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Austerity drives UK backwards to the Victorian age

Cash-strapped councils have been forced to scrap social care for 150,000 vulnerable pensioners and cut child protection spending by 8 percent since 2010, new analysis shows. As austerity remains firmly on the government’s agenda, local authority services have been discarded and state entitlements have shifted dramatically. Detailed analysis of council spending conducted by the Financial Times indicates that government services are crumbling in the face of growing demand, with council budgets being slashed by £18 billion (US$28 billion) since 2010. Yet despite the pressure that local authorities face, a further £9.5 billion is expected to be cut from council spending by 2020.”

Tory plans to plow ahead with further austerity have angered critics who warn of the rise of Victorian-levels of poverty in Britain. In a state increasingly characterized by zero-hours contracts, social cleansing, and drastic welfare reforms, they argue further austerity will impact heavily on Britain’s most vulnerable.”

As councils continue to struggle to accommodate increasing numbers of families left homeless by the UK’s housing crisis, they are also inundated with growing numbers of elderly people who require social care.”

Children’s social work departments have seen their funding cut by more than £600 for each child that is referred. Meanwhile, almost 150,000 elderly disabled people who would have received assistance with washing and dressing prior to 2010 failed to qualify for these services in 2014. General services aimed at all UK residents have also seen a steady decline under Chancellor George Osborne’s stewardship. Councils have stopped, or stripped back, some household waste collections, with large goods collections being reduced by over 25 percent since 2012.”

The crisis of growing poverty among Britons who have been impacted by these reforms was laid bare by a series of damning studies published in recent months. In April, hundreds of psychotherapists, counselors and mental health practitioners warned 'malign' welfare changes are having a detrimental effect on Britons’ psychological and emotional wellbeing. Another report released on May 1 revealed teachers have taken to washing children’s clothes, feeding them packed lunches and offering youngsters haircuts as they warn of a resurgence of Victorian levels of poverty in the UK.”


Among other things, Britain is about to sacrifice one of its biggest achievements, one of the best public health systems, on the altar of the most cruel form of neoliberalism. Isn't that a huge price to pay for a potential "national pride" referendum, or, an anti-immigrant policy with controversial results? Britons should think twice before they vote, they should look closer on Greece. They would have seen how five years of the most brutal neoliberalism literally destroyed the most vital elements of the social state. At the same time, the middle class has been systematically impoverished.

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