Published: April 6th 2011 - at 2:04 pm

From today the budget numbers become a painful reality


by Guest    

contribution by Gavin Kelly

With the Budget behind us and the new financial year starting today, it is a timely moment to take stock of the prospects of those living on low-to-middle incomes.

To do that we need to consider the combined impact of stagnant wages, rising prices, reduced tax-credits and benefits from the June 2010 Budget – as well as the measures that were announced in last month’s Budget (such as increased personal tax-allowances).

Each of these changes has of course been considered in isolation. But there hasn’t been much analysis that looks at them in the round – and considers the impact on different types of families.

The charts below, based on a few hypothetical but fairly typical working-age families, provides some insight here. They show that falling real wages, together with swinging cuts to tax-credits announced in last year’s Budget and Spending Review, will lead to some staggering reductions in household incomes.

In comparison, the changes made in the recent Budget are tiny (though positive).

The severity of the living standards crunch will vary not just according to household-type, it will also play out differently across localities and regions – though the exact nature of this variation represents an important gap in our knowledge.

To help remedy this, we recently undertook some analysis of the trends in regional disposable income that existed prior to the recession (based on newly released ONS data).

It reveals that buoyant trends in London have long been cloaking a far more worrying picture in other English regions: disposable incomes had begun falling as far back as 2003. (And we should bear in mind that this grisly data provides an overly optimistic picture, particularly in London, as it is based on ‘mean’ not ‘median’ income).

Looking at statistics and charts like this is, of course, crucial – but it only paints a very partial and somewhat abstract picture. To really understand what 2011 is actually going to feel like for working families we need a far richer and more in-depth understanding of the reality of household budgets, and how they are managed and juggled when they are hit by shocks.

That is why we at the Resolution Foundation are launching a year-long project that will track the household finances of a set of low-to-middle income families across Britain to see how they fare, the nature of the trade-offs they make and the patterns of income, expenditure and debt that they live by.

I’m pleased to say we are doing this jointly with the BBC’s World Tonight who, to their credit, are investing proper air-time over the next nine months (starting tonight) in tracking the living standards of some of the families we are working with.


Cross-posted from the Resolution Foundation blog.


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Reader comments


It’s amazing how many bombshells like this have passed the anti-cuts movement by.

I think people might actually take not when they get their pay this month, and for those with families, when the tax credits renewal letters show you’re no longer eligible for anything.


Reactions: Twitter, blogs
  1. Liberal Conspiracy

    From today the budget numbers become a painful reality http://bit.ly/hYhMCn

  2. Sophia Coles-Riley

    RT @libcon: From today the budget numbers become a painful reality http://bit.ly/hYhMCn

  3. Housing Solidarity

    RT @libcon: From today the budget numbers become a painful reality http://bit.ly/hYhMCn

  4. Sue Hoyle

    RT @libcon: From today the budget numbers become a painful reality http://bit.ly/hYhMCn

  5. Pucci Dellanno

    RT @libcon: From today the budget numbers become a painful reality http://bit.ly/hYhMCn

  6. Stuart White

    From today the budget numbers become a painful reality | Liberal Conspiracy http://t.co/YIjcWuL via @libcon

  7. Noxi

    RT @libcon: From today the budget numbers become a painful reality http://bit.ly/hYhMCn





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