8.9.10

Cuts Will Deepen Inequality

The following details have been supplied by PCS HQ:

The poorest and most vulnerable in society will be hardest hit by cuts to national and local services

The government’s brutal public spending cuts are not only unjust and unnecessary, they will deepen inequality on a scale we have not seen for generations.

The poorest and most vulnerable in society will be hardest hit, while tax breaks worth more than £24 million are given to business.

It is now clear that women, and black and disabled people will suffer disproportionately from the cuts, showing the government’s pompous pronouncement of a ‘fair’ budget to be a hollow lie.

Research by the House of Commons Library for shadow work and pensions secretary Yvette Cooper suggests 72% of cuts would be borne by women, who are more likely to be hit by reductions in benefits and tax credits as they form the majority of carers.

Cuts to national, regional and local services will have a devastating effect on minority ethnic communities which already suffer the highest rates of poverty and unemployment in the UK. Attacks on disability benefits will take away the essential support required by disabled people to live independently.

Government failed to assess impact of cuts
As public sector workers, we already have the evidence of unacceptable pay gaps between both women and men, and black and white workers. Women, who account for 68% of public sector workers, and black and disabled workers, who are often in the lowest paid jobs, now face a pay freeze and job losses, leading to increased poverty in old age. Ratcheting up harsh absence management regimes will also have a disproportionate impact on disabled workers.

By law, the government should have carried out and published an equality impact assessment to consider the likely effects on people in terms of disability, gender and race, and remove any negative or adverse impact which amounts to unlawful discrimination.

Not only has this not been done, but the government is slashing the budget of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, the only body with statutory powers to take enforcement action when an EIA has not been carried out.

We are all affected by public spending cuts, both as workers and in the services we provide. In response to the government’s intention to make ordinary people pay the price for an economic crisis which we did not cause, PCS has launched the biggest campaign in the union’s history. For it to succeed, we need to use every means at our disposal – media and parliamentary lobbying, organising, our industrial strength and the law.