I think politicians really need to engage with the issue of poverty. The fact is that, over the last decade or so, wealth inequality has increased, and a lot of people are slipping through the net.
When I started as a debt advisor back in 2011, it was really rare for someone who was working to have a budget that we couldn’t balance. And now it’s commonplace. I think more than half the budgets we look at now are what we call deficit budgets. By the time they’ve paid their rent, their energy, their council tax, their other bills. It’s just impossible to product a budget where they have enough money to live and have a decent standard of living.
It can just be a downward spiral as their anxiety increases, their stress levels increase, their ability to cope just goes away and there are times where you just get off the phone and it just feels, you would love to be able to do more, but the situation itself is just so tough.
People in the lower half of salaries, are struggling more and more. So reform there would be good, but perhaps closer to home, just making sure that there is good debt advice, and benefits advice, and budgeting advice available to people who need it.