| Mr Rising Price is back |
| Tuesday, 11 March 2008 | |
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The government has a good scam going on rising prices. They're trying to hold public sector pay down to 2.1%, which is the rate of inflation measured by the Consumer Prices Index. But if you measure inflation by the Retail Prices Index (another official government index) prices have gone up by more than 4% over the past year.
Shoppers
Shoppers (and that's all of us) have reason to believe both indexes are rigged. The price of staple foodstuffs - eggs, bread, frozen peas, butter and dairy products have gone up by 20-30% over the past twelve months. The website Mysupermarket.co.uk reports that food prices have gone up 12% overall. That's £750 a year extra on the bills for a family of four. It's a global trend. There have already been food riots in Mexico, West Bengal, Morocco, Senegal and Yemen.
Biofuels
As the Observer points out (20th Jan 2008) this is setting 850 million chronically poor people in the world against 800 million motorists. Guess who's got more purchasing power? "The maize to fill a tank for a 'Chelsea tractor' would feed a family of four for three months." The US government subsidises American farmers to grow maize not to feed the world's poor but to make biofuels.
Climate change
Climate change is actually part of the problem. The retreat of the Himalayan ice floe, already apparent, will cause the whole Indian subcontinent to go thirsty. That's a lot of people. Under capitalism, shortages give the rich the opportunity to charge for things that were free when they were more abundant. It looks like that's what will happen to water if we let them get away with it. According to Credit Suisse by 2025 almost two-thirds of us will be short of water, the most basic requirement of life. Under capitalism, shortages mean that prices go up. Inflation is a way of attacking working class living standards. We need to fight back. We need to get automatic cost of living increases built into our contracts of employment. The present round of price increases has hit food prices particularly hard. The poor spend more of their income on food. Inflation hits the weakest, those least able to defend themselves, hardest. Rising prices of essentials are a fact of life under capitalism. It's time to change the system. |