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New survey shows widespread deprivation in Britain
By Harvey Thompson
27 September 2000
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A national survey carried out by the Office of National Statistics
(ONS) has revealed important information on the extent of social
deprivation in Britain. The study, produced by researchers at
four universities (Bristol, Loughborough, York and Heriot-Watt)
and supported by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, claims to be
the most comprehensive and rigorous of its type ever conducted.
Interviews with a sample of individuals taken from the General
Household Survey (GHS) for 1998-99 were used to draw up a list
of items and activities that a majority considered "necessities".
These were defined as those things that everyone should be able
to afford and which they should not have to go without.
A follow-up survey was then conducted, weighted towards those
with lower incomes, to find out how many actually lacked these
necessities and to accumulate additional information on poverty.
Over 90 percent of the people questioned defined necessities
as a bed, heating, a damp-free home, the ability to visit family
and friends in hospital, two meals a day and medical prescriptions.
Less than 10 percent considered dishwashers, mobile phones, and
Internet access or satellite television to be necessities. The
method used by the researchers enabled them to compare their findings
with results from two earlier "Breadline Britain" surveys.
The study produced some damning statistics:
* Some four million do not eat adequately by today's standards,
i.e. they cannot afford to eat fresh fruit and vegetables, or
two meals a day.
* Around 9.5 million people cannot afford to keep their homes
adequately heated, free from damp or in a decent state of decoration.
* Some eight million people cannot afford one or more essential
household item such as a refrigerator or carpets for the living
area of their homes.
* Approximately 10 million adults cannot afford regular savings
of £10 a month.
* Almost 6.5 million adults go without essential clothing due
to lack of money.
* Nearly 7.5 million people are too poor to engage in social
activities considered necessary, such as visiting friends and
family, attending weddings and funerals or having celebrations
on special occasions.
The impact of such deprivation on children was also laid bare
by the study. It found that more than two million children go
without two or more necessities and around four million (or 34
percent) lack at least one essential item, including such things
as adequate clothing, a healthy diet, items to help their educational
development, an annual week's holiday away from home or social
activities.
As many as one in 50 children go without new, properly-fitting
shoes, a warm waterproof coat and daily fresh fruit and vegetables.
Child poverty was highest in homes where no adult had any work
at all or worked part-time; lone parent households; large families;
households where someone was chronically sick or disabled and
in families with ethnic-minority backgrounds.
Commenting on the findings, Jonathan Bradshaw of the University
of York, co-author of the study, said: Britain now stands
at a cross-roads in terms of adopting effective measures to stop
and reverse the damaging structural trends that have increased
poverty and social exclusion in the past 20 years. High rates
of social deprivation have the effects of worsening health, education
and job skills, as well as relationships in families, between
ethnic groups and across society as a whole. If Britain is to
become an inclusive society in which everybody has a stake and
is able to participate then the most important task facing government
is the ending of poverty and social exclusion.
And Sue Middleton, part of the team at Loughborough University
that analysed the data on children, said: This evidence
is vitally important at a time when government is seeking to abolish
child poverty within a generation. Some British children are going
without items which are widely accepted as being vital to the
health and development of children.
The sympathetic and expectant tone the researchers adopt towards
the Blair government's pledge to end child poverty within 20 years,
are belied by their own findings. Poverty has risen under the
Labour government. In 1990, 21 percent of households officially
lived in poverty, i.e. they could not afford three or more necessities.
In 1999, two years after the election of Prime Minister Blair,
poverty has increased to over 24 percent of all households.
Yet even after noting this increase, the researchers comment,
This dramatic rise in poverty occurred while the majority
of the British population became richer. Poverty appears to have
become more widespread but not to have deepened over the 1990s.
Their claim that much of the British population is becoming
richer is not consistent with other recent studies. A report by
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development at
the beginning of this year estimated that the majority of the
British population have experienced poverty at some time over
a six-year period. Before benefit payments are taken into account,
55 percent of the population of the UK fell below the poverty
line at least once during that period, and even after considering
benefit payments the figure is still nearly 40 percent.
The researchers point out that deprivation is more widespread
but less deep, indicating that a greater portion of
the population now find themselves on the margins of poverty.
Large numbers now live a precarious economic existence, in which
even basic needs are increasingly harder to come by.
See Also:
New data reveals rising poverty
under Britain's Labour government
[27 July 2000]
OECD study highlights widespread
and persistent poverty in Europe and America
[4 February 2000]
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