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16 What’s it to do with the price of fish?

GCSE Geography Review (2009) vol 19 no 3 pp 6–8
  • Daniel Dorling
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Fair play
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Abstract

“What’s it to do with the price of fish?” is another way of saying “why is it relevant?” Price – how much money something is sold for – in this saying is used as another word for “important”. This might seem strange; why would the price of fish be used in place (as a metaphor) for whether something matters? Especially given that prices vary so much over time, and between places. Prices vary because they are based on a combination of costs of making, growing or catching (production), availability, need, and how much people are willing to pay (demand). Each of these things varies. Now consider the price of fish or of food more generally. Food is a basic human need. However, most of us in Britain do not produce our own food. We live in a money-based economy where people are paid in tokens (coins and notes, or electronically into their bank account), which can then be exchanged for other goods or services of their choice. If the price of food increases then we can buy less of it. If the price increases too much it is possible that we could starve because we couldn’t access enough food. This is happening now in some parts of the world. This is why the prices of fish, and other food stuffs, matter very much.

Prices are important parts of the trade relationships that exist around the world. Much of our food comes from thousands of kilometres away. Our daily intake can easily include apples from New Zealand, rice from the United States, chocolate from the Côte d’Ivoire and coffee from Ethiopia.

Abstract

“What’s it to do with the price of fish?” is another way of saying “why is it relevant?” Price – how much money something is sold for – in this saying is used as another word for “important”. This might seem strange; why would the price of fish be used in place (as a metaphor) for whether something matters? Especially given that prices vary so much over time, and between places. Prices vary because they are based on a combination of costs of making, growing or catching (production), availability, need, and how much people are willing to pay (demand). Each of these things varies. Now consider the price of fish or of food more generally. Food is a basic human need. However, most of us in Britain do not produce our own food. We live in a money-based economy where people are paid in tokens (coins and notes, or electronically into their bank account), which can then be exchanged for other goods or services of their choice. If the price of food increases then we can buy less of it. If the price increases too much it is possible that we could starve because we couldn’t access enough food. This is happening now in some parts of the world. This is why the prices of fish, and other food stuffs, matter very much.

Prices are important parts of the trade relationships that exist around the world. Much of our food comes from thousands of kilometres away. Our daily intake can easily include apples from New Zealand, rice from the United States, chocolate from the Côte d’Ivoire and coffee from Ethiopia.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Sources of extracts vii
  4. Foreword xi
  5. Acknowledgements xiv
  6. Introduction 1
  7. Inequality and poverty
  8. Prime suspect: murder in Britain 13
  9. The dream that turned pear-shaped 31
  10. The soul searching within New Labour 41
  11. Unequal Britain 49
  12. Axing the child poverty measure is wrong 57
  13. Injustice and ideology
  14. Brutal budget to entrench inequality 63
  15. New Labour and inequality: Thatcherism continued? 65
  16. All in the mind? Why social inequalities persist 83
  17. Glass conflict: David Cameron’s claim to understand poverty 93
  18. Clearing the poor away 97
  19. Race and identity
  20. Ghettos in the sky 103
  21. Worlds apart: how inequality breeds fear and prejudice in Britain 111
  22. How much evidence do you need? Ethnicity, harm and crime 115
  23. UK medical school admissions by ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and sex 121
  24. Race and the repercussions of recession 125
  25. Education and hierarchy
  26. What’s it to do with the price of fish? 133
  27. Little progress towards a fairer education system 139
  28. One of Labour’s great successes 147
  29. Do three points make a trend? 149
  30. Educational mobility, England and Germany 155
  31. Cash and the not so classless society 159
  32. Britain must close the great pay divide 165
  33. Raising equality in access to higher education 170
  34. Elitism and geneticism
  35. The Darwins and the Cecils are only empty vessels 189
  36. The Fabian essay: the myth of inherited inequality 193
  37. The return to elitism in education 199
  38. The super-rich are still soaring away 209
  39. Mobility and employment
  40. The trouble with moving upmarket 217
  41. Britain – split and divided by inequality 221
  42. London and the English desert: the grain of truth in a stereotype 225
  43. Are the times changing back? 237
  44. Unemployment and health 243
  45. Bricks and mortar
  46. Mortality amongst street sleeping youth in the UK 249
  47. Daylight robbery: there’s no shortage of housing 251
  48. The influence of selective migration patterns 255
  49. The geography of poverty, inequality and wealth in the UK and abroad 263
  50. All connected? Geographies of race, death, wealth, votes and births 291
  51. Well-being and misery
  52. Against the organization of misery? The Marmot Review of Health Inequalities 299
  53. Inequality kills 307
  54. The geography of social inequality and health 311
  55. The cartographer’s mad project 327
  56. The fading of the dream: widening inequalities in life expectancy in America 333
  57. The importance of circumstance 339
  58. Advocacy and action
  59. Mean machine: how structural inequality makes social inequality seem natural 347
  60. Policing the borders of crime: who decides research? 351
  61. Learning the hard way 357
  62. When the social divide deepens 363
  63. Ending the scandal of complacency 365
  64. Our grandchildren will wonder why we were addicted to social inequality 369
  65. Mind the gap: New Labour’s legacy on child poverty 373
  66. Remapping the world’s population: visualizing data using cartograms 379
  67. If I were king 385
  68. Bibliography 387
  69. Index 389
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