The death of the meritocratic promise For decades, the British social contract relied on a simple equation: hard work plus talent equals financial security. Between the 1950s and the early 2000s, a median salary could reliably secure a home, annual holidays, and a comfortable retirement. Today, that connection has severed. While effort remains a necessary input, it is no longer the primary determinant of wealth. Data now reveals that structural advantages—specifically education and inherited assets—do more heavy lifting than personal grit. The private school multiplier Educational background creates a profound statistical divergence before a career even begins. Sutton Trust research highlights that while only 7% of British children attend private schools, they occupy over 60% of senior judicial roles and 50% of top media positions. This isn't an IQ disparity; private education buys smaller class sizes, elite networks, and a specific institutional confidence. A state-school student can work 80-hour weeks for thirty years and still remain five times less likely to reach the top tier than their privately educated peers. The £5.5 trillion inheritance engine Even more significant than schooling is the impending intergenerational wealth transfer. Kingscourt Trust estimates £5.5 trillion will pass between generations by 2047. Dr. Eliza Filby, author of Inheritocracy, argues that for those under 45, the "Bank of Mum and Dad" is now the definitive factor for social mobility. With the average first-time buyer deposit sitting at £61,000, saving from wages alone has become mathematically impossible for many on a median salary while facing high rents. Ownership as the ultimate driver Britain has pivoted from a labor-based economy to an ownership-based one. There are two ways to acquire money: trading time for a paycheck or owning assets that compound. The tax system reinforces this, with Capital Gains Tax peaking at 24% while income tax reaches 45%. Whether it is property, business equity, or scalable intellectual property, ownership is the engine that generates wealth while you sleep. Without transitioning from labor to ownership, the gap between the "grafter" and the "owner" will only continue to widen.
Inheritocracy
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