There are 4 million people at risk of going hungry in the UK and there are 272 food banks across big cities and towns. 500,000 children live in families that can't afford to feed them. 3.5 million adults cannot afford to eat properly. (Source: All-Party Parliamentary Inquiry into Hunger in the UK, Poverty and Social Exclusion project - BBC 08 Dec. 2014)
An income squeeze, benefit delays and excessive utility bills are blamed by a cross-party group of MPs for a huge rise in the use of food banks. The inquiry, by Conservative and Labour MPs and Church leaders, says many families are one unexpected bill away from financial crisis.
They
urge quicker benefit payments, the extension of free school meals and a living
wage to reduce hunger. Downing Street said it would consider the report
"seriously". But one Conservative peer who served on the inquiry team
had to apologise after suggesting hunger in Britain was caused in part by
people being unable to cook. Baroness Jenkin of Kennington later acknowledged
her words had been badly chosen.
At the same time, according to Age Concern UK, Each
winter, 1 older person dies needlessly every 7 minutes from the cold - that’s
200 deaths a day that could be prevented. As we get older, our bodies
respond differently to the cold – increasing the likelihood of a heart attack,
stroke, pneumonia, and breathing difficulties. Of the winter deaths that happen
every year, 9 in 10 are older people.
Age
UK estimates that 1.7 million older people in the UK can’t afford to heat their
homes, and over a third (36%) of older people in the UK say they live mainly in
one room to save money. Cold weather adds to the financial worries of
older people. 30% say they avoid heating rooms like the bedroom, bathroom or
living room because they are worried about the cost. (www.ageuk.org/get-involved).
This is all thought provoking given that the UK appears to have overtaken France in 2014 to become the world’s 5th largest economy. See Centre for Economics and Business Research: http://www.cebr.com/reports/world-economic-league-table-2015/. Britain jumped France all with the help of its multi-billion pound sex and illegal drug industries. According to official figures released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) earlier this year, the sex trade added around £5.7 billion to the UK’s economy in 2013 while illegal drugs added £6.62 billion.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/11313327/Britain-edges-past-France-on-world-stage.html
France refuses to
comply with recent European Union regulations which add prostitution and
illegal drugs to new pan-European accounting standards, because it does not
deem them "voluntary commercial activities”. A director of, France's
statistics office, INSEE, referred to using drugs as a "dependency"
that does not include "free will". Eric Dubois said prostitution
resulted from "Mafia networks and trafficking illegal immigrants".
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