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Mary Creagh

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Rising Scandal of Food Poverty

Posted: 14/03/2012 12:50

Britain is the seventh richest nation in the world yet we face a growing epidemic of hidden hunger, particularly in children. The reality of parents unable to feed their children is one of the starkest examples of the squeeze on living standards faced by many British families.

In February, Asda launched its Mumdex survey of 4,000 women shoppers. The survey revealed that one in four mums put something back at the supermarket checkout as they struggle to cope with higher food prices and falling wages. The previous week, Netmums revealed one in five mums regularly miss meals as they prioritise dinner for the children when food is scarce. This situation is likely to get worse when the tax credit cuts to families working part-time come into force in April; 200,000 families risk losing £74 a week under the government's plans.

The Tory-led government are out of touch with families feeling the squeeze from higher food prices. The result is a massive growth in families forced to turn to foodbanks for help. Last year, 60,000 people relied on food handouts from the foodbank charity the Trussell Trust, including 20,000 children, and one new foodbank opened every week. This year, they predict they will feed 130,000 people. Another leading food charity, FareShare, feeds over 35,000 people a day through working with the food industry to redistribute unsold or surplus food. FareShare defines food poverty as 'suffered by people with low or no income with poor access to affordable nutritious food and who lack the knowledge, skills or equipment to ensure food is safe and prepared properly.'

Over recent months, I have visited foodbanks in Harlow, Bradford, Lancashire, Halesowen and Bermondsey who are working to ensure families get the help they need. One mother described shouting at her children when they asked her for a bit of jam to put on their bread at tea-time. "I realised then that I needed to get help, but I sobbed my heart out when I came home from the foodbank," she told me. On every visit, the message is clear: the situation is getting worse, with demand growing exponentially; and food bank users are no longer the homeless, or people with drug and alcohol problems. The biggest demand is now coming from families facing benefits delays, struggling with debt and unemployment.

Today, Kerry McCarthy MP will present a Ten Minute Rule Motion to Parliament on food waste. Reducing food waste is important, both to cut the amount of edible food going to landfill and to help feed people who are hungry. The European Commission estimates that up to 50% of edible food gets wasted across the EU. Food waste in the UK costs families on average £50 a month through uneaten food, past its sell-by date. Kerry's Food Waste Bill puts the spotlight on supermarkets and large manufacturers to reduce waste and show how they can increase the amount of surplus food they redistribute to charities.

FareShare and others rely on the big retailers to provide the food which they give to their network of local distributors. According to WRAP, food manufacturing creates three million tonnes of food waste a year, although we don't know how much of it is fit for human consumption. Labour is working with FareShare to encourage the supermarkets and food manufacturers to make more of this food available to people. Defra figures show lower income households are eating 30 per cent less fresh fruit and vegetables compared to before the recession and food price hike in 2008. We also support the call by Which? for clearer food labelling and more transparent pricing in supermarkets to help families make the best buys for their budget.

We will continue to urge the government to support Labour's plan for jobs and growth but families need a government that is on their side as they struggle with rising living costs and the harsh consequences of the Tories economic policy. When it comes to food poverty, we are most certainly not "all in it together".

 

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12:53 on 17/03/2012
I do a agree with some of the posts below, some people will not spend their money wisely. I used to do a £70 a week shop which included nappies, baby wipes & milk, proper ham (£4 a pack) lots of fruit & veg, yoghurts etc. I do not eat any junk food myself & think if you have it in the house then it will be eaten. Basic sense, I now how to cook & budget but have had to cut my food shopping down to bare essentials, skip meals myself so my toddler can have the best. The rising costs of living & a £275 gas bill recently messed my whole budget up. As well as now having an uneconomical car that I cannot afford to replace. Things are changing and my money is going less far. I am now trying anything to make extra money but then barely see my son. Wait till this Government has us on our knees, it's only going to get worse!!
23:19 on 14/03/2012
The sick party was never botherd about us, we have always cost them to much and every so offten they come up with ways to cull us, deep down inside the Hanoverian and his lot think no more of us than they do of Foxes and Badgers.
16:33 on 14/03/2012
Tell us about it, going to make a chicken curry tonight and told the missus to pick up some chicken breast fillets from asda, she came back with the supposed cheap smartprice labeled pack, 3 breasts at £5.88, which is a rise of over a pound in the past month, has chickenfeed gone through the roof or is it just another con on the public, the same pack with 4 breasts 1 year ago was £3. I think the public is being filleted with fuel costs and supermarkets like this one are simply doubling the cost of any rise imposed on them.
23:25 on 14/03/2012
For £5.88 you could have bought an entire chicken to roast, and if you really wanted a curry, a pack of legs and thighs would have set you back about £3 - yes you would have had to do a little cutting up and there would have been some bones over, but you'd have had a lot more meat for less money. Breast meat is ridiculously expensive, and has little flavour or texture.
14:34 on 15/03/2012
Try buying a decent size chicken in asda now Stephen, the missus said they were 8 quid. I'm with you on the breast meat its the kids don't like leg/thigh but I have skinned/boned and cut whole ones before, looks like its pigeon next up.
14:11 on 14/03/2012
It is true to say that many families are in a mess through their own fault, however, I am more and more coming across families where Grandma and Great Grandma had limited life skill thanks in part to the Thatcher years. More disturbingly though I am more and more coming across families where the parents do have good parenting skills and life skills including budeting and cooking abilities yet they cannot make ends meet. I am coming across more and more families where both parents work and regularly skip meals to make sure the kids get enough. Then I come across people who have several forgain holidays a year, and live off nothing but the best. It would seem that the rich are getting richer while the poor are getting poorer. So much for the big society!
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12:57 on 14/03/2012
I know some families in this tough situation, and I have to say that considering I know them from serving them in a shop and thus knowing their shopping habits and think many have themselves to blame. 1 mum thinks the idea of a good meal is a Microwavable burger, a 1.29 bag of Doritos and a £1 bar of dairy milk for each of her 5 children. She buys that quite often, along with bog roll. That's £4.08 per child at least twice a week. With £4.08 you can make a proper meal for all 7 of them. Her kids one picked a £1 bag of spuds up and asked if they could have chips, the mum went and fished 4x1.29 bags of oven chips out the freezer! She couldnt even walk 10 minute to Iceland where it's all cheaper! We all do this to some extent. But when you've got next to nothing and you can bearly operate a microwave, it's time to learn some economic cookery.
10:28 on 21/04/2012
If the parents have never been taught economic cookery by thier parents then the pattern will continue unbroken. In the cookery classes in schools now they are mainly taught how to make various desserts not healthy nutricious meals. We all know that we can go to a supermarket and buy the cheap smartprice etc..potatoes and cheap veg, tinned tomatoes,baked beans, mixed herbs, curry powders and pasta, unfortunately a lot of people have no idea how do make meals with the ingredients. schools and parents are no longer teaching the children of today and the adults of tomorrow how to cook basic meals. schools because the time tables are full of quite useless lessons for the majority of the pupils and parents because theyre working every hour to buy the things that are deemed as necessary and pushed at us through the media. britain used to be a make do and mend society , those days are gone since we became a little america the buy buy buy society!