“We are concerned that the economic recovery we face will still have so many people living in poverty." - Julia Unwin, Joseph Rowntree Foundation chief executive.
Young adults and people in work
are now more likely to be in poverty in Britain following a huge increase in
insecure employment such as zero hours contracts, an influential study warns
today. The study, conducted on behalf of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation by the
New Policy Institute, found that while employment was close to a historic high,
millions of Britons were struggling to cope with a reality of insecure work and
incomes which have fallen on average by 9 per cent in the five years to 2013.
The JRF says as many people in
working families as in unemployed ones now live in poverty, after a decade of
labour market upheaval which means a job is no longer a guarantee of an end to
poverty. Half of all people in poverty now live in a family with someone in
paid work, with some 40 per cent of adults in employment now also in poverty. Its
annual report says the rise of part-time work and low-paid self-employment has
been accompanied by a sharp increase in the number of under-25s living below
the breadline as they struggle to cope with falling incomes, poor prospects and
high costs from housing to food.
A lack of affordable housing also
means those living in poverty are now as likely to be in private, usually
rented, accommodation – at higher risk of eviction and homelessness – as in
local authority or social housing. Some 13 million people in the UK are
classified as living in relative poverty – meaning their household income is
below 60 per cent of the average. The reliance of many on private rented
accommodation with insecure tenancies means that the number of landlord
repossessions – 17,000 – is now higher than mortgage repossessions – 15,000.
The prevalence of zero hours
contracts – of which there are now some 1.4 million – and part-time work has
contributed to a situation where two-thirds of people who moved from
unemployment into work in the past year are being paid less than the living
wage – the amount needed to cover basic costs of living. Many are also
effectively trapped in low-paid work, with only 20 per cent of employees having
left that income bracket after a decade in employment. The average
self-employed person now earns 13 per cent less than they did five years ago. The
report found that without tackling core problems such as low pay and the high
price of essentials, in particular housing, poverty would not diminish. The
failure of wages to keep pace with costs means the number of working people
claiming housing benefit is rising while average hourly pay has fallen in five
years from £13.90 to £12.90 for men and from £10.80 to £10.30 for women.
The study also found that
claimants of jobseeker’s allowance are now more likely to be punished for not
attending the Government’s welfare-to-work programme than to find employment
through it.
Alison Garnham, the chief
executive of the Child Poverty Action Group, said: “This comprehensive analysis
paints a bleak picture. Families have long been told by politicians that work
is the answer but are finding that it isn’t. As long as the only work they get
is insecure and low paid, they will continue to face hardship and financial
misery.”
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