logo
Poorest households spend a QUARTER of income on car ownership

Poorest households spend a QUARTER of income on car ownership

Daily Mail​16 hours ago
Car ownership is eating up a quarter of the poorest UK households' income as inadequate and expensive public transport outside major cities leaves them with no viable alternative.
A charity has warned ministers the nation's transport system is placing a 'serious strain' on hard-up families and is 'deepening poverty and social exclusion' that is leaving low-income households cut off from jobs, services and opportunity.
As a result, the think tank believes transport costs are fueling the extension of the cost-of-living crisis.
The Institute for Public Policy Research's (IPPR) analysis calculated the average household spends £87 a week on transport, though this rises to £108 if they own a car, but falls to £13 for non-car owners.
Even though the poorest travel much less than the richest, they spend twice as much of their income on 'surface transport' – such as trains, buses, cars and bikes – compared to the richest.
The poorest fifth of households are estimated to spend 18 per cent of their income on transport, compared to 11 per cent on average, and 9 per cent for the richest, the IPPR said.
The report says the high cost of train tickets, poor bus provision and inadequate links to public transport make much of the population reliant on owning a car, even when it comes at a great cost.
The poorest fifth of households spend an average of 25 per cent of their income on their vehicles, if they own one.
Hiking the cost of car ownership is insurance, with premiums for those living in more deprived areas typically between 15 and 20 per cent higher than average.
The IPPR recommends the Government provides additional funding to local authorities to retain local bus routes and set up transport concession schemes, such as travel passes for young people and jobseekers.
It also wants to see the introduction of a social leasing scheme for electric vehicles - so people on low incomes in rural households can lease a car for a low monthly fee subsidised by the Government - and slash the VAT rate on public charging to 5 per cent down from 20 per cent.
Becca Massey-Chase, principal research fellow at IPPR, said: 'Too many people are locked out of opportunity because the transport system simply doesn't work for them.
'Parents are out of work, kids are late to school, and medical appointments are missed — not because people are unwilling, but because the buses don't turn up or the cost of a journey is unaffordable.
'If the Government is serious about tackling poverty, it must fix local transport. That means cheaper, more reliable services — designed with and for the people who rely on them most.'
Ruth Talbot, founder of Single Parent Rights, added: 'This report highlights what single parents have long known: reliable, affordable transport is a lifeline, not a luxury.
'When it works well it makes the challenges of family life with one income and one pair of hands manageable, without it, single parent families are excluded from communities, services and employment opportunities.
Becca Lyon, head of England at Save the Children UK, also commented, saying: 'We fear transport is becoming increasingly inaccessible to families and is an under-explored outcome of the cost of living crisis. It comes up as a major issue time and time again.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Birmingham man used firm's Covid money for shopping and days out
Birmingham man used firm's Covid money for shopping and days out

BBC News

time8 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Birmingham man used firm's Covid money for shopping and days out

A fitness company owner who spent Covid loans for his company at a safari park, restaurants and paying off credit cards has been given a suspended jail Dar, 34, from Birmingham, dishonestly obtained £45,500 in three Covid Bounce Back Loans for his company JDARPT Ltd, when businesses were only entitled to one, the Insolvency Service from the loans was only supposed to be used for the economic benefit of the business. Dar, from Stratford Road, who used some of the funds for legitimate purposes, was sentenced to 20 months in prison suspended for 18 months at Wolverhampton Crown Court, after pleading guilty. He was also ordered to complete 20 days of rehabilitation activity and 180 hours of unpaid work and pay costs of £2, were made to Amazon and Argos, along with spending at restaurants and meat stores, the Insolvency Service spending was identified at West Midlands Safari Park and making credit card payments, alongside genuine business expenditure. 'Significant sums' Dar deliberately made false representations to fraudulently receive three loans, chief investigator at the Insolvency Service David Snasdell added: "Instead of using this money to support his fitness business through the pandemic as intended, he diverted significant sums for personal spending."Dar made fraudulent applications to three banks for Bounce Back Loans during 2020 for his fitness company, the Insolvency Service first fraudulent application was for a £13,000 loan in May 2020 and in it he claimed the turnover of JDAPRT, which went into liquidation in July 2021, was £55, days later, Dar made a second application to a different bank for £15,000, saying his company's turnover was now £60, third fraudulent application in September was for a loan of £17,500, when he claimed turnover was £70,000. Insolvency Service analysis revealed the company's turnover was closer to £61, admitted three charges of dishonestly making false representation to make gain for self/another or cause loss to another/expose other to Snasdell said: "The Insolvency Service will not tolerate abuse of the public purse and will continue to pursue fraudsters who exploited schemes designed to help legitimate businesses during a national crisis." Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Reeves to make it harder to claim compensation for City scandals
Reeves to make it harder to claim compensation for City scandals

Telegraph

time14 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Reeves to make it harder to claim compensation for City scandals

Rachel Reeves is preparing to make it harder for the public to launch mass compensation claims for City mis-selling scandals in a bid to avoid a repeat of the motor finance crisis. The Chancellor has launched a consultation on plans to rein in the power of the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS), which adjudicates disputes between individuals and financial companies. At the moment, if the FOS discovers a mis-selling scandal, it has the power to propose an industry-wide redress scheme. However, under plans put forward by Ms Reeves, it will have to consult the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), which will consider the impact of major payouts on the broader economy. Plans to tighten the rules come in the wake of the car finance mis-selling scandal, which risks costing banks as much as £44bn and has shaken faith in Britain as a place to invest in. Under the new proposals, the FCA will also be able to order the FOS to pause its own investigations until a decision has been made on how to address a large-scale scandal. Additionally, compensation will not be awarded if companies followed FCA guidance – a change to previous rules which allowed the FOS and the courts to apply their own judgment. The level of interest paid on compensation will also be cut for claims made after January 1, 2026 under the proposals. Currently, redress payments owed to wronged customers come with the addition of interest, paid at a rate of 8pc from the date at which their financial product was mis-sold. Under new plans, the interest will be paid at the Bank of England's base rate plus one percentage point – meaning the total will be as low as 1.1pc for the period, at which the official rate was just 0.1pc. Car finance scandal The proposed changes come in the wake of the car finance scandal, which revolves around the undisclosed payment of commission by banks to dealers who sold car loans to customers. The Court of Appeal declared the arrangement unlawful last year, opening up huge liabilities for major banks, including Lloyds. Some lenders brought a challenge to that judgment at the Supreme Court, with a ruling yet to be handed down in the case. The Treasury sought to intervene in the case amid fears the car finance market could grind to a halt ahead of a ruling, but Ms Reeves's petition was rejected. Charlie Nunn, the chief executive of Lloyds Banking Group, last year warned the car finance deliberations were harming the entire economy. 'Investors are looking at this and saying this principle of the courts coming up with decisions independently from the regulation – which is then having a significant retrospective look back – is bleeding across the whole economy,' he said in December. Emma Reynolds, the economic secretary to the Treasury,appeared to agree as she unveiled the consultation. She said: 'For years, stakeholders have consistently raised concerns that some elements of the redress framework can generate problems and lead to inconsistent outcomes for consumers and uncertainty for firms. 'This has suppressed investment and innovation in UK financial services, which can lead to firms offering fewer, less innovative products for consumers due to concerns about potential future redress.' Sarah Pritchard, deputy chief executive at the FCA, said the reforms would balance consumer interests with those of banks and the wider economy. 'When something goes wrong, it is right that people are compensated. But a lack of certainty in the financial redress system can hold back investment and innovation,' she said. 'Our changes will help create a system that is more predictable for firms and gives consumers quick and fair compensation where they're owed it, supporting UK growth.' However, consumer champions warned that the plans meant victims of poor financial practice risked losing out. Gina Miller of True and Fair, a financial campaign group, said: 'The proposed changes will reduce the FOS's powers to make awards, give the FCA a much greater say in mass redress schemes, and slashes the interest paid on redress. So much for the principle that consumers must be fairly compensated when they suffer loss due to regulatory or industry failure. 'These proposed measures risk tilting the balance of power further in favour of financial institutions, at the expense of ordinary savers, investors and small businesses. Limiting redress when schemes become 'too big' for banks to bear is not only unfair but undermines the very purpose of regulation: to protect consumers, not institutions.'

M4 motorway in Berkshire closed due to lorry fire
M4 motorway in Berkshire closed due to lorry fire

BBC News

time18 minutes ago

  • BBC News

M4 motorway in Berkshire closed due to lorry fire

A major motorway has been closed because of a lorry Highways said "multiple fire appliances" attended the fire on the M4 westbound carriageway between junction 12 for Reading and junction 13 for Newbury just after 13:00 eastbound carriageway is also being held because of smoke drifting across the carriageway, the company fire was extinguished just after 16:00 but crews remain at the scene, Royal Berkshire Fire and Rescue (RBFRS) said. The BBC has approached Thames Valley Police and South Central Ambulance Service for more information. You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X, or Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store