Soaring fuel bills 'forcing elderly to cut down on energy usage'
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Older people are being forced to cut down on their energy usage
as they face soaring fuel bills, a report warned today.
Pensioners have seen their gas bills jump by 55% in the two years
to April 2007, while electricity bills have risen by 36%, according
to the Institute for Fiscal Studies.
As a result, the amount of money older households spend on fuel has
increased by about 22% during the same period, despite them cutting
down their consumption by 10%.
Age Concern and Help the Aged, which commissioned the report,
warned that further price rises seen during 2008 would have
increased the pressure on older people, forcing many of them to
turn down the heating or cut spending in other areas in order to
afford their energy bills.
The group said some pensioners were even resorting to staying in
bed in a bid to reduce the amount they spent on heating.
The research also uncovered very different lifestyles being led by
the poorest and richest pensioners.
In 2007, the poorest fifth of pensioners spent nearly 40% of their
budget after housing costs on food and fuel, while the richest
fifth spent just under 20% of their income on these things.
Instead the single biggest area of expenditure for the richest
group of pensioners was holidays, at 12.5%, while the poorest fifth
spent only 3.3% of their budget on trips away, nearly half the 6.5%
and 6.2% of their income that was devoted electricity and meat
respectively.
Pensioners have also seen an increasingly large proportion of their
budget taken up by local taxes, such as council tax, with this
soaring by 84% between 1995 and 2007 to account for 7% of total
expenditure, compared with 4% for non-retired households.
Older people are continuing to help out younger family members,
with cash payments, presents to family and friends and charitable
donations the 10th largest area of expenditure for the over
80s.
Andrew Harrop, head of public policy at Age Concern and Help the
Aged, said: "What's most clear from this important new research is
the significant differences in living standards between older
people at different ends of the income scale.
"Shockingly, the report finds that while poorer pensioners are
spending more of their available income on energy, they are - at
the same time - reducing the amount of energy they buy.
"Not only does this demonstrate the problem of soaring energy costs
in recent times, but is a warning to policy makers and others that
vulnerable older people could be putting their health at risk in
winter just to cut costs."
Liberal Democrat work and pensions spokesman Steve Webb said:
"Pensioners have been hit by soaring fuel bills which have taken a
growing chunk out of their meagre state pensions.
"Once again, we see the woeful inadequacy of the basic state
pension, one of the worst in Europe.
"Forcing pensioners to rely on complex and poorly understood
means-tested benefits is simply not the answer to pensioner
poverty. It is time that the state pension was raised to a decent
level.
"As a first step, the Government should restore the earnings link
at once."
Energy and Climate Change Minister David Kidney said: "Pensioners
must not feel they can't heat their homes this winter.
"Cuts in the wholesale costs of energy must be passed on by energy
suppliers to consumers, and that's particularly important for those
on lower incomes.
"We're giving extra help to those households through a range of
measures including Warm Front grants for insulation and heating
improvements, winter fuel payments to all pensioners this winter,
and we will create mandatory social price support for the poorest
at the earliest opportunity."
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