The findings are from state-of-the nation report, The Homelessness Monitor: England – an independent study published annually by Crisis and the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) that analyses the impact on homelessness of economic and policy developments.
England has the highest rate of homelessness of all the UK countries with nine per cent of adults saying they have been homeless and 2.2 per cent saying this happened in the last five years, new analysis for the study found. Young adults, people of black or mixed ethnicities and those from deprived areas were more likely to have been homeless.
Homelessness has risen for three consecutive years. The research identifies a housing ‘pressure cooker’, particularly in London and the South East. A lack of supply and rising housing costs, cuts to benefits and to services are combining to leave people already struggling to keep their heads above water at increased risk of homelessness. Those already homeless are being left even further away from help.
The shortage and high cost of housing combined with the government’s policies – particularly reforms and cuts to housing benefit – mean homelessness is predicted to continue to rise despite signs of a recovering economy.
Leslie Morphy, Chief Executive of Crisis, commented: “We keep hearing that the economy is on the mend. Yet as we watch our GDP figures slowly rise, cuts to housing benefit and woefully inadequate house building will keep pushing up homelessness. Shamefully, it is the poorest and most vulnerable that are bearing the brunt.
“We need the government to address the chronic lack of affordable housing, take real steps to improve the private rented sector and to urgently consider the impact its cuts to housing benefit are having, particularly in the capital.”
Julia Unwin, Chief Executive of JRF, added: “Homelessness is the tragic consequence of failures in our housing system and carries enormous cost for both the people facing destitution and society as a whole. To avoid these figures going in the wrong direction, we need to address the underlying causes of homelessness urgently. That means building the affordable homes this country desperately needs and providing a proper safety net for when people are unfortunate enough to fall on hard times.”
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