Millions of "just about managing" families are no better off today than those in 2003, the Resolution Foundation indicates. Income stagnation for so many reveals that the economy has been failing to generate income for people over many years despite record levels of people in work.
In 2003, households on the lower half of incomes typically earned £14,900. In 2016/17 that figure had fallen to £14,800, the research shows.
There are over eight million low and middle-income households, just under half of which have children.
And it is not just poorer households which have been facing a pay squeeze.
On average, incomes for all households in 2017/18 increased by just 0.9%, the lowest rise for four years and less than half the average between 1994 and 2007, just before the financial crisis.
For the poorest third of households, incomes actually fell by up to £150 in the last year.
Over 40% of low to middle-income families feel they would be unable to save £10 a month and over 35% would be unable to afford a holiday for one week with their children.
"We appear to have a picture of generalised stagnation for many, with lower income households actually going backwards," the Resolution Foundation's Living Standards Audit says. "The apparent falling away of the bottom from the middle in 2017/18 represents a disturbing new development. This pattern has clear implications for poverty - captured by the number of people living in households with incomes below 60% of the median. There are good odds that 2017/18 delivered a notable increase in poverty. Relative child poverty may have risen to its highest rate in at least 15 years, despite high levels of employment."
Benefit cuts since 2010 also affect lower-income households far more than those on higher incomes.
Although employment rates are high, which is good for those in work, many of the jobs are lower paid. That's because people who are moving from unemployment into employment, such as single parents, tend to take jobs towards the lower end of income levels. Once in jobs there is also a lack of "progression" into higher paid jobs. Rather than investing in new innovations - such as computer technology or robots which could increase the amount people produce - firms have been holding onto cash.
The Resolution Foundation report reveals that, over the next decade, it is likely that "just about managing" families are likely to remain just that.
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