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Introduction: Household Finances under Pressure: What is the Role of Social Policy?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 December 2011

Ricky Joseph
Affiliation:
Institute of Applied Social Studies, The University of Birmingham E-mail: r.joseph@bham.ac.uk
Karen Rowlingson
Affiliation:
Institute of Applied Social Studies, The University of Birmingham E-mail: k.rowlingson@bham.ac.uk

Extract

This themed issue examines household finances within the context of the 2007 banking crisis, which triggered the biggest downturn in many global economies since the Great Depression in the 1930s. The effects of this crisis and subsequent global recession were still unfolding at the time the articles of this issue were submitted to the journal. The election of the coalition government in May 2010, and its emergency budget aimed at reducing the nation's budget deficit, precipitated the biggest reduction in public sector funding in living memory. Rising unemployment and the increasing cost of living means that for many households even greater strain has been placed on their finances. Other developments, such as the winding-up of the Treasury Financial Inclusion Taskforce and the axing of asset building policies, for example the Child Trust Fund and Saving Gateway, had, to some, signalled an end to the consensus in government that had been built up around the financial inclusion agenda, and had left a big gap in social policy.

Type
Themed Section on Household Finances under Pressure: What is the Role of Social Policy?
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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