Sort of. But Vancouver's white working class were relatively minted from day 1 compared with working class Brits. One of my best pals from my time there, who I still speak with several times a week, is originally from one of the interior parts of greater Vancouver lower mainland (Port Coquitlam or Maple Ridge) and managed to get to uni (first from his family) and now earns a fortune in California. The choices were very much easier for him even though his background is very working class in BC terms. My own experience there was one of being treated like an equal by everyone, rich or poor, the professors and the cleaners. Very different from the UK of the time, and much fewer 'barriers'.
Anyway, it seems that the white working class are not queueing up to emote about their disadvantage, spurred on by this BBC story. I have had another look at it. The source is The Education Select Committee chaired by Robert Halfon, tory MP for Harlow. Some on Twitter have picked up on quotes from the committee about 5 generations of unemployed white people.....and question how common it is for a family to have been unemployed since the end of world war one.....It will be interesting to see whether it gets ignored or dismissed by HMG and the wider population. My suspicion is it will all be forgotten by tomorrow. Perhaps for the best.
Interesting, as an engineer, my early managers and indeed directors were all ex apprentices and worked their way up, I never saw a ceiling . . . .this was an old school engineering Co, sadly long gone, and over 30 years ago in Brighton of all places.
Mrs Zef still hits glass ceilings now, because she's qualified down under, not here, and she's a girl! Her last job she earned half her male equivalents.