A charity has revealed that 40 percent of British families are “too poor to play a part in society,” amid government benefit cuts and rising living costs.
On Monday,
the Joseph Rowntree Foundation released a report showing that some 8.1 million
parents and children are living on earnings that cannot adequately cover
minimum household budgets, up from 5.9 million in 2008-2009.
The
findings also showed that the situation for single-parent households were even
worse with 71 percent of lone parents, or 2.3 million individuals, living below
a socially acceptable standard of living.
Katie
Schmuecker, the charity’s policy and research manager, blamed the Tory-led
coalition government’s cuts to benefits, stagnant wages and increased living
costs for the worsening situation.
“Stagnant
wages, cuts to in and out-of-work benefits and sharp rises in the cost of
essential items over several years have taken their toll upon the ability of
families with children to secure a decent living standard,” said Schmuecker.
The
charity called on Prime Minister David Cameron’s government as well as
employers to tackle the problem as “this trend is likely to have serious
consequences for the next generation.”
Donald
Hirsch, a co-author of the report, said it would take years of increased
earnings and government measures to significantly reduce the number of families
living below standards.
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