Friday, December 04, 2020

A gloomy prospect for the future

 A new study by the Fabian Society found that returning benefits to their pre-pandemic levels after a year-long boost would leave an additional 1.1 million people below the poverty line even on the most optimistic assumptions for the economy.

 If the government removed the £20 a week supplement to universal credit (UC) against a backdrop of mass unemployment, the impact would be three times as severe, with 3.2 million people living in poverty.

The new Fabian report says that in the event of its mass unemployment scenario coming about, more than one in five people (22%) would be living in poverty, while the number of children living in poverty would rise by 850,000.

Almost one in three children (29%) would be living in households with an income of less than 60% of the median – a return to the peak level reached in the early 1990s.

 Andrew Harrop, general secretary of the Fabian Society, said: “If ministers reverse the temporary benefit rises that sustained millions of low income households this year the consequences will be enormous for families, reducing spending power and driving people into poverty.

“But it could get much worse. When furlough and other support measures come to an end in the spring, unemployment is expected to grow and many more families will turn to benefits. After so many redundancies on the high street this year, there is a chance of unemployment rising to levels last seen in the 1980s and 1990s. Alongside the planned benefit cuts this will push an extra 3 million people into poverty. The government must act now and put the 2020 benefit uplift on to a permanent footing.”

Rishi Sunak's cuts 'risk plunging more than 3 million into poverty' | Poverty | The Guardian

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