The average UK household is just days away from an emergency situation in the event of sudden financial hardship, according to a new report to be released this week. Meanwhile, one food bank has reported a surge in new participants.
The consequences of severe economic fallout would present a real challenge for many people, considering that more than one-third of households (36 percent) in the UK have “no strategy in place to cope with financial hardship," according to a report from Legal & General, citing data from the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR).
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The survey of some 5,000 people in the UK, analyzed in The Independent, shows marked
contrast among people around the UK to be able to make ends meet
following the loss of a job or other economic crisis, like a
lengthy illness. In Wales, for example, most people would only be
able to survive for seven days in the event of an economic
setback, compared with Londoners, who would be able to keep going
for 83 days before their funds ran out, according to the poll.
More than one-third (35 percent) of the population has no backup
savings to protect them in the event of a financial emergency.
Days from the breadline...Britain on the brink. http://t.co/nwjqHoVBDM
— James Patrick (@J_amesp) November 23, 2014
Among the most vulnerable demographic are citizens of working age
(18 to 64), which the survey reported are just two weeks away
from requiring some sort of government assistance.
The results of the survey should provide a wakeup call for many
Britons, many of whom, according to the authors of the report,
believe they could survive 77 days following a “sudden loss
of income.”
The report does provide some basic clues on how to better endure
a hypothetical economic breakdown. First, get rid of that monthly
mortgage payment. Households that have paid off this debt are
able to last an estimated 426 days – over a year – before
draining their savings. Those with a mortgage payment last less
than a month before their money vanishes.
So many people so close to the breadline is one reason why #CameronMustGo (along with his cronies.)
— Beth_45+ (@BethVotedYes) November 23, 2014
However, households that rent from private landlords are in the worst position, being just “two days away from the breadline,” the report says.
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The results of the survey expose "the harsh reality that many
households are on the brink and just weeks away from becoming
reliant upon family, friends or the state,” John Pollock,
chief executive of Legal & General Assurance Society, told
the Independent. “Despite improvements in the employment
market, the average working-age family is just two weeks away
from the breadline."
"With new economic headwinds approaching and an interest-rate
rise on the horizon, now is not the time to be burying our heads
in the sand," he added.
Pollock suggested that more people begin to take their economic
security more seriously.
"Talk of the economic recovery and an increase in consumer
confidence could lead many people to revert back to their old
habits when now really is the time to think about protecting
their future," he concluded.
The survey comes as a record number of low-income families are seeking assistance from food charities, new research has revealed.
Some 500,000 adults and children were given three days’ emergency
food supplies in the first six months of 2014, Trussell Trust, a
UK charity organization, reported, as cited by the Guardian.
The charity said the number of people referred to its 400 food
banks had jumped 38 percent compared with the same period last
year.