Home truths

Poverty in the UK and what Oxfam is doing about it...

How comfortable are you with poverty in the UK?

How comfortable are you with poverty in the UK? Oxfam’s very uncomfortable that around 1 in 5 people nationwide live in poverty. Surprised? Discover some home truths about poverty in the UK, and what we are doing to end it.

Are you sitting comfortably? Then let’s begin…

 

Oxfam in the UK

An introduction to our work in the UK

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Factsheet

Questions and answers about UK poverty and our work

In depth

In depth

Oxfam's work in the United Kingdom in depth

What we do

What we do

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An aid plane chartered by Oxfam prepares to leave East Midlands airport, bound for Pakistan in 2005.

Oxfam’s an overseas charity. Surely it doesn’t work in the UK?


No, Oxfam’s not an ‘overseas’ charity – and we don’t just work on relief and disasters. At Oxfam, we work to end poverty – wherever we find it. Millions of people in this country simply don’t have enough to live on and struggle to get by. That’s why we work in the UK.


Photo: Derby Evening Telegraph

 

1 in 5 people in the UK live in poverty.

But the UK’s a rich country. There IS no poverty here…is there?


Yes there is. Children go to school without breakfast, or go to bed hungry. Some adults go without essential clothing. Many people struggle to heat their homes. We think this is unacceptable.

 

Photo: Chris Worrall

 

Margaret fell into poverty after her divorce and nearly lost her home.

People are poor because they are lazy, or make bad choices


Margaret from Thornaby, Teesside doesn’t think so. She fell into poverty after her divorce and nearly lost her home. Before that she used to work with poor people in Romania. Oxfam’s experience shows us that poverty is usually caused by circumstances beyond an individual’s control. If you are a woman, a British Asian, or come from a deprived area, you are more likely to live in poverty.


Photo: Chris Worrall

 

A computing class at South Riverside Community Development Centre, Cardiff

Surely tackling poverty in the UK is the government’s job?


We could not agree more, and we are not trying to do it for them. We develop projects with people living in poverty, like this one in Cardiff, to show how things can change. Then we use this experience to push – and support – policy-makers to tackle poverty in the UK more effectively.


Photo: Karen Robinson

 

Oxfam wants to make sure everyone has enough to live on, whether they are in or out of work.

Poor people live on handouts


They’re not ‘hand-outs’. It’s absolutely right that in a rich country the government provides a safety net for those people who can’t work. But it’s very hard to survive on benefits. Oxfam wants the system to change to make it easier to move from benefits into paid work – and to make sure everyone has enough to live on, whether they are in or out of work.


Photo: Kelvin Jenkins

 

Government research shows that extra money given to poor families through tax credits goes straight on items such as food.

Poor people waste their money


Government research shows that extra money given to poor families through tax credits goes straight on food items such as fruit and vegetables, and children’s clothing, not on alcohol and tobacco.


Photo: Crispin Hughes / Panos

 

Asylum-seekers such as Innocent can't return home because of conflict

Asylum-seekers come to the UK to ‘sponge’ off the government


Oxfam’s experience with refugees all over the world shows us the horrific circumstances that force people to flee and why we need to support vulnerable asylum-seekers such as Innocent (pictured) who can’t return to the Democratic Republic of Congo because of the conflict there.

 

The Ruby Group run by Gellideg Foundation Group.

Poor people should help themselves


And they do of course! In Gellideg, Wales, with Oxfam's help, the community identified what needed to change – and applied for EU funds to make it happen. They now run a community centre, café and crèche, and provide job training and life-skills workshops for young people. Not bad for the residents of one of the most deprived estates in the UK.


Photo: Karen Robinson

 

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