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22% Britons live below poverty line: report

December 09, 2003 19:54 IST

An estimated 12.6 million people in Britain, 22 per cent of the total population, currently live below the poverty line despite the progress the country has made, a survey indicated on Tuesday.

Those below the poverty line included 3.8 million children, 2.2 million pensioners and 6.6 million working-age adults.

This was, however, less than the peak of 13.4 million touched in the mid-90s and was lower than the figures at any time during the 1990s, the survey published by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation said.

"With five years' data available to measure progress since Labour came to office, it is much clearer where the government's strategy for combating poverty is working – and where it is not.

"There is still a long way to go ... but the reduction in poverty levels to below those of the 1990s is a notable milestone," Guy Palmer, co-author of the report, said.

The new Policy Institute found there were 12.5 million people in 2001-02 living in homes with incomes below the poverty line.

"There are signs that Britain may have started to move away from the bottom of the EU poverty league, which it shared four years ago with Portugal, Greece, Spain, Italy and Ireland," the institute said.

An analysis of 50 different poverty indicators found that the east, south-east and south-west of England performed better than average.

Inner London was the most unequal part of the country, with 29 per cent of people in the richest fifth of the population and 32 per cent in the poorest fifth.

Homelessness was also higher in the capital than elsewhere.

Levels of treatment for drug abuse in the north-east, Yorkshire and Humberside were four times those in the east and south-east.

Scotland was typical of Britain on many poverty indicators, but its death rate among men below retirement age was higher than elsewhere.

The report said poverty continued to affect a large number of low-income house-holds with someone in paid work.

About 3.5 million people experienced 'in-work poverty' between 1999 and 2002.

According to the survey, half of all adults in their late 20s with no qualifications earn less than 200 pounds a week, compared with one in six of those with qualification equivalent to first class matriculation.

Premature death rates for men and women under 65 fell between 1991 and 2001. But obesity among women rose by half in the decade to 2001 to a point where a quarter of all women aged 25 to 64 were affected.


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