The findings show that:
- One in three people (34%) have had to use some form of debt to get by since March 2020, with 6.4 million (12%) people using multiple forms of debt, such as a credit cards, overdrafts and loans.
- Additionally, more than one in ten people (12%) have resorted to missing a bill or debt repayment since March. Before the pandemic only 3% of people were falling behind with credit payments.
- Half of all people furloughed since March have had to use forms of debt, compared to just 23% of people who have seen no change to their employment.
- More than one in five of us (11 million people) are now running out of money ‘always’ or ‘most of the time’ before the end of the week or month – this is an additional 4.2 million since March.
- Employees are now twice as likely to frequently run out of money as they were pre-Covid-19 and self-employed workers now 2.5 times more likely.
- More than eight million workers are also currently only able to cope financially for less than a month if they lose their main source of income.
- 40% of 18-24-year olds have frequently run out of money in the past year, compared to only 8% of people over the age of 55.
- A third of people with a disability (33%) run out of money frequently (‘Always’ or ‘Most of the time’), compared to only 18% of people without a disability.
- While over a third of people from both Asian and Black ethnic backgrounds frequently run out of money (34%, 36%), only a fifth of people from white ethnic backgrounds experience frequently running out of money (21%).
- Nearly a third of women (32%) could also only last a month or less if they lost their main source of income, compared to a quarter of men (25%).
- Only 26% of Universal Credit claimants have hardly ever or never run out of money before the end of the week or month within the last year, compared to 72% of people who aren’t claiming income related benefits.
- Maintain the £20 per week uplift to Universal Credit to stop at least 700,000 people from being plunged into poverty
- End the five-week wait for Universal Credit so people can avoid falling further into debt
- Increase funding and guidance for Local Welfare Assistance schemes – so that people don’t have to rely on foodbanks
- Increase support for children through the benefits system to reduce the high numbers of children growing up in poverty
- Increase support for people with disabilities and apply the £20 uplift to legacy benefits to reduce the high proportion of families with a disabled family member living in poverty
