Calderdale and Kirklees households have hundreds of pounds less spending money than the average for Yorkshire and the Humber

Calderdale and Kirklees households have £600 less spending money than the average for Yorkshire and the Humber, figures show.
Calderdale and Kirklees households have 600 less spending money than the average for Yorkshire and the Humber, figures show.Calderdale and Kirklees households have 600 less spending money than the average for Yorkshire and the Humber, figures show.
Calderdale and Kirklees households have 600 less spending money than the average for Yorkshire and the Humber, figures show.

Social equality charity the Equality Trust called for action to address a "dangerously extreme" wealth gap, after Office for National Statistics data revealed a nearly £48,000 gap between the UK's richest and poorest areas.

The average person in Calderdale and Kirklees had £15,534 left over after tax in 2017, the most recent data available – down 1.4 per cent from the previous year.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

This is lower than the £16,119 average disposable income per head across Yorkshire and the Humber.

Dr Wanda Wyporska, executive director of the Equality Trust, said: "We are a highly unequal society, with dangerously extreme gaps in wealth and income between rich and poor in all areas and between the regions.

"We see vulnerable people and low-income families in particular struggling to make ends meet, as their lives become more precarious each day and many are forced to turn to food banks or are made homeless.

"It's clear that we need political will to tackle this scandal and introduce a range of policies that will redress the balance, put more money in people's pockets and stop the tragic and preventable rise in child poverty."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

According to the figures, the UK's total gross disposable household income was £1,289 billion in 2017, 1.6 per cent higher than the previous year.

The only region where disposable household income fell between 2016 and 2017 was Yorkshire and the Humber, where it dipped by just 0.2 per cent.

Nottingham has the UK's lowest spending money per head, at £12,445. That's nearly five times smaller than Kensington and Chelsea, and Hammersmith and Fulham (£60,343).

Matthew Geer, campaigns manager at Turn2us, a charity helping people in financial hardship, said: "The inequalities shown in these figures highlight how different people's financial circumstances can be depending on their postcode.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He added: "This can have a huge impact on the day to day lives of families and vulnerable adults, from struggling to cover simple costs like utilities or putting food on the table, all the way through to not being able to handle unexpected costs caused by a broken appliance, a school trip or a relationship breakdown.

"Current policy does not adequately meet the needs of those who most need it. We need to see an increase to wages and in benefits to stop people having such fragile financial stability."

A spokesman for the Treasury said the figures did not account for regional differences in living and housing costs.

He added: "Unemployment has fallen in all regions and nations since 2010. We're investing more than £12 billion into regions across England via the Local Growth Fund, with the majority of funding going to areas outside London.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"The poorest 60 per cent of households receive more in public spending than they contribute in tax and we're helping people across the UK with the cost of living. This year we've cut taxes for over 30 million people, increased the National Living Wage again and frozen fuel duty for the ninth year in a row."