South Wales Echo

‘Big divide’ in household budgets in pandemic

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AROUND two-fifths of highincome working-age families have strengthen­ed their household budgets since the coronaviru­s crisis started, compared with just one in eight households on low incomes, research has found.

Some 38% of those on the highest fifth of incomes have seen their spending reduced while their incomes have remained the same or even grown, enabling them to strengthen their overall household budget, the Resolution Foundation said.

In what the Foundation described as a “big divide” in how families’ household budgets are faring, just 12% of those in the lowest income fifth have been able to strengthen their budgets.

More than half (57%) of the richest fifth of families have been able to reduce their spending since the crisis began, including one in 10 (10%) who have cut their spending by more a quarter.

By contrast, less than a third (30%) of the poorest fifth of households have managed to cut their spending.

People in the low income bracket are nearly as likely to have increased their spending during the crisis (27%) as they are to have reduced it, the Foundation said.

Poorer households are much more likely to say that their ability to manage financiall­y has worsened than improved (37% compared with 10%).

Those in the top fifth meanwhile are about as likely to say their position has improved as they are that it has worsened (23% compared with 22%).

The research was based on a survey of more than 6,000 people in May.

Laura Gardiner, research director at the Resolution Foundation, said: “Many highincome families have reduced their spending in recent months.

“Those on lower incomes, however, have found it far harder to reduce spending which, when combined with income falls, means many are seeing their ability to manage financiall­y deteriorat­e.

“As policymake­rs prepare their plan to support Britain’s recovery, they must prioritise strengthen­ing the family finances of low- to middle-income households.”

The findings were released as a separate report, from StepChange Debt Charity, warned that a “personal debt tsunami” of around £6bn of additional household debt directly attributab­le to the coronaviru­s pandemic is being stored up.

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