Cost of Living Crisis in United Kingdom Triggers Early Deaths
London – The United Kingdom's inflation-fuelled cost of living crisis is triggering early deaths and significantly widen the wealth-health gap, according to a study published by open access journal BMJ Public Health on Monday.
The modelling conducted for the study predicted that proportion of people dying before their time (under the age of 75) will rise by nearly 6.5% due to the sustained period of high prices.
The most deprived households will experience four times the number of extra deaths than the wealthiest households, it forecast, with the poorest having to spend a larger proportion of their income on energy, the cost of which has soared.
The researchers studied the impact of inflation on death rates in Scotland in 2022-3, with and without mitigating measures such as government support to help cut household bills.
The collected data was then used to model various potential future outcomes on life expectancy and inequalities for the UK as a whole if different mitigating policies were implemented.
Without any mitigation, the model found that inflation could increase deaths by 5% in the least deprived areas and by 23% in the most deprived – coming down to 2% and 8% with mitigation, with an overall rate of around 6.5%.
Overall life expectancy would also fall in each case, it added.
"Our analysis contributes to evidence that the economy matters for population health," the researchers said.
"The mortality impacts of inflation and real-terms income reduction are likely to be large and negative, with marked inequalities in how these are experienced. Implemented public policy responses are not sufficient to protect health and prevent widening inequalities," they continued.
UK inflation unexpectedly slowed in August to 6.7% from a high of 11.1%.
Therefore, the inflation in this countries still the highest in the G7, fuelled by coronavirus lockdowns, Brexit and the war in Ukraine.