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Wednesday, May 25, 2022

It is the poor that pays

 Britain’s poorest households are expected to see their living costs increase by almost twice the rate as the richest in society do when energy bills rise this autumn, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said.

The fresh surge in gas and electricity bills expected in October could lead to average annual inflation rates of as high as 14% for the poorest tenth of households.

The increase in the energy price cap to close to £2,800 is likely to hit poorer families disproportionately because a larger share of their total spending goes on energy. The IFS said the poorest tenth of households typically spend almost three times as much of their budgets on gas and electricity compared with the richest 10th.

“As poorer households spend more of their budgets on gas and electricity, this increase is likely to hit poorer households harder,” said Heidi Karjalainen, a research economist at the IFS.

In stark contrast to a 14% personal inflation rate for the poorest, the richest tenth could see rates of about 8%, the thinktank said. 

Across all households inflation is likely to reach 10% amid the surge in energy bills, the highest rate since 1982.

The Resolution Foundation said one-off payments targeted at poorer households worth up to £15bn were needed to stop rising energy bills putting millions of families into destitution this winter.

While all households are expected to feel the squeeze from rising living costs this year, the thinktank warned that poorer families were being hit hardest as they spend a greater share of their budgets on energy bills and food – the biggest drivers of the inflation shock sweeping Britain. It said the scale of the crisis meant the number of households in severe fuel stress – whereby families find themselves spending £1 of every £5 of their budget on energy bills – could surge from 325,000 households in England last winter to 1.9 million this year.

Inflation rate for UK’s poorest forecast to hit 14% after price cap rise | Cost of living crisis | The Guardian



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