Skip to main content
Cost of living
Deep poverty and destitution

A Budget for big earners and big owners

Responding to the Chancellor’s Budget, Paul Kissack, Chief Executive of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation said: “This was a Budget for big earners and big owners.”

Date published:

Responding to the Chancellor’s Budget, Paul Kissack, Chief Executive of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation said:

“This was a Budget for big earners and big owners. Prioritising capital gains tax cuts for owners of multiple properties is an insult to almost four million people facing destitution in the UK today.

“The Chancellor stood up at the despatch box today and announced a short term patch up of his government’s own failed systems. He was right to extend the household support fund, which has given essential help for some families at difficult times. But extending a temporary support scheme for a paltry six months doesn’t equate to fixing the fundamental problem that made its existence necessary.

“The Government is right to acknowledge that deductions from Universal Credit which leave 97% of low income families affected by these loans having to go without essentials are driving hardship in this country. They are right to take action on this dire situation, but they must now commit to a fundamental change in our social security system which guarantees that people can always afford the essentials.

“Cutting national insurance gives you an eye catching headline but doesn’t fill the gap for the millions in our country experiencing deepening poverty. For the people struggling to afford the rent or the weekly shop, or having to visit a food bank, that widening gulf is all too real.”

Findings from JRF’s pre-Budget analysis:

  • The cost of essentials was ranked the number 1 concern by the public (64%), and 90% of the public thought that government had at least some responsibility for these prices.
  • 73% of the public thought that government had complete responsibility for funding the NHS and 57% thought the same for other public services.
  • When excluding those who own their home outright, more people rank housing as a top concern than the NHS.
  • The NHS and other public services were in the top three areas the public is most worried about, alongside essentials. Worries about income from investments and the tax paid on them ranked firmly at the bottom of the public’s concern.
Leftovers from breakfast on a plate.

This news article is part of the cost of living topic.

Find out more about our work in this area.

Discover more about the cost of living