Helen Rowe

Helen Rowe is an award-winning social researcher and writer. Her first book "Eliminating Poverty in Britain" won The Page Turner Awards Mentorship Prize in 2021. The book was published by Flint Books in September 2023 and since then she has spoken to a variety of audiences including, The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Poverty, The Bank of England, BBC Sounds Podcast "Sacred Money", The Royal Geographical Society, OFCOM, The Financial Conduct Authority and Greater Manchester Combined Authority. She has also published a guest blog for The Equality Trust.

She runs a training course on "The Biology of Poverty" for policy makers and staff in charities and public bodies who work directly with those experiencing poverty or develop systems to alleviate it. Her training course on "The Biology of Child Poverty" is provided to schools (pro-bono) to deepen teachers' understanding of how poverty affects growing children.

Rowe's expertise in the social housing sector includes campaigns on adult literacy and digital inclusion. As co-founder of the Connected Housing Initiative, she worked to improve Internet access for vulnerable and low-income residents living in social housing in England. In central government, she was a counter-terrorism expert and chemical and biological weapons analyst. She has volunteered in support centres for vulnerable women, East End food bank services and a children's clothing exchange. She lives in London with her husband and daughter.

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CONTENTS

Prologue

Introduction

Part One: Our Society

1: Poverty and The Pandemic

2: Poverty and Physical Health

3: Poverty and Mental Health

4: Poverty, Housing and Homelessness

5: Poverty, Crime and Prostitution

6: Poverty and Barriers

7: Poverty, Employment and Caring

8: Poverty and Education

Part Two: Our Money

9: The Green Agenda

10: Finance

11: Procurement

Part Three: Our Future

12: Eliminating Poverty from Britain

13: Poverty and Compassion

14: The Plan

15: Impact of Success

16: Conclusion

Acknowledgements

Annex

Notes

Index

PROLOGUE

Springtime in London is glorious.

A morning stroll through one of its city farms can be a transporting experience. The further you walk, the more enveloped you become in a landscape of lush new growth glazed in morning dew. A clear blue sky and crisp air shivers your senses awake and your skin gratefully receives the slowly warming sun.

At our local farm, there is a spot by the paddock where, if you look in the right direction, everything you can see is either green leaves or sky. It is easy to imagine yourself in the depths of the British countryside. The horses take no notice of passing humans and the bird song carries across the fields. They were in full voice on the particular morning I was there.

I leant my elbows against the paddock gate and circled around to take in the view. My eyes lingered on the only part which wasn’t green, a large white sack of fertiliser sat among the wild flowers in the distance. I thought it was a strange place to leave one, but as a city lover I could hardly pass judgement on the running of a farm, so I turned back to watch the horses.

I began to hanker for coffee and so set off on the short stroll to the farm café. The closer I walked to the sack, the more confused I became. Its colour changed and the texture was softer than expected, until I stopped on the wet grass in a cold silence. It was not a sack at all. It was a duvet which hung across a bench and dangled down to the floor. The only sign of the person beneath was a thick grey sock poking out of one end.

My stomach hollowed. In amongst this tiny garden of Eden was the hard reality of poverty and loss. This was not a London issue; it was a countrywide issue caused by decades of spiralling change. A small flock of birds flew over our heads and settled themselves in a nearby tree. A reminder that nature and the world beyond would carry on regardless of a person’s circumstances. The beauty of the morning dimmed and the cold air nipped at my fingers. “The person underneath must be freezing” I thought. I couldn’t bear the idea that they might not be alive at all. I trudged past quietly, not wanting to wake them.

Wrapped in the warmth of the café, I pondered the future.

“It’s a new decade” I thought. “What will it contain and for whom?”

INTRODUCTION

The idea for this book came to me after a surreal conversation with my colleagues in 2013. We were working at a housing association and in the midst of new austerity measures, which were coming from central government thick and fast. We were grappling with the implications of the bedroom tax, which required residents in social homes which were too large for their needs to either pay extra rent, move to a smaller property or rent out the spare room. The sudden rise in housing costs had caused many people financial harm and we had a duty of care to those involved not to make their situations worse.

The question was this: Should we allocate a pregnant woman a two-bedroom property as we would normally do to ensure her a permanent home with the space for her child, and accept the risk that if she had a miscarriage, it would not just involve the heartbreak of losing a baby, but she would also have to pay the bedroom tax as well? Or, should we offer her a one-bedroom home which would mean the inevitable disruption of moving to a larger property with a small child later on and be costly and difficult?

Which would you choose?

The fact is that if there had been enough social homes built over the decades, this kind of debate would never have been needed. However, when it comes to social mobility, Britain’s past and present do not look different enough. On the face of it, the years 1986 and 2016 seem to have little in common. Advances in technology and medicine have recreated our economy, education and world view. If you had said to an adult in the ‘80s that one day, they would be doing their weekly shop on their mobile phone, you would have received a hearty laugh and roll of the eyes and yet, here we are. However, a more detailed look at our social advancement and the gap closes rapidly. A snippet of a childhood memory is as clear to me as a camera reel:

Under a grey London sky, my father held my hand tightly as we walked down the wet, slippery steps of Kings Cross Station and into the underpass. The corridors were busy, but for a moment there was a pause in the passing commuters and I looked down an adjoining subway to see a cardboard city continue into the distance. The air was dank and the yellow tiled walls were dirty below the cold strobe lights.

The memory returned to me as I sat on the top deck of a bus driving through Brighton city centre in 2016. Every empty shop doorway (and there were many) had people sleeping rough. The same dank feeling hung in the air as the homeless sat on their sleeping bags in entrances to once affluent shops. Afterwards, I wandered along the sea front in need of some fresh air, but people were sleeping in the shelters there too. As far as Hove, I found tents pitched on rough land and even outside the swimming pool on a spot which provided only marginal protection from the wind. It was disorienting. I thought “Aren’t we meant to have sorted these problems out by now?” As a mother, I wondered, “Is this it? Is this the society I have brought my child into?”

Life in the 21st century for many millions of people is not what was expected and social stagnation was never part of the vision. Yet, while the technology and new products are as shiny and innovative as had been hoped, no one had mentioned the huge underbelly of people who would still be struggling to get by. It is now clear that waiting for busy politicians to solve enormous issues like poverty is not practical. They are humans like the rest of us and they need new ideas to act upon. I am not prepared to live in perpetual hope of change, and so I write.

This book has taken five years of discussion, interviews, research and thought. Authors who have previously written about ending inequality have generally done so from a global perspective, but I prefer to write about Britain and what I know. In my lifetime here, I have lived alongside some of the wealthiest people in our country and I have worked alongside some of the poorest. I have dined at the most prestigious private clubs in London and spent my evenings filling dishwashers on minimum wage. I have stood at a cash point exhausted from endless hours of work and seen a bank balance where I still couldn’t make ends meet. From those I have loved who have known poverty, I have seen how its shadow lingered throughout their lives, it never entirely went away. Through all this, I have learnt that extreme wealth brings choices, but not automatic happiness, and that poverty can make people savvy and cynical, but when released from its grip, the joy is a shining light in their eyes.

From all these experiences and from listening to those who have gone before, it is clear that the structure of our society is severely wanting. The churn of government policies made on the fly and without full consideration of the consequences have done serious harm. It is not just the lack of political vision which hinders us, but the lack of realistic thinking, and none of it is necessary.

I have delved deeply into the subject of poverty in Britain and believe that the way to deal with it globally, is to create a tailored plan for each country based on the problems and needs of the population, whilst having regard to their political systems and environmental constraints. The way deprivation affects British society is staggering and with every research paper which is published on its social or medical effects, each one adds to the growing tide of understanding into how poverty affects every person in our country, irrespective of individual income.

This is a book for realists in whichever section of society they may be, whether the upper echelons of political life, people living in hope for a better future, or students starting out on their studies. I am not working to create a utopian society, just one in which our wealth and prosperity reflect our humanity towards one another.

This book is split into three sections: Our Society, Our Money and Our Future. The first part relates to the pressure that poverty puts on our social structures, including the education system, the economy and policing, and how it impacts our biology, from our mental and physical health down to our DNA. The second part focusses on where the money could come from to fund a poverty elimination agenda and how it would need to complement the green agenda, as the two issues are inextricably linked. Here there are a lot of descriptions around how much projects will cost in terms of millions and billions of pounds. For me, these figures can often blur into unimaginable amounts, so here is a way to understand the difference: One million seconds equates to eleven and a half days, whereas one billion seconds is 31 and a half years.

The final section, Our Future considers the practicalities of removing inequality from Britain and how it could be achieved using three key concepts: Compassion, Focus and a Plan. The Plan begins on the first day of a new prime minister’s government and talks through the options and policies that need to be considered. After the plan, comes the consequences – some will be expected and some less so, including how other countries may respond to a Britain without poverty.

This book draws on medical journals, social research, writing from investigative journalists and authors, and lived experiences to create novel ideas and ways of working. New concepts are rarely perfect, but they don’t need to be. The core ideas are there to be remoulded and worked upon and a full list is provided in the final chapter. What I hope to offer from this book is a foundation from which we can go on to consider and question how we create a society of the future which is so exceptional, that it is fit for every generation that lives in it.

PART ONE - SOCIETY

1 POVERTY AND THE PANDEMIC

Before the Coronavirus Pandemic, it seemed a far-fetched dream that the whole of government could have a single focus during peacetime, but then Covid-19 came along and changed everything. On 19 April 2020, Britain was into the fourth week of its first lock-down. During the daily press briefing, the then Education Minister, Gavin Williamson commented:

“This is a whole government effort. We are doing everything that is required, everything that is needed.”

His words reverberated; so, it was possible after all. Many journalists and politicians compared the situation to a war. Undoubtedly it was a frightening and uncertain time. It was a life-or-death situation with huge economic and social implications, but it also showed how collegiate working could be done during peacetime and that systems could change rapidly when given the right impetus.

To prevent the spread of the disease and aid the struggling tourism sector, the government gave over 37,000 homeless and rough sleepers temporary accommodation in private hotel rooms, meals and a laundry service under the government’s Everyone In scheme. Lord John Bird, who created The Big Issue magazine highlighted the irony that government attitudes towards the homeless had gone from utter neglect to being suddenly focussed upon because of the fear of spreading the disease.

The move became a huge opportunity to get proper support to people with complex needs and had the potential to significantly reduce homelessness in the longer term. Sadly, it was clear that it would not have happened without the virus.

The homeless charity Shelter estimated that by February 2021, thousands may have returned to the streets and that thousands more continued to live in emergency accommodation with no long-term plan for the future. Records from the Dying Homeless Project suggest around a thousand homeless people died during the pandemic, despite government efforts to bring all rough sleepers inside. In Scotland, those deaths were mainly caused by drugs and suicide, with only 3% caused by the virus itself. Councils’ response to the virus showed that they must have specialist support available to deal with street homelessness and have more to offer than simply giving people temporary accommodation for a few months. (For further discussion see Chapter 4 on Poverty, Housing and Homelessness.)

By trying to create a nostalgic, wartime spirit during the Pandemic, the Government sought to suggest that were all in it together. It was a view which sounded sensible until properly analysed. As the Prime Minister Boris Johnson lay in intensive care with the virus, BBC Newsnight journalist Emily Maitlis put it clearly:

“They tell us Coronavirus is a great leveller. It’s not. It’s much, much harder if you’re poor. How do we stop it making social inequality even greater?... The language around Covid-19 has sometimes felt trite and misleading. You do not survive the illness through fortitude and strength of character, whatever the Prime Minister’s colleagues will tell us. And the disease is not a great leveller, the consequences of which everyone, rich or poor, suffers the same. This is a myth which needs debunking.

Those serving on the front line right now, bus drivers and shelf stackers, nurses, care home works, hospital staff and shop keepers are disproportionately the lower paid members of our work force. They are more likely to catch the disease because they are more exposed. Those who live in tower blocks and small flats will find the lock down tougher. Those in manual jobs will be unable to work from home.

This is a health issue with huge ramifications for social welfare, and it’s a welfare issue with huge ramifications for public health. Tonight…we ask what kind of social settlement might need to be put in place to stop the inequality becoming even more stark?”

The American Nobel Prize-winning economist, Joseph Stiglitz, offered Maitlis some answers and suggested the disease showed the fragility of the American economy and the social support system, which enabled front line workers to be so poorly paid. He considered the need to rethink the US market economy once the pandemic was over.

In Britain, one of the hardest things to hear along with the death rate, was the food banks’ alarm that they were running out of supplies because the public was stockpiling food. None of this suggests that this is a country which has completely solid social foundations. It would be easy to claim that any country under that kind of exceptional pressure would react in the same way, and yet international leaders behaved very differently to each other. America’s leadership was slow to react compared to New Zealand’s, which locked down quickly after the first few cases emerged. The attitude of a leader is paramount when dealing with a crisis or period of great change. To create a country free from deprivation, our Prime Minister would need to be empathetic, well informed and practically-minded.

Humanity does itself a disservice by forgetting the extraordinary things it is capable of achieving. The density of vying voices, fake news, fake democracies and some charismatic, but low-skilled politicians have meant that compassionate policies do not tend to dominate the agenda, unless they make politicians look good. To succeed, a government would need a detailed and holistic plan which can sit above the competing territories of political life. The response to Covid-19 has shown what can be achieved. A focus on eliminating poverty is not impossible.

The implications of the Pandemic are slowly becoming clear and will create immense difficulty and hardship over the coming decade. The UK’s national debt, which was already sizeable before Coronavirus, will have to be repaid at some point and that would suggest further years of austerity to come, without a significant boost to the economy somehow. The damage the cuts inflicted on the lowest paid people after the 2008 global financial crisis have been obvious for years. However, it is important to remember that austerity was a choice, other options were available although all had their flaws.

Covid-19 may be an opportunity to press the ‘reset’ button on British society as we question whether we want to return to an economic model which was so imbalanced. Over the years, it has created and maintained poverty, inflicted harm on the environment and enabled wealth gaps to increase, not just between the richest and poorest, but also between women and men, between communities and between children. Thoughtful innovation and a focus on the needs of the whole population could engender lasting change, whilst reducing pressure on the National Health Service (NHS), social services, police and the education system. These organisations consistently provide a sticking plaster over the social problems caused by inequality.

With over 227,000 deaths in Britain from the disease, the impact is now clear and continues to be felt. The lack of widespread education in science combined with misinformation on vaccines has increased health inequalities, by making many groups hesitant to accept their Covid-19 vaccine. I have met numerous men in our diverse area of London who speak with pride about how they haven’t had a vaccine because they are “strong” and don’t need one. The fact that they may be spreading the virus without having any symptoms appears to have been either unknown or ignored. Figures from The Health Foundation showed that a year after the pandemic had ended, people living in the most deprived areas, some ethnic minority groups (including 40% of African Caribbean adults) and people without English as their first language were more likely not to be fully vaccinated.

Inequality lies at the heart of so many issues related to the virus that it is now possible to ask the question: If there had there been no poverty in Britain when the pandemic began, how much lower would the death toll have been? We now know it would have been significantly lower, as people who lived in the most deprived areas of England and Wales were around twice as likely to die after contracting the virus.

Yet in light of this, the elimination of poverty, rather than alleviation of it, remains on the outskirts of public policy, awaiting its day. When the next pandemic comes, it will be poverty-related issues which will determine how the disease controls our society and economy, so dealing with deprivation now is key to Britain’s future stability.

Protecting the NHS from becoming overwhelmed with patients was at the heart of the government’s strategy against Covid-19, but even without the pandemic, the beloved system has been struggling to deal with the impact of deprivation on the health of the nation, and the costs have been immense.

The NHS spends around £16bn a year on drugs (excluding pandemic-related costs) and the British Medical Association (BMA) has stated that poverty costs the UK healthcare system around £29bn per year. The knock-on effects are serious and include significant changes in life expectancy, for example in affluent areas of Wales, women can expect to live seven years longer, and men can expect an extra nine years. For children who live in cold homes, they are more than twice as likely to suffer from a range of respiratory problems as those living in warm homes. And many people cannot afford the cost of their care, such as prescription charges, resulting in their condition worsening over time.

(This is the first ten pages. The references are in the book, but they have not been included here).