Living standards Household incomes have finally surpassed previous peak 15 February 2016 Matthew Whittaker Adam Corlett David Finch Pace of living standards recovery set to slow over this parliament, with many poorer households losing out altogether Typical household living standards have finally surpassed their previous peak levels but the pace of recovery is set to slow in the coming years, and many low-income households could lose out entirely, according to the Resolution Foundation’s annual audit of living standards. Living Standards 2016 – which provides a detailed breakdown of what’s happening to living standards, and uses projected labour market trends alongside announced tax and benefit changes to forecast changes over the remainder of the parliament – shows that the backdrop of rising employment and ultra-low inflation has led to strong income growth in recent years. The recent recovery has also been broad-based, leaving typical household income – at £24,300 – above its 2009 peak. The report shows that the downturn and recovery (2008 to 2015) has been felt very differently across the UK. Typical household income growth has been strongest in Scotland (4 per cent), while incomes in Northern Ireland (-2.4 per cent), the West Midlands (-1.9 per cent) and Eastern England (-0.8 per cent) are still below pre-crash levels. The report also highlights a stark contrast between pensioner and working age households. Typical pensioner household incomes have grown steadily in the wake of the crash, even while working age household incomes fell. This divergence predates the downturn, with pensioner incomes having grown ten times faster than working age ones since 2002. The Foundation’s outlook for living standards over the parliament suggests that the strong broad-based recovery of recent years may not last. It warns that rising inflation, significant reductions in welfare, and an uncertain outlook for pay could lead to a slowdown in household income growth, with living standards for typical households rising by an average of just one per cent a year over the parliament. This pace of growth is broadly in line with the stagnant income growth seen in the mid-2000s, and weaker than the strong growth enjoyed in the 1990s and early 2000s. The Foundation adds that while the downturn and recovery have been marked by falling income inequality, this pattern is likely to be reversed in the coming years. Its forecast suggests that real incomes for the poorest quarter of households are set to fall over the parliament, due largely to the impact of the four-year benefit freeze and cuts to Universal Credit, and despite the welcome introduction of the National Living Wage. Matthew Whittaker, Chief Economist at the Resolution Foundation, said: “The financial crisis led to one of the longest and deepest squeezes on household incomes in living memory. But the welcome recent backdrop of strong employment growth and ultra low inflation has meant that typical household incomes have finally surpassed their previous peak. “It’s particularly encouraging to see that the recent recovery has been broadly shared, with low-income households receiving the strongest living standards boost of all. “But there are huge uncertainties surrounding the future path of living standards. The pace of recovery is likely to slow over the remainder of the parliament. Substantial benefit cuts will bear down most heavily on poorer households, with many seeing their incomes fall as a result. “Successfully implementing the new National Living Wage, making progress towards the government’s full employment target, and unwinding some of the worst effects of the cuts to Universal Credit will hold the key to securing a strong and sustained living standards recovery that is felt by all.” Notes to Editors Embargoed copies of Living Standards 2016 are available from the press office. The Resolution Foundation will present the key findings from the report at an event tomorrow morning (9.30-11am) with Heidi Allen MP, Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee and Gideon Skinner from Ipsos MORI. Please contact the press office if you would like to attend. Average annual growth in real disposable household income, by income percentile (equivalised, RPIJ-adjusted)