1936, near the end of the Great Depression, Children International launched one of the earliest child sponsorship charities. Today, child sponsorship is one of the most significant forms of foreign aid. It’s estimated that there are over 8 million internationally sponsored children in the world. With the average monthly sponsorship level set at about $30 (not including other gifts sent to sponsored children), the flow of resources from wealthy countries to poor countries from international child sponsorships is about...
A Meat Grinder Which Destroys Lives: Pope Francis on Slavery
Pope Francis has already made it clear that he has a heart and mind for the poor. We’ve seen images of him washing the feet of AIDS patients, stopping traffic to bless a severely handicapped man in St. Peter’s Square, and reminding us from the first moments of his papacy to remember the poor. Beyond that, there is a certain population of the poor that Francis wants us to remember: those caught in human trafficking and slavery. The White House...
What We Can Expect from Pope Francis
Michael Severance, operations manager of the Istituto Acton in Rome, recently wrote an article for the World Catholic Report explaining why Pope Francis was a historic choice and examining what we can expect from his papacy. He points out that “this past week proved a historic week of firsts:” We now have the first Jesuit pope. And the first pope named Francis. He is the first non-European pope since Gregory III, an eighth-century Syrian. And we now have the very...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved