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Almost a third of Britons cannot afford a holiday, poverty report shows | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Almost 30% of people in Britain are unable to afford even a week's annual holiday, up from less than a quarter before the financial crisis, according to an analysis by the Office for National Statistics , which reveals the day-to-day struggle facing many families. | |
The finding is part of a wider report comparing levels of poverty and social exclusion across the UK and the rest of the European Union. More than a fifth of the population – 22.7%, or 14m people – were considered "at risk of poverty or social exclusion" in 2011, the latest year for which data is available. | |
This level has been largely unchanged since 2007 and compares to an EU average of 24.1% – though that includes countries such as Greece and Spain which are in deep financial and economic crisis. | This level has been largely unchanged since 2007 and compares to an EU average of 24.1% – though that includes countries such as Greece and Spain which are in deep financial and economic crisis. |
The proportion of the population in the UK defined as "at risk of poverty" has fallen since the depths of the recession, the report says, from 18.7% in 2008 to 16.2% in 2011 – but that is partly because the definition of the poverty line, which is calculated relative to average incomes, has declined as real wages across the economy have fallen. | |
The ONS, therefore, uses a series of measures of "material deprivation" to give a clearer picture of how living standards have been affected. | |
These show that more than a third of people (36.6%) say they would be unable to afford an "unexpected but necessary financial expense", such as a surprise bill, up from 26.6% in 2007, suggesting that a growing number of households are struggling to make ends meet. | These show that more than a third of people (36.6%) say they would be unable to afford an "unexpected but necessary financial expense", such as a surprise bill, up from 26.6% in 2007, suggesting that a growing number of households are struggling to make ends meet. |
There have also been modest increases in the percentage of people saying they struggled to pay their mortgage, rent, utility bills or heating. | There have also been modest increases in the percentage of people saying they struggled to pay their mortgage, rent, utility bills or heating. |
The proportion of people in "severe material deprivation", defined as being unable to afford four or more from a list of items, including a washing machine and a telephone, has remained largely flat since 2005, and stood at 5.1% in 2011, the ONS said. | The proportion of people in "severe material deprivation", defined as being unable to afford four or more from a list of items, including a washing machine and a telephone, has remained largely flat since 2005, and stood at 5.1% in 2011, the ONS said. |
But statisticians also pointed out the large number of people in the UK living in a household where there is so-called "low work intensity": where the adults were employed at only 20% or less of their capacity – in other words, where they were unemployed, or working few hours. In 2011, 11.5% of people in Britain lived in a household with low work intensity. That was down from 13.1% in 2010, but was the seventh highest level among the 26 European countries compared by the ONS. The average across the EU is 10%. | |