The United Reformed Church has added its support to a new campaign for benefit levels to be increased to cover essential living costs.
In total more than 90 charities, have asked politicians what they intend to do to help the millions of households still going without essentials.
In a letter to all UK political party leaders, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF), the Trussell Trust and other NGOs, charities and professional bodies say that, despite living in one of the wealthiest countries in the world, nine in ten low-income households on Universal Credit are currently going without essentials.
The letter comes as the Trussell Trust is due to reveal how many emergency food parcels were distributed by food banks in its network over the past year, next Wednesday.
The cost-of-living crisis, which has seen the prices of everyday items like food and clothing soar since 2021, has made this problem worse. But the UK’s inadequate social security system hasn’t provided enough help for years. 2.4 million people experienced destitution at some point in 2019, up 54% since 2017.
Research by JRF and the Trussell Trust published earlier this year showed how the shortfall between the basic rate of Universal Credit and the cost of essentials, such as food, bills and vital household items, is a key driver behind increasing levels of hardship.
The standard allowance of Universal Credit is only £85 a week for a single adult. That’s at least £35 a week below a conservative estimate of what’s needed to afford these essentials. Often people receive even less as they face deductions from their support which are automatically taken at unaffordable rates, for example to pay off debts to the UK government.
It’s why so many organisations from those helping single parents of young children to others helping people with mental health problems or long-term disabilities want the governments of the UK to back the Essentials Guarantee. This means ensuring that the basic rate of Universal Credit at least covers the cost of life’s essentials, with support never being pulled below that level.
Katie Schmuecker, JRF Principal Policy Advisor, said: “Every day sees another person’s circumstances change whether it’s losing their job, needing to care for a sick family member or ending a relationship. Our social security system is meant to give us peace of mind that the support will be there when we need it. But the price of food we all need to eat and the bills we all must pay are still too often outpacing the income of those on Universal Credit, many of whom will be in work. We must remind political leaders that, whether they like it or not, this is driving millions of people into hardship and it not a problem that will go away without bold and concerted action.
“It is time to build a system that is needs-tested – where the support people get is linked to the actual costs of essentials to meet basic needs rather than the baseless system people have to suffer now.”
Polly Jones, head of Scotland for the Trussell Trust, said: “We all deserve the dignity of staying warm, fed and protected from poverty. For too long people have been going without because social security payments are not based on a real reflection of life’s costs and are being pushed deeper into hardship as a result.
“The support of 90 organisations backing our call to guarantee our essentials confirms what we already know – that the vast majority of the UK public agrees everyone should be able to afford life’s essentials, such as food and bills.
“We know with the right financial support, people would not be forced to experience hunger. The time is now for the UK government to urgently change the law so that the standard allowance of Universal Credit will always cover our essentials. By pledging this the government will be taking a crucial step towards ending the need for food banks.
Fiona Loud, Policy Director at Kidney Care UK, said: “Chronic Kidney disease and its treatment can make it impossible to maintain an adequate income. In the first two months of 2023 alone, we saw 48% more applications for our financial support compared to the same period in 2022. We have been hearing from people with kidney disease every week that they are being forced to choose between heating, eating, making every day purchases and their life saving dialysis. It just doesn’t add up and we need action to help people survive. We need
the basic rate of Universal Credit to at least cover the cost of essentials like food, household bills and travel costs.”
Brian Dow, Deputy Chief Executive, Rethink Mental Illness: “It’s impossible to improve your mental health when every day is shaped by the agonising worry and anxiety of how you will make ends meet. Financial hardship makes people more likely to be trapped in a cycle of poor mental health and jeopardise their prospects of recovery from mental illness. We need to see the government take action to ensure social security represents the safety net it’s intended to be by meeting the cost of the basic essentials we all need.”
Sue Christoforou, Senior Policy and Campaigns Adviser, Financial Health, at Parkinson’s UK said: “There are thousands of people with Parkinson’s of working age, and a recent survey we conducted showed that around half can no longer work at the same rate or for the number of hours a week that they had been able to before their diagnosis.
“No longer able to work, as much as previously and not yet old enough to claim a pension, many will find themselves reliant on Universal Credit, a benefit that does not pay enough to live on.
“Receiving a diagnosis of a degenerative condition like Parkinson’s when you’re young is hard enough to comprehend. Stress and worry that benefits won’t provide enough money to buy
essentials creates unnecessary pressure and worsens symptoms making it harder to work and live well. That is why we agree that Universal Credit must be paid at a rate that will guarantee our essentials.”
Emily Holzhausen OBE, Director of Policy and Public Affairs at Carers UK, said: “We hear from many unpaid carers providing round the clock care for relatives who are older, disabled or seriously ill who are constantly stressed and worried about making ends meet. A quarter of carers (25%) told us late last year that they are cutting back on essentials such as food or heating – nearly twice as many compared to 13% in 2021. Those receiving Carer’s Allowance, which is just £76.75 a week, were even more likely to be cutting back on food and heating (35%).
“Unpaid carers contribute so much to our society, but they have been left without targeted financial support when they desperately need it which is unacceptable. The Carer Poverty Coalition, a collection of over 100 organisations led by Carers UK, wants to see Carer’s Allowance increased and reformed so that it better helps unpaid carers, recognising and valuing their support as well as preventing financial hardship. For lower-income carers receiving Universal Credit, it is vital that Government increases the basic rate so that they can at least cover the cost of essentials.”
Director of policy and campaigns at Action for Children, Imran Hussain, said: “The most disturbing thing about millions of children falling through the huge holes in our social security net into poverty – which damages childhoods and destroys life chances – is not that the Government continues to tolerate this, but that their policy choices have been a big reason why this
is happening and why things are expected to get worse.
“The £20-a-week increase to Universal Credit helped cut child poverty in the first year of the pandemic, but just as prices began soaring 18 months later, that help was snatched away from families.
“We must confront the myth that everyone in poverty can simply work their way out of it. Our analysis shows that work is often not a route out of hardship for families where both parents or a single parent is already working full time, have long-term sickness or disability, or caring responsibilities.
“An approach built on what works would ensure we have a social safety net that enables families to meet their essential costs, and that benefits can do their job of providing a basic minimum living standard.”
Image: Nick Fewings/Unsplash.