No longer 'managing': The rise of working poverty and fixing Britain's broken social settlement
Article
In this paper we trace the emergence of a poorly understood social challenge and one which symbolises Britain’s broken ‘social settlement’: the continued rise in working poverty since the beginning of this century.
Our welfare system is built on the notion that work is the main route out of poverty and this government has promised to ‘level up’ opportunity through skills, jobs and economic growth. Yet for increasing numbers of working families around the country, the promise of social mobility through ‘hard work’ as a route out of poverty alone is failing to deliver.
We argue for greater priority to be given in welfare and economic policy to bringing down the high costs of housing, childcare and other essential goods as a proportion of household income, as well as reforms to genuinely ‘make work pay’.
Related items
From bystander to builder: government guidance will be essential for industry to thrive
Global political attention remains fixed on Washington. US president Donald Trump’s tariffs (and the circling threat of new tariffs) are challenging the global economic order and throwing governments into chaos. Intensifying economic…Accountability matters: Securing the future of devolution
English local government faces major reshaping.Nuclear enrichment: Building a stable and effective nuclear workforce
The government has talked a good game on the future of nuclear generation.