Did the UK policy response to Covid-19 protect household incomes?

Authors

Mike Brewer, Iva Valentinova Tasseva

Publication Date

Jun 2020

Abstract

We analyse the UK policy response to Covid-19 and its impact on household incomes in the UK in April and May 2020, using microsimulation methods. We estimate that households will lose a substantial share of their net income (7% on average). As a proportion of income, the losses due to the crisis are largest for previously higher-income families. However, the overall impact of the crisis on income inequality is small. Earnings subsidies (the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme) will protect household finances and provide the main insurance mechanism during the crisis. Besides subsidies, Covid-related increases to state benefits, as well as the automatic stabilisers in the tax and benefit system, will play an important role in mitigating the income losses. Analysing the impact of a near-decade of austerity on the UK safety net, we find that, compared to 2011 policies, the 2020 pre-Covid tax-benefit policies would have been less effective in insuring incomes against the shocks. The extra benefit spending in response to the pandemic will strengthen the safety net, providing important additional income protection.

Publication type

EUROMOD Working Paper Series

Series Number

EM12/20

Research areas

Health and wellbeing, Tax and benefit systems

Notes

Referenced by: Great Britain. HM Treasury (2020) ‘Impact of COVID 19 on working household incomes distributional analysis as of May 2020’. London: HM Treasury. ; Tinson, A. (2020) ‘Living in poverty was bad for your health before COVID-19’. London: Health Foundation.

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