Tory cost of living crisis: what it means for you
The impact of the Tory cost-of-living crisis reaches far and wide, but it’s disproportionately impacting the poorest, most vulnerable members of society.
In 2014, the UK government told Scots they’d be £1,400 better off by voting ‘No’.
It’s yet another promise that has since turned to dust – with new figures stating an average family will be £2,413 worse off. This is the cost of Westminster control.
Rising energy prices
In the 2014 referendum and the 2016 Brexit referendum, the Tories promised cheaper energy bills.
But between 2015 and 2019 alone, energy prices rose by 40% – and from April, average household energy bills will skyrocket by almost £700.
⚠️ In 2014, the UK government said Scots would be £1,400 better off by voting 'No'.
✂️ Now, Westminster cuts, tax hikes, a damaging Brexit and soaring energy bills are set to leave families in Scotland £2,417 worse off.
❌ Westminster isn't working. https://t.co/bkLETLohJ9 pic.twitter.com/CN74Avcy55
— Yes (@YesScot) February 9, 2022
Citizens Advice Scotland found that one in three Scots find energy bills unaffordable – and shamefully, almost half a million people in Scotland have had to choose between heating and eating.
And Rishi Sunak’s response is simply a Tory con trick – instead of a discount or a grant to protect people from skyrocketing bills, he has merely introduced a £200 ‘buy now pay later’ loan.
It doesn’t even come to close to mitigating rising energy prices – let alone the cumulative impact of Tory cuts, Brexit and tax hikes on working people.
🏘️ Families now face a £693 energy bills rise from April, despite being told voting ‘No’ would mean lower energy bills.
📈 That’s on top of a cost of living crisis caused by Tory cuts, tax hikes and Brexit.
❌ Westminster isn't working for Scotland. https://t.co/LZLgRffbA0 pic.twitter.com/YW2vgSgfNH
— Yes (@YesScot) February 3, 2022
Rising food prices
In January 2022, inflation rose to 5.4%, the highest it has been in almost 30 years since March 1992. Experts now expect inflation to hit 7% this year.
Campaigner and journalist Jack Monroe, in her viral Twitter thread, noted how the large price increases for household essentials – some of them over 100% in the space of a year – hit those on the lowest incomes the hardest.
Woke up this morning to the radio talking about the cost of living rising a further 5%. It infuriates me the index that they use for this calculation, which grossly underestimates the real cost of inflation as it happens to people with the least. Allow me to briefly explain.
— Jack Monroe (@BootstrapCook) January 19, 2022
- Last year, the cheapest rice in one of the Big Four supermarkets was 45p for a kilogram bag. Today it’s £1 for 500g. That’s a 344% price increase.
- Baked beans: were 22p, now 32p. 45% price increase.
- Canned spaghetti: was 13p, now 35p. 169% price increase.
- Bread: was 45p, now 58p. 29% price increase.
- Curry sauce: was 30p, now 89p. 196% price increase.
And alarmingly, the “worst is still to come” for food price rises, as Tesco’s boss John Allan told the BBC – estimating supermarket prices could rise by around 5% by the spring.
Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the British Retail Consortium, added: “It is inevitable that retail prices will continue to follow in the future.”
The ‘worst is still to come’, the boss of Tesco has warned shoppers today amid the growing cost of living crisis across the UKhttps://t.co/olVdXrGGJH
— The Daily Record (@Daily_Record) February 6, 2022
The cost of Tory Brexit
People, businesses and communities are paying a heavy price for a hard Brexit we never voted for, imposed by a Tory government we never voted for.
Research shows that the average cost of Brexit per person has been around £480 so far – with at least a further £720 hit coming down the tracks.
And for all the economic disruption caused by Covid, the OBR – the UK government’s own financial body – predicts Brexit hits the economy twice as hard.
Despite the clear cost, Keir Starmer has fully embraced Brexit and ruled out re-joining the EU – meaning that only with independence, can Scotland return to the European family of nations.
🌹 Keir Starmer says Tories are “treating Scotland with utter disdain”
🥀 But Keir Starmer doesn’t think the people of Scotland should have a say on their future – and he’s now backing Brexit, even though Scotland overwhelmingly rejected it.pic.twitter.com/0gGsvZr5pN
— Yes (@YesScot) January 26, 2022
Tory cuts: only making the problem worse
Despite the rapidly rising living costs under the Tories’ watch, the UK government ploughed ahead with a cruel £20/week cut to Universal Credit.
The move was the biggest cut to social security since World War Two – and slashed the incomes of over 480,000 families in Scotland overnight.
On top of all the pain caused by 11 years of Tory austerity, the Trussell Trust revealed that the scale of hardship caused by the Universal Credit cut, causing an estimated 1.2 million people to go hungry across the UK.
🔎 At #PMQs, Boris Johnson falsely claimed that "poverty is down" in the UK.
Poverty – especially child poverty and in-work poverty – has increased under the Tories, and the UK has the highest poverty rate in North West Europe.
Scotland can do better. https://t.co/bkLETLnJTB pic.twitter.com/vP9ZsPyYLX
— Yes (@YesScot) January 5, 2022
Tory austerity: slammed by the UN
The UN rapporteur on extreme poverty has called the Universal Credit cut “unconscionable”, adding that it effectively breaks human rights law.
Another UN figure, Prof. Philip Alston, accused the UK government of “systematic immiseration of a significant part of the British population” – while praising Scotland for taking a different approach.
My @guardian story: "Unconscionable" universal credit cut breaks human rights law, says UN envoy https://t.co/rD84xBT6ZF
— Patrick Butler (@patrickjbutler) September 16, 2021
Scotland is taking a different path on social security, despite limited powers
The Scottish Government is already protecting the people of Scotland from some aspects of UK austerity – for example, through mitigating the Tory bedroom tax.
With one hand tied behind its back, the Scottish Government has introduced a new social security system – with seven brand new benefits such as the “game-changing” Scottish Child Payment, the only benefit of its kind in the UK.
However, around 85% of welfare expenditure is reserved to Westminster – and damaging Tory policies like the Universal Credit undermine the progress we deliver in Scotland.
🏴 Independence is about aspiration, empowerment and building a better, fairer society.
📣 Meanwhile, Unionist parties are running scared of the independence debate.
🗳️ Join us: https://t.co/bkLETL68v1 pic.twitter.com/6CHY3y3iIS
— Yes (@YesScot) February 3, 2022
Here’s what the Tories must do now to tackle the crisis of their own making
To boost household incomes and reverse the rising levels of poverty, here’s what Rishi Sunak must urgently do:
- Launch a multi-billion pound Brexit Recovery Fund to compensate the growing cost of Brexit.
- Turn the £200 loan into a grant.
- Roll out a £20 per-week Child Payment across the UK – mirroring Scotland’s “game-changing” policy.
- Reinstate the £20 a week uplift to Universal Credit.
- Introduce a Real Living Wage.
- Scrap the abhorrent rape clause, the benefits cap and the punitive sanctions regime.
👇🏼 It's tale of two governments.
✂️ Tories preside over cuts and a cost of living crisis.
🏴 We have introduced 11 new benefits – 7 of which are unique to Scotland – including the "game-changer" Scottish Child Payment, which we will soon double. #bbcqthttps://t.co/cOHFDMLz4u
— The SNP (@theSNP) January 20, 2022
Tory MPs are too distracted by trying to save Boris Johnson – it’s time to deal with the real issues
More and more people are beginning to see that Westminster is utterly out of touch with the everyday struggles of people across Scotland – and that the UK government doesn’t have any solutions for the cost of living crisis they’ve created.
Inflation is rising. Costs are soaring. Hard-pressed families are struggling because of Tory cuts.
The Westminster system is not working for Scotland, and we’re all paying the price for Tory governments we haven’t voted for since 1955. Let’s choose a better future with independence.
🏴 The Scottish independence debate. What is it actually all about?
📺 Cut through the noise and share our latest film with 5 friends. #SNP21 pic.twitter.com/kJL0GPfZ8f
— Yes (@YesScot) November 28, 2021