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Social mobility 'improving in UK' | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Labour's policies may be improving social mobility, according to a study published by the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit. | Labour's policies may be improving social mobility, according to a study published by the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit. |
It examined the link between parents' earnings and academic achievement for children born in 1970 and 1990. | It examined the link between parents' earnings and academic achievement for children born in 1970 and 1990. |
The study said the results "suggest a statistically significant decline in the importance of family background on educational attainment". | |
But the Conservatives said any improvements were "fractional" at best. | |
'Tragic decline' | |
Gordon Brown has said increasing social mobility must be a "national crusade", but the prime minister has been accused of presiding over widening class and social divides. | |
Education charity the Sutton Trust has also claimed that the government's education policy fails to give poorer children the chance to improve their quality of life. | |
The truth is that Britain today is a country where poverty is getting worse Chris Grayling, Conservatives | |
Figures published on Monday by the Strategy Unit suggest that, between 1970 and 2000, social mobility neither improved nor deteriorated. | |
However, findings provided for it by Bristol University, the London School of Economics and the Institute of Fiscal Studies seem to show that there have been encouraging signs since then. | |
They appear to indicate that a child's academic achievement - measured by the number of GCSEs they pass - is becoming less dependent on their family's wealth. | |
'Making a difference' | |
Cabinet Office minister Liam Byrne told the BBC: "Despite the changes of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, social mobility didn't get moving a lot. | |
"Now there's a sense that since 2000 we have been making a difference." | |
Mr Byrne said increased nursery places, improving exam results, more people staying on at school after the age of 16 and better on-the-job training meant poorer people's life chances were improving. | |
For the Conservatives, shadow work and pensions secretary Chris Grayling said: "What a damning indictment of 11 years of Labour government - of vast amounts of money spent on regeneration programmes, on complex new systems of support for people on low incomes, on the New Deal - that the best they can claim is a fractional improvement. | |
"If indeed that fractional improvement even exists outside the Downing Street spin machine... | |
"The truth is that Britain today is a country where poverty is getting worse." | |
Mr Grayling is due to deliver a speech on social mobility later. | |
In June, Mr Brown said a white paper on on the subject would be published by the end of the year. |