WBG responds to the Spending Review
The women who've been hit the hardest won’t believe that austerity has ended until they see an improvement in public services they rely on.
Press Release
Why it’s time to put care at the heart of economic recovery
The recent autumn statement demonstrates that once again the government has failed to spot the real problems; the care deficit, the deficit in affordable housing and the deficit in high quality paid work, all of which impact particularly on women.
The Women’s Budget Group latest report is a comprehensive analysis on the impact of the 2014 Autumn Financial Statement on women and looks in detail at the care deficit and what can be done about it. The report concludes:
Commenting on their new report, Professor Diane Elson, Chair of the Women’s Budget Group, said:
“The money the government has “saved” from cutting vital public services has not gone to reducing the deficit but instead has been given away to income tax payers in the form of higher allowances which has clear gender effects.
“Eliminating the budget deficit is the wrong policy target. To achieve a sustainable and equitable recovery in living standards, something different is required.”
The Women’s Budget Group makes a bold call for a national care infrastructure plan consisting of a massive programme of public investment on social infrastructure, including child and elderly care, health, and education as well as funding for physical infrastructure such as housing, public transport and affordable renewable energy.
We need labour market policies to ensure that real wages and productivity grow in line with each other enabling upwards convergence in men’s and women’s wages, so that the UK does not become a low wage, low productivity economy.
A national care infrastructure plan forms the heart of our Plan F – using feminist economic policy to put care and quality at the heart of the regeneration of this battered UK economy.
Comments/questions: 07792126390/admin@wbg.org.uk
The women who've been hit the hardest won’t believe that austerity has ended until they see an improvement in public services they rely on.
Pre-Budget briefing on 'Taxation and Gender' from the UK Women's Budget Group – Spring 2023
A briefing from the UK Women’s Budget Group on the key policy priorities for the upcoming Spending Review from the Women and Equalities sector.
Briefing from the UK Women’s Budget Group on the gender impact of changes in housing policy since 2010.