New analysis from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) has found that millions of people are already in poverty, and millions more are ‘teetering on the edge.’
The research found that 3.2 million people in the UK are only £40 a week from poverty, equivalent to the entire population of Wales. This includes 700,000 children, 1.5 million working-age adults and 1 million pensioners. 900,000 of these are only £10 a week away (including 0.2 million children, 0.4 million working-age adults and 0.3 million pensioners). This is on top of the 14.2 million people already in poverty in the UK, of which 4.2 million are children.
1.1 million people already in poverty are only £20 a week away from very deep poverty. Around 500,000 are only £10 a week away.
Whilst 9.7 million people already live in deep poverty in the UK. Within this, 6 million people already live in very deep poverty.
JRF says that it has now been almost 20 years since the last prolonged period of falling poverty. In May 2024, 7 million households reported that they had gone without essentials like showers, toiletries or adequate clothing in the last six months, or had gone hungry or cut or skipped meals in the last 30 days.
Large numbers of people are also close to deep or very deep poverty lines, meaning they are living on incomes less than 50% or 40% of the UK average.
Paul Kissack, CEO of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said “Such high levels of hardship, with millions experiencing poverty and millions more teetering on the edge of it, are a stain on the moral conscience of our nation.
“It has been six prime ministers since this country last made sustained progress on reducing poverty. During that time we’ve seen a sustained rise in the number of people in deep poverty, with hardship and destitution growing even faster. Whoever is Prime Minister after July 4th must make reversing this dismal trend a priority.
“Our political leaders must be specific and ambitious about how they will tackle poverty. But so far there hasn’t been anything like the level of urgency from either Rishi Sunak or Keir Starmer that we need to see. Pointing to future growth as a panacea just won’t cut it.
“Tonight’s debate is a chance for both leaders to set out their plans and demonstrate they are serious about addressing hardship. Failure to act is a political and moral choice, and one they should expect to be judged on.”