How rural poverty is getting worse across the UK

Low pay, insecure employment and poor public transport exacerbating the cost-of-living crisis

Farming
Fifty per cent of rural households experienced poverty at some point between 1991-2008
(Image credit: 2007 Getty Images)

Mark Shucksmith, professor of planning at Newcastle University, Jane Atterton, senior lecturer and manager of the Rural Policy Centre at Scotland's Rural College and Jayne Glass, researcher in geography at Uppsala University explain the reality of rural poverty in Britain, and how those in rural areas have more difficulty accessing state support through the welfare system.

In Britain, people imagine poverty as mainly an urban phenomenon. We think of poverty as rundown housing estates or tower blocks, far from the idyllic countryside scenes of shows like Escape to the Country.

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