We’re all in this together, apparently. But some places are in ‘this’ considerably deeper than others. Research by Becky Tunstall of LSE presented at a Bevan Foundation / Joseph Rowntree Foundation seminar earlier today shows that areas with the highest unemployment do worse in recession than areas with average or low unemployment. Not only do many of them do less well in periods of growth, but they are hit harder by economic contraction, resulting in an ever widening gap.
The ‘gap’ is all too clear in Blaenau Gwent, where 7.8% of the working age population is claiming JSA. Compare this with the 2.3.% or less who claim in large swathes of the outer south east of England – Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Surrey, Dorset and Oxfordshire. Unemployment in Blaenau Gwent even in the best of times has never been as low as these areas currently have, even in recession. Indeed it’s questionable whether these places have had a recession at all.
All in this together?