JRF - Families struggle to close budget gap despite a pause in the rise of the cost of living

2 Jul 2015 11:26 AM

The cost of a decent standard of living, as defined by the public, has stopped rising for the first time since the recession began, independent research published yesterday by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) has revealed.

However, the gap between people’s incomes and the amount they need to cover their essential costs has widened dramatically since 2008.

A Minimum Income Standard (MIS) for the UK, funded by JRF is calculated annually by Loughborough University’s Centre for Research in Social Policy. This year’s analysis finds that for the first time since 2008, the amount families need to earn to reach a minimum, socially acceptable standard of living has fallen.

Low and negative inflation in 2015 has meant the cost of what you need to meet the MIS remained the same. Additional factors have also helped to narrow the gap between earnings and outgoings for many low income households in the last year, bringing welcome respite. These include:

But the budget gap between the incomes of low income families and the cost of a decent standard of living is still much wider than before the recession began, both for those earning the National Minimum Wage (NMW) and those reliant on out of work benefits.

Compared to what the public say people need for an acceptable living standard, in 2015, for those on the minimum wage (all figures are per week, in 2015 prices):

People who are reliant on safety net benefits face even bigger shortfalls:

Since 2008, average wages have risen by 12 per cent and the minimum wage has risen by 18 per cent. Over the same period, the cost of the goods and services which people need to achieve MIS has risen by 29 per cent. The value of benefits has fallen in real terms. In 2015:

Despite flat inflation for most items, and cuts in taxation, single adults must earn the same as last year to achieve the same standard of living, as rent rises swallow up any gains. Inflation is predicted to begin rising again by the end of the year. This means that even with rising wages and further tax cuts, those relying on benefits and tax credits could become worse off unless they are increased.

Julia Unwin, JRF Chief Executive, said:

“After seven years of declining living standards, the pause in rising costs is a very welcome respite. But many low income households are still much worse off than in 2008, leaving them struggling to make ends meet and reliant on benefits to top up their incomes.

“A couple with two children who each earn the minimum wage faces a shortfall of almost £4,000 a year between their incomes and what the public say they need for a minimum standard of living. We need to see action to raise wages, build more genuinely affordable homes and tackle the UK’s low productivity to help people get on at work.”

Donald Hirsch, Director of the Centre for Research in Social Policy, Loughborough University and author of the report, said:

“Near-zero inflation is a particularly welcome relief for families whose income relies partly on benefits, which are no longer increased automatically in line with prices. But modest inflation is expected to return. Even though earnings are forecast to grow healthily in the next few years, rising prices will prevent low earners from becoming better off if their tax credits are frozen - and more so if threats to cut them are implemented in the forthcoming Budget.”

To help narrow the gap between wages and basic living costs, JRF calls for:

Addressing these issues will help reduce the need for people on low incomes to rely so heavily on tax credits and housing benefit to maintain a decent living standard.

View report : http://www.jrf.org.uk/sites/files/jrf/MIS-2015-full.pdf