Weststander
Well-known member
I will repeat again - the working class encompasses anyone who works by hand or by brain for a wage - this by its nature, in a 21st century society, creates a situation where the working class comprise the vast majority of the population - go back 50 years and the proportions were different - go back 100 years and the working class comprised half the population and the middle-class almost 40% - go back 200 years and the working class was in a minority, and a major section of the population were peasantry. Globalisation over the past 50 years has had the impact of decimating the middle-class and dramatically increasing the percentage of the population in the working class.
You can disagree with this - but the facts speak for themselves - the current stats in the UK -
28.5million employees (86.65% of the workforce)
4.39million self-employed (13.35%)
Not all of the 'employees' are working class (but the percentage that aren't is quite small) - and many of these 'self-employed' are bogus self-employed because employers want to avoid their social insurance responsibilities, etc (many delivery drivers, construction workers etc.)
In the UK there’s a vast change going on, hastened by the lockdowns and furlough. Millions of young people by choice are either setting up to work on their own, or plan to, or at the very least are determined not to spend 45 years in a master and servant relationship. I see this all the time. They do not want to follow what their parents did of a 9 to 5 at the desk, lathe or production line.
If that comes off, it’s a big positive.
It’ll swell further still the numbers you quote.
There’s also a very long tradition in the UK of millions of building industry tradesmen, engineers who 100% want to be self employed. They do not want to be employed by house builders, plumbing companies, etc for many personal reasons.
The ‘gig economy’ etc is a modern thing, a separate part of the workforce. To add, many of them like it that way eg freedom on holidays, they work when they want to.