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Uncomfortably Off

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In highly unequal societies such as the UK, where the top 10% take a higher share of disposable income than in most other European countries, many feel resentment towards high earners. On paper, th...
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  • 25 July 2023
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In highly unequal societies such as the UK, where the top 10% take a higher share of disposable income than in most other European countries, many feel resentment towards high earners. On paper, they are doing well, but inequality isn’t even working for them.

Uncomfortably Off reveals that those generally considered to be the most affluent feel anxious about the future and struggle to keep up, or even to stay put. They are starting to doubt their common sense ideas about hard work and meritocracy as work pays less and less and life is becoming more uncomfortable.

This book makes two crucial arguments. First, reducing income inequality will benefit everyone, even those quite near the top. Second, we need to understand the anxieties of high earners to understand their politics. As leading managers and professionals they have disproportionate influence on the institutions that rule over our public life. Their interests are ultimately not that dissimilar from those of the median earner: being able to afford a good quality of life in an ever more expensive and uncertain world.

The hope of this book is to prompt high earners to question accepted truths and long-held beliefs that affect how they see themselves and judge others. In doing so, it seeks to help us all understand why dismissing the concerns of this group will not help in the fight to solve inequality.

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Price: $29.95
Pages: 258
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 25 July 2023
ISBN: 9781447367512
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Classes & Economic Disparity, Social groups, communities and identities, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Labor & Industrial Relations, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Labour / income economics, Sociology: work and labour
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“If capitalism isn’t working for the top ten percent, then it's not working at all. This brilliant book tells us why and what we need to do about it” Neal Lawson, Compass

"Aims to challenge the top 10%’s conception of their world, to unmask their own privileged lives, and to show that the system is failing everyone except those at the very top of the pile.. which makes for some very interesting reading." BSA Network Magazine

Marcos González Hernando is Honorary Research Fellow at the UCL Social Research Institute, Postdoctoral Researcher at Universidad Diego Portales and Adjunct Researcher at the Centre for the Study of Conflict and Social Cohesion.

Gerry Mitchell is a freelance policy researcher, working most recently for the Think-tank for Action on Social Change (Dublin), Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (Stockholm and London) and the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (Brussels).

Introduction: Why bother with the well-off?

1. Not billionaires, but well-off?

2. On the ubiquity and invisibility of the upper-middle class

3. ‘Work is life, that’s it’

4. Don’t rock the boat: politics and the well-off

5. Business class tickets for a sinking ship

6. Jumping ship, but where to?

7. Barriers to being comfortably off

8. ‘When the facts change, I change my mind’

Conclusion: Accepted truths, social distance and discomfort