Home Business News Top 10 per cent of households nearly 900 times wealthier than poorest 10 per cent

Top 10 per cent of households nearly 900 times wealthier than poorest 10 per cent

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19th Oct 17 10:47 am

Only four per cent of people think the distribution of wealth in the UK will become fairer in the next 10 years

Wealth inequality in the UK has been rising for the last 10 years and is set to continue growing over the next decade, with young people particularly hard hit,according to a new report published today by IPPR, the progressive policy think tank. New YouGov polling for the report shows that the public are deeply pessimistic about the future, and believe the government should do more to counter wealth inequality.

The report, commissioned by Channel 5 to mark the launch of the second series of Rich House, Poor House, finds that the wealthiest 10 per cent of households have five times the wealth of the bottom 50 per cent. Half of households in Britain now have just an average of just £3,200 in net property, pension and financial wealth, while the top 10 per cent hold an average of £1.32 million. The report shows that every generation since the post-war ‘baby boomers’ has accumulated less wealth than the generation before them had at the same age, with people born in the 1980s having just a third of the property wealth at age 28 of those born in the 1970s.

The Chancellor has already hinted that young people may be a priority in the Budget next month. The new YouGov polling shows that Philip Hammond is right to prioritise this issue: 80% of people think 18-24 year olds will have more debt than older generations, 74 per cent think they will have less in savings and investments than previous generations and 72 per cent think they will have less housing wealth.

With wealth inequality having risen since the financial crisis, the report shows that the UK is facing a “second lost decade” to 2027. On current trends fewer than half of ‘millennials’ (the generation born between 1982 and 2002) are expected to own their own home by the age of 45. If current trends continue household debt (negative wealth) is set to increase in real terms by 2027 by 21.8 per cent (from £70,400 to £85,700) despite household income only rising 10.3 per cent. This will include a 39.8 per cent increase in unsecured debt, from £20,300 today to £28,400 in 2027. (All figures are in 2017 prices).On current trends London property prices in 2027 (per metre squared) will be over 10 times the price of property in the North East. 

Rich House, Poor House is an observational documentary that sees two families from opposite ends of the wealth divide switch places and finances for a week to see how they fare. One family is from the richest 10 per cent, the other is from the poorest 10 per cent.

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