Poverty: Rowntree Revisited

by Sean Stitt and Diane Grant

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Book cover for Poverty

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Central government argues that deprivation, as defined by basic needs such as nutrition, domestic warmth and adequate clothing, no longer exists. People, it says, have all their needs met. Rowntree's original research included designing a primary poverty budget for minimum subsistence in terms of weekly amounts which he was careful to ensure did not include commodities which opponents of his "message" could ridicule as being "luxuries" or "non-necessities". This minimum subsistence budget has been the underlying basis of all social security scales since the 1940s. This research, carried out by social scientists, nutritionists and home economists at Liverpool John Moore's University, strictly adopts Rowntree's specific methodologies, values and rationale, and draws a 1992 primary poverty standard which includes weekly budget standards for four areas of basic needs and is at pains to exclude commodities and practices which cynics might attempt to criticize as unnecessary.
Having achieved this through using official government guidelines where possible, the case is made that a) many millions of individuals/families still live on or below a stringent, subsidence standard of living; b)there has been an increase in the trends identified by Rowntree in the first half of the 20th century; c) real needs, as in inadequate dietaries, heating levels, clothing stocks, are not being met on a widespread basis as Britain approaches the 21st century.
  • ISBN10 1856284026
  • ISBN13 9781856284028
  • Publish Date 5 August 1993
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 2 March 2002
  • Publish Country GB
  • Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Imprint Avebury
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 136
  • Language English