For all the talk of recovery this week, the unpalatable truth remains that most people are still getting poorer. In the last quarter, average weekly earnings rose by just 0.9 per cent, less than half the rate of inflation (2 per cent). As long as the wage squeeze continues, the Tories will struggle to rebut Ed Miliband’s warnings of a “cost of living crisis” – and it could cost them the election. While the Conservatives have established a comfortable lead on who would best manage the economy, they continue to trail Labour on who would do most to improve family incomes (the same trend seen during Obama vs. Romney).
Aware of this, the Tories have resorted to statistical chicanery that would make even Iain Duncan Smith blush. In an article in today’s Times, George Osborne’s protégée Matthew Hancock, the skills minister, claims that the “crisis” spoken of by Miliband is a mirage. He writes: “The story is said to go like this: yes, there are a record number of jobs but the rich are getting richer and incomes are falling for everyone else. Right? In fact, wrong.”