Poverty, housing and welfare reform: Kathleen Kelly, Programme Manager, Joseph Rowntree Foundation Current and future JRF research
What is poverty? When resources are not enough to meet your needs … income easiest to measure but not whole story In income terms for (2011/12) 60% median income: o £128 pw for a single person with no children o £357 pw for couple with two children Around 5 th UK population experience poverty in a given year A tenth experience persistent poverty i.e. income below poverty line for 3 out of 4 years
Poverty, work and welfare reform 6.1 million people in poverty are in working households. 1 in 3 low paid workers are aged Across UK around 20% of employees (5 million) earn less than the living wage A ‘low pay, no pay cycle’ for many
Links between housing and poverty Housing cost induced poverty has been growing for two decades An extra 3.1 million people in the UK are in poverty after their housing costs have been paid. Renters three times more likely to living in poverty Housing efforts to reduce poverty = limiting rent costs maintaining good conditions
Ongoing relevant work: Housing and work incentives Landlords business plans and strategies International comparison of benefits systems for under 25s Trade-offs at the bottom of the market Housing and poverty programme Monitoring poverty and social exclusion Take up of benefits Welfare to work Universal credit Anti-Poverty Strategies for the UK Homelessness monitor Nature and extent of destitution Homelessness and Destitution
Impact on tenants … and implications
Impact on landlords … and implications
A word about the bedroom limit … potential reforms Poverty, housing and welfare reform
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