I'm afraid the 1950s disappeared long ago, the definition of poverty has changed, I think I heard that if you spend more than 20% of your income on energy you are classed as being in fuel poverty, another thing that has changed is attitudes towards holidays they are now classed as a necessity, I lost a customer today reason given "energy rises", this was a privately owned house with both people working, trouble is people do listen to the news and I can just imagine the conversation in that house, "How can we save money? Mmmmm, window cleaner will have to go then", warning to all don't get complacent, window cleaning is not immune to the economic turmoil.
As you clearly cant read, heres the facts again about poverty. Not "I think I heard". Facts.
The percentage of individuals in relative low income, Before Housing Costs
(BHC), was 16 per cent. This is unchanged from 2010/11 and continues the
lowest level since the 1980s. Levels remained static because, in the main, real
incomes for households near the bottom of the income distribution fell by roughly
the same rate as real incomes for households at the average.
In 2011/12, the percentage of individuals in absolute low income,
measured against the 2010/11 baseline, was 17 per cent BHC, which is one percentage
point, or 900,000 people, higher than in 2010/11. As incomes across the
distribution grew by less than RPI inflation in 2011/12, and the absolute low-
income threshold was uprated by RPI inflation, the population falling into
absolute low income rose.
ONS:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/206850/first_release_1112.pdfAnother fact: youll spout more b***ocks about how "its not like that".