Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
3 reasons economic ‘inequality’ is misleading
3 reasons economic ‘inequality’ is misleading
Nov 3, 2025 7:38 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
Acton Institute Partners with Refo500
News from the Acton Institute: The Acton Institute for the Study of Religion & Liberty is joining forces with Refo500, a project that aims to bring international attention to the 500th anniversary of the Reformation. Leading up to the anniversary in 2017 of Martin Luther’s posting of his Ninety-Five Theses, Refo500 is engaging with a variety of partner organizations to promote the importance of the Reformation period and its relevance for today’s world. “Refo500 has the potential to help Acton...
Audio: Dr. Donald Condit on End of Life Planning and Health Care Reform
Dr. Donald Condit joined host Drew Mariani on the Relevant Radio Network to discuss the positives aspects of end-of-life planning as well as the troubling issues surrounding end-of-life care under government health care systems. Dr. Condit is an orthopedic surgeon and the author of Acton’s monograph on health care reform, entitled A Prescription for Health Care Reform and available in the Acton Bookshoppe; he has also authored a number mentaries on health care for Acton and other organizations; his most...
Stewardship Resources: Global and Mobile
Did you know that the NIV Stewardship Study Bible is available for Kindle, iPad and everywhere your smart phone goes? It’s true. Download this Bible for your Kindle emulator on your Mac, PC, smart phone, or directly to your eBook reader, and thousands of stewardship resources will be available at your fingertips. Or you can go to Apple’s bookstore and download the NIV Stewardship Study Bible for your viewing on your iDevice. Want to start your year out on the...
Another Attack on Egypt’s Coptic Christians
We have tried to raise awareness of the persecution and violence Coptic Christians face in Egypt and around the world at the Acton Institute and in the pages of Religion & Liberty. On New Year’s Day, a suicide-bomber killed 21 Coptic Christians as they left al-Qiddisin Church in the port city of Alexandria, Egypt. On the heels of the attack, news reports have surfaced that al-Qaeda lists Coptic Churches in the Netherlands as targets for their terror. CNN also reports...
Accra: Confession or Conversation?
It is sometimes remarked in response to my treatment of the Accra Confession of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC) and now World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC) in my book Ecumenical Babel that the Accra document is not really a confession at all. It says itself, after all, that it is a confession, but “not meaning a classical doctrinal confession, because the World Alliance of Reformed Churches cannot make such a confession, but to show the necessity and...
Churches and Relief in Haiti
Mark Hanlon of Compassion International writes about his experience related to the place of local churches in relief work. Contrary to the belief of some that relief and development groups “couldn’t rely on churches to do the work they needed to do in the third world. They claimed that the needed expertise and skill sets simply weren’t there,” Hanlon writes, In my three decades of experience in developing nations with Compassion International, I have witnessed the opposite. In the midst...
Government Efficiency and Churchly Charity
The Acton Commentary this week from my friend John pares church budgets to government budgets, and what “government thinking” might look like if it were reflected in charitable and ecclesiastical budgeting. He writes, “If we think the government is the best source passion for the needy and the engine of economic growth, then it makes sense to set taxes at high rates so the government can do all good things for the people.” On that point, over at Evangelical Perspective...
Obamacare and the Threat to Human Dignity
From the Jan. 5 Acton News & Commentary. This is an edited excerpt of “Health-Care Counter-Reform,” a longer piece Dr. Condit wrote for the November 2010 issue of the Linacre Quarterly, published by the Catholic Medical Association. For more on this important issue, see the Acton special report on Christians and Health Care. Dr. Condit is also the author of the 2009 Acton monograph, A Prescription for Health Care Reform, available in the Book Shoppe. Obamacare and the Threat to...
A Tithe for Uncle Sam
Catching up on some recent mentaries. We e a new writer, John Addison Teevan, who is director of the Prison Extension Program at Grace College. He also teaches economics and Bible courses at the Winona Lake, Ind., school. This column was published Dec. 29. Sign up for the free, weekly email newsletter Acton News & Commentary here. A Tithe for Uncle Sam By John Addision Teevan Political leaders talk as if the money Americans keep (not paid in taxes) belongs...
The ‘Big Reach’ of Food Banks
I took some issue with a quote from an otherwise fine piece about food banks in the December issue of Christianity Today. So let me follow-up with a mendation without reservation for this profile of the work of the Big Reach Center of Hope in the current issue of CT by Nicole Russell, “A God-Sized Food Bank.” Big Reach is “a food pantry and distribution center situated in a town so small it’s an unincorporated dot on the Ohio map....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved