Britain has plunged down a league table measuring international standards of living.
In a sign of the hard times facing families, the Office for National Statistics said the UK has dropped from fifth in 2005 to 12th in 2011.
The league table of the world’s wealthiest nations, using the latest available official figures, is based on how much money households have after paying their taxes and what they can afford to buy with their spare cash.
Fall: Britain has fallen down the household league table from fifth in 2005 to 12th in the new 2011 table
While average incomes have risen in Britain, they have increased by more in rival nations. At the same time, the price of goods has risen by a higher margin in Britain – meaning we can buy less with our salaries compared with people in other countries.
It also includes the value of any free ‘benefits’ received from the Government, such as NHS treatment and education. But the total figure is then adjusted to take account of the prices of goods and services in each country.
Plunging economic fortunes: David Cameron and
Chancellor George Osborne were today hit by the news that Britain has
slipped down the global family income league table, caused by the
economic crisis
Based on research by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, which measures economic and social well-being around the world, the ONS report said the UK’s downfall was primarily fuelled by the collapse in the ‘purchasing power’ of households.
The ONS said: ‘Between 2005 and 2011, the price of goods and services in the UK has increased relative to other countries.
‘As a result, although household income in the UK has grown, when compared to other countries that income doesn’t stretch so far. This goes some way in explaining why the UK ranks relatively lower than it did in 2005.’
It comes as a separate report, from the Halifax bank, warned that millions of families are ‘at full stretch financially’ and are being hit by a ‘squeeze’ forcing many to ‘cut back where they can’.
Around one in two ‘admitted they would find it difficult to cope if their monthly outgoings increased by up to £99’.
Others are even more hard-pressed, with their finances so finely balanced they would be tipped over the edge with just a £24 increase in monthly bills.
Anthony Warrington, director of personal current accounts at Halifax, said: ‘Rising prices are putting disposable income under increasing pressure.
Jobless: This table shows unemployment rates in the OECD states in 2011. The UK went from 12th place in 2005 to 21st in 2011
Comparison: This table shows GDP per head in all the major economies. The UK is ranked 14th in the table of 30 states
Frances O’Grady, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, said: ‘The combination of recession and austerity has taken its toll on household finances, with income levels in the UK falling behind many of its European neighbours.
‘Even before the recession, household spending in the UK was far more reliant on debt than in other advanced economies.
‘In order to address this as a country we need to obsess less about housing bubbles and focus instead on securing decent pay rises and creating better-paid jobs.’
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