The British economy has spiralled into chaos: the UK government’s £45bn package of tax cuts has resulted in the pound sinking, interest rates rising, and the Bank of England intervening in an extraordinary way to avert economic collapse. The International Monetary Fund, which usually steps in to ensure stability in middle- and low-income countries, made a rare and critical statement on the danger of the government plan.
Economic policies that increase inequality and make the bulk of the population poorer have grave consequences for health and wellbeing. This is true not just for the lowest earners, but for most of the population including middle-class families. Currently, rising interest rates have increased mortgages while real wages are falling. This will lead to more expensive and increasingly unaffordable housing. The costs of expensive mortgages are passed on to both homeowners and renters, in the form of higher mortgage payments and higher rents. Shelter has highlighted that almost 2.5 million people are behind or constantly struggling to pay their rent – an increase of 45% since April 2022.
The constant threat of being homeless, and the stress associated with this, is debilitating. This is the toll of not knowing if you’ll have a roof over your head next month, or food on the table next week. This is the stress of knowing that even working 50 hours a week won’t bring in enough money to cover the bills. Such financial precarity is linked to heart attacks, strokes, cancer, depression and reduced life expectancy. Significant financial stress is associated with 13-fold higher odds of having a heart attack. Financial stress eats at your mind and body, day after day. It’s an impossible feeling to understand for those who
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