The majority of people living in Suffolk enjoy a good quality of life and the county is typically seen as a fairly prosperous part of the UK – hence deprivation or need is usually not widely recognised or addressed. But a report commissioned by the Suffolk Foundation in 2011 by the University of Cambridge found that: Nearly 78,000 people in […]
Low Income Families in Suffolk hit hardest by Council Tax hikes
A recent report by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, reported in the Ipswich Post by Matt Stott, highlighted that changes earlier this year to how council tax is funded is “making the poor poorer”. From 1 April this year, around 30,800 Suffolk families had to pay up to 9% of their 2013/14 council tax bill for […]
Impact of inequality on Heart Disease
People living in the most deprived parts of Ipswich are up to three times more likely to die from heart disease than those from more affluent areas of Suffolk. An article published by the Ipswich Star’s Lizzie Parry last year highlights the vast health inequalities between Suffolk’s rich and poor. She found that […]
Inequality and the Housing Market
A report published in March 2013 by Savills, the UK Property Agents, highlights the inequalities in the UK housing market. The report states: With a market dominated by high house prices and increasing loan-to-income mortgages, access to equity is key. Unfortunately access to equity is constrained by income and financial wealth inequality and has […]

Inequalities in Suffolk
A report published in 2011, published by Insight East, the Economics Intelligence Centre for the East of England (which now appear to be defunct), highlighted the particular problem of income inequality in Suffolk. To quote the report: The broader economic success of the East of England region masks local disparities. The East of England contains […]