Australia is edging towards British and American levels of inequality, with the COVID-19 crisis widening the gap based on wealth and where people live.
“Extended periods of time stuck at home has made people in lower-socio economic areas feel they had less access to parkland and open space,” he said.after the state government imposed a harsher lockdown across western Sydney during the COVID-19 crisis – an opinion shared with David Borger, executive director of Business Western Sydney.
“The other great divide is the length of commute,” he said. “A life spent on the motorways can be very frustrating.”Dr McMillan said the spread of COVID-19 in south-western Sydney showed how much harder it impacted people on lower wages and in service-based industries where they couldn’t work from home.
“Since the start of the pandemic, we’ve seen property prices soar to the point that future generations will only be able to enter the property market based on the assets held by their parents,” he said. Professor Randolph said the housing market was widening wealth and income differences and “this has simply got out of control”.
_andrew We are sick of these 'surveys'... conducted by who... how much did they scam from the govt?
_andrew & what’s the solution
_andrew Just keep voting the RWNJ LNP then, it'll get worse.
_andrew Sure is , see it first hand u see it on struggle st where political class rarely go
_andrew The new variant is extremely infectious. Use BostApp instead to safely communicate at social distance. Download for free at Apple & Google