Government Early government responses to rising inflation included a 6.6% increase in the minimum wage, announced in 2021 and effective in April 2022. The UK government intensified its efforts to address the cost-of-living crisis in May 2022, introducing a £5 billion
windfall tax on energy companies to help fund a £15 billion support package for the public. The package included every household receiving a £400 discount on energy bills, in addition to a £150 council tax refund that the government had already ordered. For about 8 million of the UK's lowest-income households, a further £650 payment was announced. Additionally, pensioners or those with disability would qualify for extra payments, on top of the £550 that every household gets, and the £650 they would receive if they had a low income. In June 2022, business secretary
Kwasi Kwarteng ordered an urgent review of the motor fuel market, to be completed by 7 July, to determine whether consumer prices were excessively high. The measures were called insufficient by many people and organisations, including outgoing Prime Minister
Boris Johnson, with the Bank of England predicting that the UK would enter recession by 2023. Johnson's successor
Liz Truss announced a package of subsidies to address rising energy bills, with an estimated cost of up to £150billion, depending on future wholesale prices. The main piece of this package was the
Energy Price Guarantee, which would mean that a UK household with "average energy usage" would pay no more than £2,500 a year on energy, although this was widely misinterpreted as Truss stated in media interviews that "nobody would pay more than £2,500". She later clarified this, while ruling out introducing a new windfall tax on the profits of energy producers and suppliers. The subsidies were initially planned to last for two years for consumers and six months for businesses, but in October the new Chancellor
Jeremy Hunt said that the package would continue until April 2023 and that from this date support would be targeted at "the most vulnerable." After he was appointed prime minister in October 2022 following Truss's resignation
amid an economic and credibility crisis caused by
the September 2022 mini-budget proposed by Truss and Kwarteng,
Rishi Sunak continued the package of subsidies for rising energy bills. As chancellor, he provided some funding to help vulnerable people cope with the rising cost of living. In October 2022, the Scottish government introduced
an act to freeze rents and establish a moratorium on evictions in Scotland for both the private rented and social sectors.
Civil and political Various campaigns, such as
Don't Pay UK, were established to encourage the government to implement further assistance. The campaigner
Jack Monroe warned that the crisis could be fatal for some of the children of low-income parents, and asked the government to increase benefits in line with inflation. UK civil society continues to respond to the hardship caused by the cost-of-living crisis, such as by running
foodbanks, though some foodbank managers report both extra demand but also lower levels of donations, as the crisis means some people who could previously donate can no longer afford to do so. On 18 June 2022, thousands of workers marched to Parliament in London to demand further government action for the cost-of-living crisis. A campaign called "
Enough is Enough" was organised by trade union leaders to lobby during the crisis. Its demands include a return to pre-April 2022 energy rates, a real-terms pay rise for public sector workers, a rise in the national minimum wage, a reversal of the National Insurance increase, and a £20-per-week increase in
Universal Credit payments. Within a few weeks of its August 2022 launch, almost 450,000 people had joined the movement. It gained some high-profile supporters, including the
Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham and US Senator
Bernie Sanders. In November 2023,
The Trussell Trust calculated that a single adult in the UK in 2023 needs at least £29,500 a year to have an acceptable standard of living, up from £25,000 in 2022. Two partners with two children would need £50,000, compared to £44,500 in 2022. Twenty-nine per cent of the UK population—which works out to 19.2 million people—belong to households that bring in below a minimum figure. co-leader
Carla Denyer speaking at a demonstration on the cost-of-living crisis in 2022 The
Green Party of England and Wales supports increasing
Universal Credit and implementing a home insulation scheme to reduce energy use and cut fuel bills as part of its stance on the cost-of-living crisis. It also supports lowering the costs of public transport, providing 35 hours a week free child care from the age of nine months and a pay increase for public sector workers to match inflation.
Media response The cost-of-living crisis has been noted by the media, as well as workers' unions, as one of the reasons for industrial action by staff in industries such as the
railway strikes, bus strikes and
action by
legal aid lawyers. In September 2022, the
BBC soap opera
Doctors began covering the topic in a long-running issue-led storyline featuring
Scarlett Kiernan (
Kia Pegg) and her father struggling to survive. In October 2022, the BBC unveiled its new brand,
Tackling It Together, designed to help consumers navigate the cost-of-living crisis. == See also ==