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Anti-poverty strategies for the UK October 2014 Chris Goulden, Head of Poverty Research, JRF.

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Presentation on theme: "Anti-poverty strategies for the UK October 2014 Chris Goulden, Head of Poverty Research, JRF."— Presentation transcript:

1 Anti-poverty strategies for the UK October 2014 Chris Goulden, Head of Poverty Research, JRF

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3 It’s time to rethink poverty Half of people in poverty live in working households – One in five workers is low paid Poverty prevents the economy from firing on all cylinders – Child poverty costs us £29bn each year Debate on poverty is divisive – But 62% think there is “quite a lot of poverty” Poverty exists but it’s not inevitable

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5 What is poverty? When you can’t afford to meet your basic needs – Includes taking part in society (birthday presents, school trips…) Two basic solutions 1.Increase people’s resources 2.Decrease the cost of meeting needs Needs a comprehensive approach, addressing:  Taxes and benefits  Labour markets  Cost of essential goods & services  Where we live  The choices we make

6 Almost anyone can experience poverty Poverty is dynamic – Over half of the population experienced at least one year in poverty during 1991-2003 But some groups at much greater risk – Including those with complex needs Aspirations remain high despite poverty – 97% of mothers want child to go to University

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9 Costly, wasteful & risky Poverty affects educational achievement and earnings in later life Child poverty costs the UK £29bn each year Work needs to be a route out of poverty – 56% of working households have someone paid less than the Living Wage Job insecurity is bad and worsening – Half of men newly claiming JSA have done so in previous 6 months And many cannot work from disability or caring

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12 Previous strategies have had… No vision of a poverty-free UK – No long-term cross-party support No link between actions and outcomes No dynamic or life course approach No involvement of people in poverty No consideration of policy interactions Not really strategies at all

13 Programme structure Evidence for policy ideas 33 evidence reviews 4 theory reviews Participation Think Tank seminars Policy ‘Dragon’s Den’ Other JRF programmes Policy development & modelling Agent-based Household Dynamic Strategies UK Blueprint Scotland Wales Northern Ireland 2013/14 2014/15 2015/16

14 Timetable TaskDate Commission models of povertyDone Publish 33 evidence summariesDone Publish ‘a UK without poverty’Done Publish reviews of theoryAutumn 2014 Refine and test policiesNow to mid-2015 Start to draft strategy for UKEarly 2015 Publish UK strategyDec 2015 Publish strategies for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland During 2016 Implementation???2017+

15 What policies might work? Universal Credit, better and more generous design Incentivise welfare to work systems to reduce poverty Fairer benefit uprating Action on pay through NMW increases & Living Wage Localise skills budgets, co-ordinated with employment programmes Business-sector led skills development strategies Increase affordable housing supply Area-based energy efficiency schemes Rebalance childcare support on those with lowest incomes Reform markets for essential goods and services Raise teaching quality in schools with most poor pupils Co-location of advice and support, including for relationships Long-term, intensive support for complex needs

16 Where are we heading? If we don’t act now, poverty will increase – Also would if 2010 system had been in place Prices of essentials have been rising fast while wages at the bottom and benefits stagnate Technological change & globalisation lead to a divided job market Demographic pressures: living longer but with poorer health, alone, diverse families Climate change affecting poorer communities

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19 A comprehensive approach Nature of work at the bottom end of the labour market Cost of living, markets for goods and services and regulators Whether people can reach their potential at school or at work Civil society and private institutions that are important in people’s lives The choices that people make Poverty is real but not inevitable – Look at pensioner poverty A poverty-free UK would not only be good for people who experience poverty; it would be good for everyone


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