Over three million people go hungry since start of lockdown, says survey

0
803

MORE than three million people (6%) in Great Britain have gone hungry since lockdown began, reporting that someone in their household has been unable to eat despite being hungry because they did not have enough food.

A new YouGov poll commissioned by the Food Foundation and the Food, Farming and Countryside Commission found that 1.5m (3%) have gone a whole day without eating since the lockdown came into effect, and 7.1m (14%) say someone in their household has had to reduce or skip meals because they could not access or afford sufficient sustenance.

Dr Rachel Loopstra, lecturer in nutrition at King’s College, London, commented on the findings: “These figures, based on a three-week window of time, are one and a half to two times higher than what we usually see when we survey about experiences of hunger covering a 12 month period.

“They suggest the Covid-19 lockdown has had a swift and devastating impact on the population’s ability to access sufficient food, both for economic reasons and because of self-isolation.”

Of the 8.1m people (16%) facing food insecurity, 21% didn’t have enough money to buy adequate food supplies, 50% were unable to get the food they needed from the shops due to shortages and 25% were unable to leave their homes and had no other way to get the food they needed.

Given that shortages have subsided, a proportion of the problem was likely to be short term.

Sue Pritchard, director of the Food, Farming & Countryside Commission, said: “It’s taken a pandemic to reveal just how fragile our food system is for many people.

“Our report last year showed how the food system in this country needs levelling up.

“We need urgent action now, so that people do not go hungry, whilst farmers are having to throw away produce.

“This is a long-term problem that needs serious, substantial and radical change.”

The poll data, published on 14 April, suggests that just three weeks into the lockdown, more than 3m people have already had to borrow money or take out personal loans as a result of Covid-19, though this has not increased in the last 14 days.

A further 2% of respondents, equivalent to more than one million people, said they’ve lost all of their income, but 38% of those who reported a drop in income think they are not entitled to help from the government.

Anna Taylor, executive director of the Food Foundation, commented: “We cannot rely on food banks to support the millions of people who need emergency food aid during this crisis: it is too big a problem, and urgently requires substantial investment from central government.

“The government must put money in the pockets of families who can’t afford food, and support local authorities to scale up the food response for those who are self-isolating so they can secure enough food to sustain themselves and their children. Other countries are doing this, so can we.”

The government’s free school meal replacement programme means that 63% of the households with children (aged 8-16) eligible for free school meals report receiving a substitute – up from 54% in the beginning of April.

Sabine Goodwin, coordinator of the Independent Food Aid Network, added: “Independent food banks in our network are seeing as much a 300% increase in footfall compared to this time last year.

“Meanwhile they are struggling to source enough or appropriate food because of reduced donations, limited access to supermarkets and diminished surplus supply.

“Unless the UK Government takes action to reduce poverty levels by increasing benefit payments and enabling cash grants, this situation will continue to spiral out of control.”