Household income hit the hardest during pandemic

Working age households have experienced the biggest immediate shock to their incomes in nearly half a century, according to a think tank.
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The coronavirus crisis has triggered a 4.5% fall in typical working age household incomes, the Resolution Foundation said.

It calculated the fall by comparing the months leading up to the crisis with the situation in May this year.

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According to the Foundation’s Living Standards Audit, this was the biggest short-term income drop since the oil crisis-induced inflation spikes of the mid-1970s.

The pandemic has had a huge effect on household incomesThe pandemic has had a huge effect on household incomes
The pandemic has had a huge effect on household incomes

Government support has cushioned the shock for millions of people, but the report warned that further income shocks could be on the horizon.

It said that, without Government intervention to strengthen the social security safety net, the incomes of the poorest fifth of households could have fallen by as much as 8%.

The Foundation said that a further income shock could be due next year if the Government proceeds with plans to withdraw the recent increase in the generosity of Universal Credit.

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Allowing it to expire next April would delay hopes of a post-Covid-19 living standards recovery for millions of low-to-middle income households, the Foundation argued.

The Foundation focuses on improving the living standards of those on low-to-middle incomes.It said the coronavirus crisis had come on top of a poor decade for income growth, particularly for low income households and the young.

The 2010s was a “disastrous decade for living standards”, the report said, starting in the aftermath of the previous financial crisis, and with a post-Brexit referendum inflation spike holding back real incomes in the later part of the decade.

Adam Corlett, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation, said: “Living standards across Britain stagnated in the years running up to the crisis, and fell for the poorest families.

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“That stagnation has now given way to the biggest immediate income shock since the mid-1970s, as Britain’s economy - and much of its workforce - went into lockdown.

“The Government’s unprecedented policy response has played a critical role so far in protecting millions of households, and particularly the poorest, from the worst of the crisis. But for many the threat of further income falls looms large.

“The phasing out of the Job Retention Scheme means much larger rises in unemployment are ahead of us, and these are likely to be concentrated among lower-income households. And withdrawing increases in Universal Credit next April, when this crisis will be far from over, will leave over six million households facing a further income loss of over £1,000.”

Meanwhile, Marks & Spencer has seen its share price fall after reports that the high street giant is to axe hundreds of jobs.

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The retailer is set to announce redundancy plans for hundreds of employees within days as part of a major restructure.

It comes after a bloodbath on the high street in the face of coronavirus, with the likes of John Lewis, Boots and Debenhams announcing thousands of job cuts.

Total job losses across the company could potentially reach several thousand when existing restructuring plans are taken into account, sources told the broadcaster.

In May, chief executive Steve Rowe said the company would be accelerating parts of its transformation plan with a programme dubbed “Never the Same Again”.

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M&S told investors that “central support costs and headcount will be examined at all levels” as part of the plan. The retailer’s food stores continued to trade throughout the lockdown period, but trading in other part of its business, such as clothing, was significantly reduced.

It has also now reopened 118 of its cafes and said last week that it will pass VAT reductions on to its customers.

Mr Rowe warned at the latest update that some customer habits have “changed forever” as a result of the coronavirus crisis.

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