Half of people in poverty are disabled or live in a household with a disabled person, new research shows
And one in five disabled people are unable to afford multiple basic items like household bills or heating their home
ALMOST half of people in poverty are disabled or live in a household with a disabled person, according to new research.
A report by the New Policy Institute found that such households make up 48% of the people living in poverty in the UK.
Meanwhile, almost one in five disabled people are unable to afford multiple basic items like household bills or the cost of adequately heating their home.
The report, funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, found there are just shy of four million disabled people living in poverty in the UK while a further 2.7 million non-disabled people in poverty live with someone who is disabled.
It also found that disabled people are much more likely to be in poverty than non-disabled people.
Adam Tinson, senior researcher at the New Policy Institute, said: "These findings confirm that disabled people must be at the centre of attempts to reduce poverty in the UK.
"Not only is disability a feature of nearly half of the households in poverty, but there is a range of other disadvantages in the labour market and participation in life for disabled people.
"If the Government is serious about improving people's life chances, it must tackle poverty for disabled people, and it must do it in conjunction with disabled people themselves."
The report highlights apparent regional disparities in terms of employment opportunities for the disabled.
For example, in regions like Northern Ireland and the North East, disabled people are much less likely to be in work than in other areas.