Cuts and changes to Britain’s increasingly threadbare social
security system are the most common triggers of the acute personal financial
crises that drive people to use food banks, according to research. The study
finds that in most cases people used food banks because they were tipped into
financial crisis by events that were outside their control and difficult or
impossible to reverse, such as benefit cuts and delays, bereavement or job
loss. Most people said they used food banks as a desperate and shaming last
resort.
At least half of all food bank users are referred because
they are waiting for benefits to be paid, because they have had benefits
stopped for alleged breaches of jobcentre rules or because they have been hit
by the bedroom tax or the removal of working tax credits, it finds. The study,
commissioned by the Church Of England, the Trussell Trust food bank network,
Oxfam and Child Poverty Action Group, calls for urgent changes to the
“complicated, remote and at times intimidating” social security system to make
it more responsive to the millions who rely on it. It warns the government
against reliance on charity food to fix holes in the welfare state.
The Trussell Trust, which runs more than 400 food banks in
the UK, found that 913,138 people were given food parcels by its volunteers in
2013-14, almost a threefold increase on the previous year, and likely to be a
fraction of the total numbers of people experiencing food insecurity. The
report says the current sanctions policy is “causing hardship and hunger”. Almost
a third of food bank users interviewed for the study who had experienced
problems with the benefits system said they had been “sanctioned” by social
security officials and left penniless for weeks on end, while a further third
were left unable to put food on the table because of lengthy delays in benefit
payments.
Many people who used food banks lived in, or were close to,
poverty and were attempting to cope with the “ongoing daily grind of living
without sufficient income to make ends meet each month”. Many worked, but in
jobs that were low paid and insecure. Often they were also coping with mental
and physical ill health and bereavement.
Alison Garnham, the chief executive of Child Poverty Action
Group, said: “Food banks have boomed not because they‘re an easy option but
because people haven’t got money to eat – often because of problems with claiming
and the payment of benefits. “A delay in a benefits decision or a period
pending a review can force hunger and humiliation on families, leaving them no
option but the food bank. Rather than protecting these families from poverty at
the time when they most need help, the system leaves them with almost nothing
to live on.”
David McAuley, the chief executive of the Trussell Trust
said: “This new evidence brings into sharp focus the uncomfortable reality of
what happens when a ‘life shock’ or benefit problem hits those on low incomes:
parents go hungry, stress and anxiety increase and the issue can all too
quickly escalate into crippling debt, housing problems and illness.” Junior DWP
minister Steve Webb had been due to attend the launch, but pulled out on
Tuesday night for unspecified reasons. McAuley said: “They do not want to hear
the story”.
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