Recovery: One-In-Five Britons Borrow Money To Afford To Eat

Recovery?: One-In-Five Britons Borrow Money To Afford To Eat (ZeroHedge, Mai 5, 2013):

While GBP jumped and the world celebrated the UK’s recent avoidance (for now) of a triple-dip recession (defined on GDP as opposed to reality), the situation in the island nation appears to be going from bad to worse. As Carney takes over the reigns of this once mighty nation he faces a country deeply divided. As the BBC reports, while London real estate prices smash old records, a stunning one-in-five households borrowed money or used savings to cover the costs of food in April. This is the equivalent of five million households unable to fund their food via income alone. Over 80% of these people are concerned about rising food prices (just as print-meister Carney is about to go ‘Abe’ on them) and almost 60% find it difficult to cope on their current incomes. The director of the consumer group ‘Which?’, noted that “many households are stretched to their financial breaking point,” as “families face a cost of living crisis.” While equity and real estate prices hit all-time highs, the opposition sums up the country’s feeling, “this incompetent government needs to wake up to the human cost of their failed economic policies.”

Over one-third of Britons “feel squeezed”

Via BBC,

One in five UK households borrowed money or used savings to cover food costs in April, a Which? survey says.

It suggests the equivalent of five million households used credit cards, overdrafts or savings to buy food.

The figures come despite official statistics last week showing that personal insolvencies had dropped to their lowest levels in five years.

Results showed that of the households who resorted to using credit or savings to pay for food, most were low income families. Among this group:

  • Eight out of 10 (82%) worried about food prices
  • More than half (55%) said they were likely to cut back on food spending in the next few months
  • Nearly six out of 10 (57%) said they found it difficult to cope on their current income
  • A third (32%) borrowed money from friends and family in April

A typical weekly food bill averages about £76, Which? researchers said, up 4% on last year.

Of all the people polled, the research showed:

  • A quarter said they were living comfortably on their incomes
  • More than a third – 36% – felt their finances were under pressure
  • Almost one third – 31% – of those surveyed cut back spending on essentials last month, and they were most likely to be women aged between 30 and 49.

Mr Lloyd, Which? executive director, said: “Our tracker shows that many households are stretched to their financial breaking point, with rising food prices one of the top worries for squeezed consumers.

Mary Creagh, Labour’s shadow environment secretary, said the UK was facing a “growing epidemic of hidden hunger”.

“Families face a cost of living crisis and are being forced into debt or to use their savings simply to put food on the table.

“This incompetent government needs to wake up to the human cost of their failed economic policies and change course now,” she added.

 

5 thoughts on “Recovery: One-In-Five Britons Borrow Money To Afford To Eat”

  1. The statistic is the same here. Over 20% of US households suffer from “food insecurity”. Some states are well over 20%, others are at 18-20%.
    One in five seems to be the norm. In America, over 50 million households are on food stamps. In 2005, it was about 15 million.
    The world economy is imploding, and the world is blowing up with more wars instead of dealing with stabilizing our own economies. It is insanity.

    Reply
  2. Everybody pays for their food by CC & has done for three decades.

    The problem is that we’re all feeling insecure, costs are rising, BIG/GOV encroaches ever more, our economy has been trashed since Thatcher and we have no real basic skills infrastructure to develop for the future.

    Agricultural monoculture, skill losses & globalised corporations have jeapordised the future of our next generations.

    We must turn the clock back.

    Reply
  3. We either adjust to the new and seemingly ever changing restrictive parameters…. or do a

    ” Gandhi “.

    If we’re allowed to live, and we all do the latter, we just might be able to turn the clock back.

    Reply
  4. As I see it back in the immediate post war period of austerity, food accounted for between 20-30% of the household budget, followed by utilities (power, water, gas, coal, telephone) and then mortgage repayments.

    Now, priorities are dictated by sophisticated marketing. That is where the problem lies. The “NAG” factor of targeted child marketing results in increased sales of between 30-40% for otherwise totally unnecessary products, some of which are addictively self perpetuating like soda drinks & fast food.

    Marketing and ‘fashion’ are jointly the main cause of the current generation’s poor record of prioritising.

    Ignore the commercials, kill the box and turn the clock back to become responsible again.

    In Sweden, marketing of toys aimed at kids is limited to ‘after the watershed’.

    Reply

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