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40% of people receiving Universal Credit are skipping meals to survive

7th September 2022

New Trussell Trust research reveals that 40% of people receiving Universal Credits are skipping meals to survive.

The research also highlighted that:

  • One in five (21%) people were unable to cook hot food this summer as they couldn’t afford to use the cooker
  • Almost a quarter (23%) have been unable to travel to work or essential appointments because they couldn’t afford the cost of public transport or fuel, the charity says
  • Almost two-thirds (64%) of Universal Credit claimants had to spend July’s first Cost of Living payment from government on food.

This starkly shows the support package has not been enough to protect people from harm or tackle soaring bills, the charity warns, as it calls on new Prime Minister to urgently provide more support

The Trussell Trust has published new research highlighting the devastating impact the cost of living crisis is having on people forced to survive on the lowest incomes.

The charity is urging new Prime Minister Liz Truss to address soaring living costs, which are leading to more people using food banks, in the emergency budget expected on 21 September.

The research, a YouGov survey of 1,846 people in receipt of Universal Credit during August 2022, found more than two million* people had skipped meals across the previous three months to keep up with other essential costs.

Worryingly, 38% of people said they’d gone a whole day with no food at all or just one meal, in the last month, because they couldn’t afford to buy enough food.

Almost a quarter of people surveyed (23%) have been unable to travel to work or essential appointments, such as the doctors or the school run in the last three months, because they couldn’t afford public transport, or fuel, while a fifth (21%) of people said they didn’t cook hot food because they couldn’t afford to use the oven or other utilities.

This comes as the Trussell Trust revealed that food banks in its network provided 50% more parcels to people across the UK in recent months, compared to before the pandemic. This means a parcel provided to someone facing hardship every 13 seconds.

And while the charity welcomed the UK government’s £15bn support package announced in May aimed at helping people pay for essentials, it says these measures are no longer enough as the crisis has escalated.

Despite the survey being conducted in mid-August, almost 70% of people surveyed who had received a cost of living payment, said they had already had to spend all of the £326 they received from the government in mid to late July, of which 64% of people had to use the money to buy food. The next payment is due by 7th September but the pressure of rising energy prices and return to school costs mean that the £324 is unlikely to cover the necessary bills and even more people will need to turn to food banks.

The research shows that financial insecurity is a problem for millions of people, and that this number is growing, even before the imminent increase in energy costs.

More than a third (34%) of people surveyed said they have fallen into debt in the last three months because they couldn’t keep up with essential bills.
The Trussell Trust says it expects more and more people to be forced to access food banks unless the government takes immediate action to ensure the social security system provides people with enough support to afford the essentials.

The charity is standing with 70 other organisations to call for at least a doubling of the additional support offered to people on the lowest incomes.

It is also urging the government to take action in the emergency budget to address the worrying levels of hardship people are facing by rethinking the deductions that it takes from people’s benefits payments. Furthermore, the government should provide better, long-term funding for local crisis response, so local authorities can provide much needed support directly to communities. Only then will we be able to end the need for food banks in the future, the charity said.

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