• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Gap between rich and poor in UK widest in 40 years

Tue Jul 17, 2007 8:12am EDT
Two ladies and a gentleman chat at Ascot race course June 17, 2003. The divide between rich and poor in Britain has widened to its greatest gap for more than 40 years, a social policy research charity said. REUTERS/Kieran Doherty

LONDON (Reuters Life!) - The divide between rich and poor in Britain has widened to its greatest gap for more than 40 years, a social policy research charity said.

Lifestyle

The greatest extremes tend to be clustered in the southeast of England, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation said on Tuesday in its report "Poverty, Wealth and Place in Britain 1968 to 2005".

This has resulted in average households, described as neither poor nor wealthy, being pushed out of some areas.

"Over time it has become clear that there is less and less room in the south for them; they have either moved elsewhere, or become poor," said the report's author Danny Dorling.

The disproportionately wealthy are becoming segregated from the rest of society, creating a deep polarization. Some cities in Britain have areas where more than half of all households are struggling on the poverty line.

While the number of people living in extreme poverty may have fallen, the number of people living below the poverty line has increased, with more than one in four households, 27 percent, classed as "breadline poor" in 2001.

At the same time the number of asset-wealthy households rose dramatically between 1999 and 2003, with more than a fifth of families, 23 percent, now falling into this category.

The proportion of average households fell from around two-thirds of families in 1980 to just over half by 2000.

A second report published simultaneously found that people felt the gap between rich and poor people had grown too large.

The authors, Michael Orton and Karen Rowlingson, blamed people on higher incomes being overpaid, rather than those on low incomes being underpaid.

Orton said: "There is widespread acceptance that some occupations should be paid more than others: but the gap between high and low paid occupations is far greater than people think it should be."



More from Reuters

Photo

Democrats reach deal on health bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democratic healthcare negotiators said they agreed on Tuesday to replace a government-run insurance option with a scaled-back non-profit plan and would seek cost estimates on the deal.

File photo of snow covered Uhuru peak of the largest free-standing volcano in the world, Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, taken on March 10, 2006. REUTERS/Neil Wallace
Postcards to Copenhagen:

Wish we weren't here

Mount Kilimanjaro's melting snow cap is one of many things forever altered by climate change. Here's a snapshot of a world dealing with environmental destruction.   Full Article 

People prepare to lower the body of one of the ministers killed in a blast from a suicide bomber last Thursday at Shamo Hotel in Somali's capital Mogadishu December 4, 2009.  REUTERS/Feisal Omar

Scenes of a "slaughterhouse"

War is just about the only story to tell in Somalia. But when one reporter tried to cover an event reflecting positive change, violence reared its ugly head again.  Full Article