Analysis
Public idea of dignified living is miles from
what some can afford this winter
Patrick
Butler
Wifi, Netflix, a laptop, presents for family and the
odd night out with friends are in this year’s Minimum Income Standard
Fri 2 Sep
2022 06.00 BST
What
constitutes a no-fripperies minimum standard of living in the UK in 2022? It’s
not just sufficient money for three meals a day, suitable clothes, heating and
a roof over one’s head, according to the public, but enough for a Netflix
subscription, a smart speaker, the odd night out with friends and a supply of
Covid masks.
It’s about
being able to afford things such as a smartphone, a laptop, wifi, a cooker, a
TV, the odd alcoholic drink and also enough to take an unostentatious week’s
holiday away in the UK once a year, treat yourself to an occasional takeaway,
buy presents for the children and family, and make charitable donations.
The Minimum
Income Standard, agreed every year by teams of shrewd, socially representative,
focus groups, marshalled by Loughborough University researchers, is effectively
a dignity index tracking the cost of a relatively frugal, needs-not-wants,
necessities-not-luxuries lifestyle – a “normal” existence, if you like – in the
UK.
You may
disagree. Some will see certain requirements as impossibly frivolous – Netflix,
alcohol, really? Others will view it as joylessly austere. The point is it
tracks what the general public considers the cost of a “normal” life as a
participating member of society, not grim survival on destitution rations.
This
unassuming lifestyle is now beginning to seem quaintly aspirational in the face
of a cost of living crisis some predict will lead to the biggest squeeze on
living standards for a century. Three meals a day and suitable clothes are
already out of the window for many families, for whom a Netflix subscription
and a holiday and a meal out with friends already sound like fantasy.
The study,
published annually by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, has always shown a gap
between what the public agrees should be a minimum household income, and what
low-income families actually earn, whether from minimum wage work or through
increasingly meagre subsistence benefits.
This year,
however, the gap between real incomes and the public vision of the cost of a
no-nonsense “decent life” has become a widening chasm for millions. The
standard was raised by record amounts to largely reflect higher inflation in
energy and food, but after just a few months, those modest upward adjustments
already look modest.
The
standard may not have the sharp cut-through of a poverty measure, but it tells
us with some precision what many households on low incomes will miss as their
budgets shrivel away this winter – and it’s not just Netflix, a new winter coat
and regular meals, but a sense of human dignity.
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