UK Told Poorest Are ‘Brutally Exposed’ to Cost of Living Crisis

Jul 3, 2022

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(Bloomberg) -- The poorest families in the UK were left “brutally exposed” to the cost of living crunch after almost two decades of income stagnation, the Resolution Foundation warned.

In a report published Monday, the think tank said too many families faced the current crisis already struggling with low incomes, scant savings and ungenerous welfare support.

Adjusted for inflation, the disposable income of a typical household grew just 0.7% annually in the 15 years before the Covid pandemic, and the poorest fifth of the population were no better off at all, the foundation estimated in its annual Living Standards Audit.

It blamed an abysmal productivity performance that has depressed pay levels and entrenched decades of inequality. A typical wage would be £9,200 ($11,000) higher today had pay continued to grow as it did before the 2008-09 financial crisis, it said.

“Britain’s poor recent record on living standards –- notably the complete collapse of income growth for poor households over the past 20 years –- must be turned around in the decade ahead,” said Adam Corlett, principal economist at the Resolution Foundation.

“To do that, we must address our failure to raise pay and productivity levels, strengthen our social safety net, reduce housing costs and build on what we’ve done well –- such as boosting employment for lower-income households.”

Key Points:

  • Since 2004-05, income growth for non-pensioners has slowed from an average of 2.3% a year. A typical wage is now no higher than before financial crisis
  • One in four families do not have enough savings to cover their costs for a whole month
  • Basic unemployment support has fallen to 13% of average pay, a record low
  • Five of the 10 most unequal years on record have occurred since 2013-14
  • People living in rented accommodation and those with children are the most vulnerable

The foundation was not universally critical, however. Employment and hours also mattered for income growth, and on that score the UK had a good record recently, it said.

For the poorest half of the working-age population, the employment rate rose by 6 percentage points between 2007-08 and 2019-20, compared with 2 points for the richest half. 

Meanwhile, the proportion of working-age households with no earnings has fallen by 6 percentage points over the past 25 years to 15%.

 

 

 

 

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