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David Cameron may be a One Nation Tory, but what does his new index mean if people can’t even get on the property ladder? (Let alone the rest) When I was small, we used to have at home a mug
which bore the words of an Irish blessing (or an Irish curse, as my mother used to call it). It went as follows: > Health and long life to you, > > A child every year to you, >
> Land without rent to you, > > And may you die in Ireland. In a country with a strong sense of history, where between 1603 and 1750 the percentage of land owned by Catholics
went down from 90 per cent to around 7 per cent, there is resonance, or at least the pullstrings of memory, about that third line, “land without rent to you”. If an Englishman’s home was his
castle, an Irishman’s was his homestead, the possession of his own turf some safeguard of the means to raise produce for his family – for as the Potato Famine showed, the British government
could not be relied upon to provide for its subjects in John Bull’s other island (food was exported from Ireland even as the populace starved). Land without rent is, however, a dream for
the young in Britain today. And even a cramped flat in an undesirable suburb is going to be out of the question for years to come, according to a new survey by the Joseph Rowntree Trust.
Mortgages are unlikely to be easy to come by for first-time buyers — ie without a hefty deposit of 25 per cent or so — it reports, until 2020. It is not as though soaring property prices had
not made it difficult enough already. In the early part of this decade, while working at the _Independent_, I remember colleagues only a few years younger than me looking despairingly at
estate agents’ websites, wondering if they would ever be able to afford anything within commuting distance of Docklands. (This, as well as the fact that pay, to an extent, and certainly
freelance rates, in print journalism have dropped dramatically in real terms over the last 20 years, has had the perverse and unwelcome effect of making it increasingly a profession which
only those who enjoy considerable parental support can enter.) Prices may now be coming down, but the banks that got us into this mess in the first place are now penalising the rest of us
for their foolishness, in all sorts of ways, including an unwillingness to lend to those who are thus forced to turn to rental – spending more money than they might on a mortgage but with no
long-term investment in bricks and mortar in return. (For a superb analysis of how Ireland is being punished for the banks’ mistakes, incidentally, I recommend Paul Krugman’s “Eating the
Irish” in the _International Herald Tribune_.) On top of this, new graduates are even less likely to be able to raise the requisite deposit once they are saddled with further debts from
tripled tuition fees. This is just one of several contexts in which David Cameron’s plan that we should think of our well-being in terms of a “happiness index” instead of GDP is particularly
jarring. It may well be that there is something in the idea – President Sarkozy persuaded the Nobel Prize winners Amartya Sen and Joseph Stiglitz to head his commission to examine it, while
the term Gross National Happiness was coined by Bhutan’s king in 1972. Most would accept that the quality of our lives is not determined simply by how much money we have, although the
efforts of the Labour government’s “Happiness Czar”, Richard Layard, appear to have been swiftly forgotten. It’s more that there is a shade of the well-meaning but not-quite-in-touch
patrician about this, as though Cameron were a country squire meeting a tenant farmer whose crop had failed and saying brightly, “Chin up! Better luck next year!”. The squire’s sentiments
may be genuine, but utterly fail to grasp the nature of the devastation visited upon the farmer. Others may be far harder on the coalition. But I don’t think that Cameron is a bad man, or
that he is at all like the hard-faced Thatcherites who did appear to revel in the “creative destruction” of the old industries that threw millions out of work in the 1980s. Nor is that my
opinion of the many members of his team whom I’d met long before they even went into politics. I see them sitting together, brows furrowed, saying, and meaning quite truthfully: “Something
must be done”. But here I now believe, having welcomed the formation of the coalition initially, https://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/the-staggers/2010/05/labour-party-coal… that the wealth of
those taking decisions is a grave problem. According to the _Daily Mail_ in May, 23 out of the 29 ministers then entitled to attend cabinet were millionaires. They may very well know people
who are facing harsher realities, like Howard Flight, who in the interview that got him into such trouble also said: “Two of my nieces and nephews, both of them very bright, gave up
university halfway through because they didn’t want the financial burden.” But that’s not the same as having the remotest chance of facing those realities themselves in the future. We really
aren’t all in this together. As I thought about this, a very minor personal example came to mind. Some years ago, probably around 1995, I attended a party in a South Kensington flat shared
by some City trainees and, if memory serves, George Osborne. (At the least, the party was certainly thrown by mutual friends and I’m sure I remember him being there.) Come 3 or 4am, it was
time to go home. I lived way up the Harrow road in north London, and a mini-cab would have cost me not far short of a tenner. This was exactly what I had. The only trouble was that, not
being a City trainee myself, it had to last me for the next four days. So I walked home instead – no great trial for a healthy man in his early 20s, although it did take me about three hours
which is probably why I remember it still. This is no ill reflection on the man who is now the Chancellor. He may, for all I know, be inordinately fond of a stroll, whether nocturnal or
diurnal. It may well be that, had I asked him, he would have cheerfully said, “I’ll tell you what – I’ll join you, I could do with stretching my legs.” My point is that I find it hard to
imagine George ever looking such a dilemma in the eye, as it were: taxi home – even if means having to make do on a pound or so for a few days? And if such a small inconvenience is beyond
the experience of a large percentage of the cabinet, how can they really understand what it is like for prospective students today, for whom the choice of going to university entails debts
unthinkable when George, Danny Alexander and I attended Oxford? (There were still student grants then, for Heaven’s sake.) How can they empathise with those with no idea when they will ever
be able to call any square footage – never mind the grand terraced houses of the Notting Hill Tories – their own? Above all, how can they possible claim to have an inkling of what it is
going to be like for the thousands, perhaps millions, who are going to lose their jobs, only to come up against a reduced welfare system that it appears will regard them as workshy? David
Cameron may be a One Nation Tory, but that honourable strand of Conservatism rests on the assumption that the less fortunate feel some connection to those who would “feel their pain”. Our PM
once made a point of wearing a lounge suit to a wedding when all the other men wore Morning Dress. If his policies cause too many people, however, to picture him in their mind’s eye in the
tailcoat he spurned – still less in the full fig of the Bullingdon Club – he will find no One Nation to unify, and certainly no Big Society. He and his millionaire colleagues need to show
that they realise there will be something gross and national about the consequences of these cuts. To say that happiness will be any part of the equation, however, is delusional at best.