Last updated: 08 December 2009
Today the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit and the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister's Neighbourhood Renewal Unit published further plans to tackle the causes of deprivation and reverse what they identified as the 'cycle of decline' which creates disadvantage, including a lack of employment opportunities, poor living conditions and low performing public services. The report concludes that the Government's goal should be that by 2021 no one should be seriously disadvantaged by where they live.
The report, 'Improving the prospects of people living in areas of multiple deprivation in England', identifies the factors that combine to drive an area into decline.
They are:
The Neighbourhood Renewal Strategy launched in 2001 set out a 10-20 year programme for tackling the differences in outcomes between deprived areas and the rest of the country. Much has been achieved in just four years, but there remains concern about the extent and severity of some concentrations of deprivation.
The report sets out a number of proposals that will:
'I strongly welcome this report. In 2001 I set the ambition that no one in Britain should be held back by the area they live in. We have made some progress on a number of indicators including some education, employment and crime indicators and many neighbourhoods have been significantly improved. However, to fulfil our aim we must do more.
This report highlights the factors which create a cycle of decline and identifies the strategies which can turn areas around by creating a positive cycle of improvement which can set neighbourhoods on the path to stability and prosperity.
We must tackle concentrations of worklessness by helping those trapped on benefit, particularly the 1 million on incapacity-related benefits who we know want to work, back into jobs. By involving local people in managing their own housing, their local services and, increasingly, local policing, we will tackle the fundamental drivers of decline and disadvantage. And we must ensure that our programme of public service reform puts choice and power in the hands of those who live in our most disadvantaged areas.'
'After only four years Neighbourhood Renewal Strategy is starting to show progress in closing the gap between the disadvantaged areas and the rest. For example, education is showing progress across a range of measures. The gap between the average pass rate for five good GCSEs (A*-C) in the 88 Neighbourhood Renewal Fund (NRF) areas and England as a whole has narrowed between 1997 and 2003 and employment in the NRF areas has increased by 1.7 percentage points since 1997, compared to 1.4 points nationally. This represents an extra half a million more people in jobs from deprived areas, but this is a 20 year strategy and there is more to do.
Today we are also publishing three other documents: People, Places and Prosperity, Making it Happen in Neighbourhoods, and Citizen Engagement and Public Services, which show how the government is taking forward delivering better services and involving communities.'
The report sets out a package of measures that aim to tackle all of these drivers in an integrated fashion, from work levels to poor housing, recognising the complex linkages between them.
Measures needed include tackling barriers to work for individuals through:
Government will also leverage private and public sector investment to support regeneration through:
Measures needed include:
Measures needed include: