Resolution Foundation
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The Resolution Foundation is an independent think-tank dedicated to lifting living standards in the UK.
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Hello and welcome to all our new followers 👋

To ensure you're getting all the best analysis and insights, we've made a starter pack of all our staff on Bluesky. Make sure to give them a follow too ⤵️
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resfoundation.bsky.social
Passive wealth accumulation – where wealth increases due to rising asset prices – has been responsible for more than half the increase in average family wealth between 2010-12 and 2020-22.

Read more about what's been happening with household wealth in Britain in our latest report⬇️
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Chart showing estimated mean change in family wealth per adult over preceding two years, by type of wealth accumulation: GB

Since the start of the 2010s (2010-12), passive gains have accounted for 53 per cent of the growth in average family wealth, with the remaining 47 per cent coming from active accumulation.
resfoundation.bsky.social
Affordable housing stock has fallen drastically relative to population since the early 1980s ⤵️
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chart showing Affordable dwelling stock per 1,000 adults (left axis), and additional affordable homes (right axis): England
resfoundation.bsky.social
🏘️ The Government's housebuilidng targets are ambitious, but hitting them is key to reducing pressure on private rents and temporary accommodation.

Read more: buff.ly/jzJulXO
1. Hitting its ambitious housing target is key

Hitting the Government’s target of 1.5 million new homes in England over this Parliament, equivalent to around 300,000 new homes per year, would arrest the recent decline in Britain’s housing stock relative to its population. 

With higher levels of housing-stock-to-population associated with lower average private rents, hitting this hard-to-reach annual housing target over the next decade should ease pressure on housing costs. 2. Boosting affordable housing stock is a bigger challenge

The supply of affordable homes has fallen drastically from a peak of 154 per 1,000 adults in 1979 to just 88 in 2024.

The Government’s allocation of £39 billion through the Social and Affordable Homes Programme over the next ten years is a welcome attempt to address this decline.
3. Lack of affordable housing has serious consequence

Five decades of decline means in England today there are 131,000 fewer affordable homes than there were in 1980. 

There are 1.3 million households on local authority social home waiting lists and 131,000 households – including 169,000 children – were in temporary accommodation as of March 2025. 4. New homes must be built in the right places

Cities such as London, Oxford and Bristol have some of the most expensive housing markets in the country and should be prime targets. But it’s also important building is targeted not just to expensive areas, but also those with huge productivity potential, which hold the key to boosting economic growth. Therefore, building in rapidly growing areas like Birmingham and Greater Manchester should be a priority.  

These major cities may be relatively affordable now, but housing demand and cost pressures will increase as productivity grows if housing stock doesn’t keep pace.
resfoundation.bsky.social
Wealth is unevenly distributed across Britain, but there is also significant wealth inequality within regions.

London is the most unequal region: in 2020-22, families at the 90th percentile of the wealth distribution in the capital held 12-times more wealth per adult than the median family
Chart showing Ratio of the 90th percentile and the 50th percentile of net family wealth per adult, by region and nation: 2006-08 to 2020-22

London, unsurprisingly, stands out as the most unequal region: in 2020-22, families at the 90th percentile of the wealth distribution in the capital held 12-times more wealth per adult than the median family. For comparison, the ratio between the 90th and 50th percentiles of net family wealth per adult across Britain as a whole was 5.2.
resfoundation.bsky.social
Britain's wealth gaps means that a typical worker would need to save more than a lifetime’s worth of their earnings to become wealthy

It would now take 52 years of typical earnings – £1.3 million in total – to move from the middle to the top of the wealth distribution.

➡️ buff.ly/Ya8kInK
Chart showing ratio of the absolute wealth gap between fifth and top wealth deciles (measured by average family wealth per adult) to median full-time earnings: UK/GB

In 2006-08, the gap in average wealth per adult between the top and middle deciles was equivalent to around 38 times typical fulltime earnings. By 2020-22, this had risen to 52 times
resfoundation.bsky.social
The UK outlook for productivity is poor across the board but the Bank's view is far more pessimistic than the OBR (for now).

Catherine talks about a U-shape of productivity across firms, where mid-productivity firms are especially keen to invest to catch-up with top but face financial contraints.
Reposted by Resolution Foundation
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Here at ⁦‪the Resolution Foundation‬⁩ we have Catherine Mann talking about demand weakness. Great event with Michael Saunders too: www.resolutionfoundation.org/events/expla...
resfoundation.bsky.social
Catherine follows up with a fascinating chart on how those cost pressures differed across the income distribution:

- Poorer households affected by rents, and energy prices.
- Middle income households affected by discretionary items.
- Richer households hit by higher mortgage payments.
resfoundation.bsky.social
Why is consumption in the UK still so weak?

One factor is the scarring effect of the cost of living crisis, says Catherine L. Mann.

Over that period, households experienced 12 years' worth of normal inflation in just two.

Livestream link here www.resolutionfoundation.org/events/expla...
resfoundation.bsky.social
External MPC Member Catherine L. Mann kicks off our event by noting that the main challenges to the UK economy are twofold:
- inflation remains persistently persistent
- the outlook for growth remains modest

Watch the event here www.resolutionfoundation.org/events/expla...
resfoundation.bsky.social
This event is starting at 9.30am - watch the livestream here!

www.resolutionfoundation.org/events/expla...

NB - RF President David Willetts has replaced RF Chief Executive Ruth Curtice as Chair for this event...
resfoundation.bsky.social
Wealth gaps between families at the top of the wealth distribution and those in the middle reached £1.3 million in 2020-22.

This gap increased by £17,000 between 2018-20 and 2020-22.

Read more aboult what's been happening to wealth: buff.ly/Ya8kInK
Chart showing absolute gap between average family wealth per adult within each wealth decile and average wealth for the fifth decile: GB
resfoundation.bsky.social
While overall financial resilience improved over the pandemic, some low-income families saw a sharp fall in savings.

10 per cent of families in the bottom income quintile saw their savings fall by £4,000 or more during the pandemic, twice the equivalent drop in the previous period.

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Chart showing Change in liquid savings at the 10th percentile, by equivalised household income quintile in the first period (2017-18 and 2019-20): GB, 2017-18 to 2019-20 and 2019-20 to 2021-22
resfoundation.bsky.social
🚨Last chance to register for the keynote speech by External MPC member Dr. Catherine L. Mann🚨

Join us tomorrow morning to hear how the recent episode of above-target inflation and higher interest rates have affected households’ behaviour⤵️

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Event graphic: 

Explaining the consumption gap: Keynote speech by External MPC member Dr. Catherine L. Mann

Date and time:
Thursday 9 October 2025
9:30 am - 10:45 am
Speakers
Dr. Catherine L. Mann
External Member of the Monetary Policy Committee
Michael Saunders
Senior Economic Adviser at Oxford Economics
Ruth Curtice
Chief Executive of the Resolution Foundation (Chair)
resfoundation.bsky.social
Older adults are more likely than younger adults to have seen passive gains in wealth.

Between 2018-20 and 2020-22, adults aged 75-79 saw the highest average passive increase in family wealth, a gain of nearly £18,000. People in their late 30s gained roughly half that amount (around £9,000).
Chart showing Estimated mean change in family wealth per adult over preceding two years, by age group: GB, 2014-16, 2016-18 and 2020-22
resfoundation.bsky.social
Wealth gaps between age groups have widened sharply in recent years.

The difference between those in their early 30s and early 60s has more than doubled in real terms since 2006-08, from £135,000 to £310,000.

Find out more about these trends in our latest report on wealth⬇️

buff.ly/Ya8kInK
Chart showing median real family net wealth per adult, by five-year age group: GB
Most age groups saw their wealth rise in the latest period, but gains were far from equal. Those aged 50-54 recorded the largest increase – typical per adult family wealth rose by £35,000 between 2018-20 and 2020-22 – but people in their late 30s saw only a £9,000 rise. These larger gains for older groups have widened existing wealth gaps: the difference between those in their early 30s and early 60s has more than doubled in real terms since 2006-08, from £135,000 to £310,000.
resfoundation.bsky.social
Wealth gaps between age groups have widened sharply in recent years.

The difference between those in their early 30s and early 60s has more than doubled in real terms since 2006-08, from £135,000 to £310,000.

Find out more about these trends in our latest report on wealth⬇️

buff.ly/Ya8kInK
Chart showing median real family net wealth per adult, by five-year age group: GB
Most age groups saw their wealth rise in the latest period, but gains were far from equal. Those aged 50-54 recorded the largest increase – typical per adult family wealth rose by £35,000 between 2018-20 and 2020-22 – but people in their late 30s saw only a £9,000 rise. These larger gains for older groups have widened existing wealth gaps: the difference between those in their early 30s and early 60s has more than doubled in real terms since 2006-08, from £135,000 to £310,000.
resfoundation.bsky.social
Wealth gaps between age groups have widened sharply in recent years.

The difference between those in their early 30s and early 60s has more than doubled in real terms since 2006-08, from £135,000 to £310,000.

Find out more about these trends in our latest report on wealth⬇️

buff.ly/Ya8kInK
Chart showing median real family net wealth per adult, by five-year age group: GB
Most age groups saw their wealth rise in the latest period, but gains were far from equal. Those aged 50-54 recorded the largest increase – typical per adult family wealth rose by £35,000 between 2018-20 and 2020-22 – but people in their late 30s saw only a £9,000 rise. These larger gains for older groups have widened existing wealth gaps: the difference between those in their early 30s and early 60s has more than doubled in real terms since 2006-08, from £135,000 to £310,000.
resfoundation.bsky.social
Great to see our latest research on household wealth featured in today's @theguardian.com.

You can read the full report here ⬇️ www.resolutionfoundation.org/publications...
resfoundation.bsky.social
Passive wealth accumulation – where wealth increases due to rising asset prices – has been responsible for more than half the increase in average family wealth between 2010-12 and 2020-22

Read more about what's been happening with household wealth in Britain in our latest report ⬇️

buff.ly/Ya8kInK
Chart showing estimated mean change in family wealth per adult over preceding two years, by type of wealth accumulation: GB

Since the start of the 2010s (2010-12), passive gains have accounted for 53 per cent of the growth in average family wealth, with the remaining 47 per cent coming from active accumulation.
resfoundation.bsky.social
It would now take 52 years’ worth of typical earnings – £1.3 million in total – to move from the middle to the top of the wealth distribution.

Read our latest wealth report ⬇️ buff.ly/Ya8kInK
Chart showing ratio of the absolute wealth gap between fifth and top wealth deciles (measured by average family wealth per adult) to median full-time earnings: UK/GB

In 2006-08, the gap in average wealth per adult between the top and middle deciles was equivalent to around 38 times typical fulltime earnings. By 2020-22, this had risen to 52 times