Recent analysis by the SMF found that transport costs are keeping 5 million people below the poverty line, with cars costing the median British household over £5,650 a year. Regions that are less well served by public transport and rely more heavily on car use are the worst affected by transport poverty, with the North East (12.5% of households) and West Midlands (11.9% of households) seeing the worst effects. With government interventions such as fuel duty freezes doing little to alleviate the impact, it is clear that more needs to be done to address the worst effects of transport poverty.
At this event, our panel of experts discussed the main drivers of transport poverty, its links to wider regional inequalities and the action required to minimise its effects.
Panel:
Leonie Cooper AM, London Assembly Member for Merton and Wandsworth
Jonathan Gibson, Head of Policy & Public Affairs, West Midlands Combined Authority
Caroline Stickland, CEO, Transport for All
Gideon Salutin, Senior Researcher, Social Market Foundation
Dr Aveek Bhattacharya, Interim Director, Social Market Foundation (Chair)