Title
Not enough money: the resources and choices of the motoring poor
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
2002
Subject Area
Location - UK, Modes of Transport - Car - Driving, Social Issues - Poverty, Social Issues - Social exclusion, Transport services - Cost
Abstract
This paper helps to develop the social aspect of a new agenda for automobile research through focusing on motoring expenditure in the UK by poor households. It moves the social exclusion debate on by going back to Rowntree's 1901 survey, which established that poverty entailed not having enough resources to meet the needs of the household. Rowntree's analysis of primary and secondary poverty is updated here through the focus on the resources and choices of poor households, which incur significant motoring costs as the price of participation. Statistical sources and interviews in Inner and Outer London are used to explore these issues and the analysis shows that the story is one of constraint, sacrifice and precariousness. Car ownership imposes large costs on poor households, which limit other consumption opportunities. Labour market participation may depend on such sacrifices where public transport and local employment opportunities are limited. This locks poor households into a precarious cycle whereby the car is necessary to get to work and the job is necessary to keep the car on the road. Using Rowntree by analogy, the paper argues that, as well as improving public transport provision policy makers must also recognise the problem of poverty. Home page of the journal onManey Publishing website is: www.maney.co.uk/journals/c17.
Recommended Citation
Froud, J, Johal, S, Leaver, A, Williams, K, Not enough money: The resources and choices of the motoring poor, Competition and change, Vol. 6, Issue 1, pp. 95-111, 2002. Permission to publish abstract given by Maney Publishing.
