The 1990s. My school years. My mum used to work all day at a school, then cook us tea and go off to work at sainsburys until 10pm. She and my dad gave us a great childhood and helped us go to uni. She was a bloody hero and gave up so much to give us a better life. Love her
Same here mate, my mom worked at a care home in the day and sainsburys at night, dad worked at a factory which was slowly destroying him. All to give me and my brother a semi decent life. My gratitude will always be there for them. It wasn't easy growing up in brum in the 90's. Now I'm a telecoms rigger doing alright for myself 👍🇬🇧
What people are not talking about is the fact that the richer have been buying up property and then leasing it to the poorer and getting rich off the working classes backs. The buy to let scam is disgusting but not even discussed openly.
@@TheWillog : Wow! You're not very clever, are you? Where do you think they live, dumbo? They take up rental housing and rental apartments thus forcing up rents. I suggest you Google the law of supply and demand. It will relieve you of your obvious ignorance.
@@somelad3756 And the music was bloody brilliant! No disgusting, plastic-bodied, auto-tuned female "rappers" spewing bollocks about what gets their knickers all moist holding the number 1 spot in the charts. Give me Des'ree, Tasmin Archer, Shirley Manson, Tori Amos, Alanis Morissette, Sharleen Spiteri et al over any and all contemporary female vocalists/artists.
@@thewalkingdad4537 I'd sooner have a bunch of homeless zombies swapping crack and heroin for spice than those hordes of tweenage girls skanking it up with their friends. "Making love's forever"? No it fucking isn't,, obviously. Pass me the Zig-Zags and Spice and let me exit this corporate pop abortion. Ahhh ,,, , .
Two lessons I got from this: 1) Education is key and keeps you employable. 2) Give the rich the choice on wages they will be greedy and squeeze people dry.
Depends what education. Only trades and stem get paid. Pick a trade pick it young get good. If you are particularly academic do stem. Everything else is a road to retail.
Why do many of these idiots have 8 kids, smoke, drink, take drugs and have sky? Poor people make poor decisions, then blame everyone else. Take ownership and don't do stupid things. These idiots deserve everything they get. Clueless idiots.
When I see people like this it really hits home how fortunate I am to be in my position. I was very nearly in this situation. Left school with no qualifications, thought I knew it all and wasn’t bothered about a good job. Soon realised shit jobs are soul destroying and managed to find an apprenticeship in my late twenties. I’m not financially well off, but I can afford to live a good life.
Your govt is the main problem here. They don't believe something call Empty City. They keep their criticism without limits yet ignoring, how much billions they spend for the project were actually building the society, creating job even the end result mean Empty City looks like ghost town but not for long... Every countries face this kind of problem, so do my country named Malaysia. 1998, Asia share market crumble down yet Malaysian survived that period without hardship nor poverty cos Putrajaya were an Empty City. Malaysia govt pawn almost all their land to banker in exchange for loan to built an Empty City that only occupied by strays dogs cos the nation were not bailed out by IMF. Malaysia ranked top in economy recover and Putrajaya project still on going as at today, being the new govt city beside Kuala Lumpur. Putrajaya indeed looks like a ghost town but that was the past. The main issue here, were how you build the city, creating jobs and flourishing the market with opportunities and indirectly supporting the whole econ sector or whats lack in your society. You need something to boast back your slumped econ, you must do something and cannot stand there and watch it slump. Get it? That is what UK doing, when crisis. They only increase your welfare payment without any development. That is how, Empty City pop up in Malaysia in 1998 and causes the whole econ sector booming after 3 to 4 years even other presume Malaysia already doomed by Asia financial meltdown. This thing really happen since Malaysia still exist in Asia or you can visit Putrajaya that once occupied by stray dogs. Cos the money that you invested in building empty city would keep rotating in the market creating more and more opportunities. The investment won't evaporated into thin air since Putrajaya owed by the govt, that slowly occupied back the whole city. Me don't understand, why West fear of building empty city cos after you completed the foundation, the whole econ sector grows by itself.
Poverty in the UK is nothing new. Universal Credit will save you from starving but will not permit you to live with dignity. Unfortunately, this will only get worse until enough people stand up and force the wheels of power to make it change. UK wealth inequality is a national disgrace. We must become a more equal and fair society.
@@Jba8179it's worse than that. The ukgovt have openly stated they will breedout brits by 2040. Yet no one takes notice. Not even all the murders and rapes that dont make the news. I feel like am in a game and everyone around me is a none playable character.
why will people stand up when they want the tax payer to feed them. The only way to stop this is when the tax payer stops footing the bill for companies. So really nothing will change and it will get worse as people dont cry to their company when they want a pay rise they cry to the nasty tories to top them up more.
I was on the bones of my arse in the 90s and early 2000s but through hard work and sacrifice I climbed out of poverty, not that I have a lot of money now but I can pay my bills and feed my family
problem is that still many people work hard just to feed the family and pay the bills and thats it. just to live another month to collect the salary and pay bills and buy food to keep on going. working to eat and eat to be able to work. its a working class problem still, just like slaves but they are allowed to go home to sleep for the night.
It was also through opportunity you made it no doubt. In the 90’s there wasn’t the opportunities or rights we have now, ironically thanks to the EU. If you’ve got “new” money, don’t get too comfortable, they are trying to redress the balance now, it’s going to get bad very quickly
Minimum wage 1999 - £3.60 p/h 2023 - £9.50 p/h. 24 years gone up £6ph yet buying a house and renting gone up 1000%. Councils sold off housing and rent gone up.
@jnwms sorry can't pay you more, it's bad for the economy Sorry can't give you sick leave, it's bad for the economy Sorry can't give you holiday, it's bad for the economy Sorry can't build more houses, it's bad for the economy Fking bullsht mate
@@jnwms Minimum wages do work. Things were worse before it was introduced than now and would be even worse if it hadn't been introduced. Trouble is we haven't built enough houses, nor have councils been able to keep or replenish homes lost due to Right to Buy.
This is the Britain I grew up in. I never knew why my mother was upset that I was shaking in the morning, or why she was embarrassed at the condensation on the inside of the window. It was cold and we could not afford heating. It makes you harder
Living on the streets makes you EVEN harder... Nice philosophy :) Or maybe the government could have built better housing.. Many countries HAVE managed it....
It’s too late for that, the wealthy are too wealthy and they run the two party system (as is the case most everywhere else). The only way things will properly change is a total breakdown of the governments we have.
@@Hugh_Morris Welcome to the accelerationist synopsis. This is pushing the dichotomy of left and right further than ever before. Probably couldve avoided it with the alternative vote.
We need to use the gov.uk petition system to vote no confidence, ignore the electoral vote use the petition vote en Mass ie millions of people petitioning not voting!
That's because education has been so diluted and devalued. It's pointless having a degree...esp when it comes with a crippling debt that sticks like shit for decades after graduating.
@@aleenasmakeup If I were you and I’m 62 try to get into an apprenticeship. Not only do you benefit from the theory side but also practical side. Today you need a master or a phd even then employers will ask what experience you have had. If you want to get into medicine that’s another story you must go to university. I would say IT , law, finance and medicine is a great career. You don’t need to go to university to study drama or art. Be prepared to make sacrifices as this word seems to be lacking in todays world. Good luck and be determined always remain positive and don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t do something because you can if you really want it badly enough. 🙏🙏🙏🙏
@@thatssofetch3481 it's basic economics. If you import the 3rd world as your workforce, wages go down, natives go on benefits and the government skim the fat for themselves.
My mom did a degree in the 1980s at the Uni of Birmingham, apparently back then there was evidence of New Town being the poorest area of Europe! Not much has changed around that area, I'm from north Birmingham so past it on the too town every time I'm there, New Town still has a horrible reputation ...
It's always amazed me that here in the UK forever have the poor been advised by the upper middle and higher class how to live on low money.. How to budget.. When these people don't even know what budgeting it.. Its alright being a toff and going into a poor house for a week to learn how it is. I could manage for one week on low money but u do that week after week after year after year and that money now has to buy clothes, pay for utility break downs when ur cooker packs up, microwave dies., washing mashine, hoover on and on.. Absolute joke.
Yeah man. You can be already struggling, then one day your fridge breaks, and a week later the oven stops working. Your kid's shoes are falling apart. Winter is coming up and you need new coats for the kids etc. It's a fuckin' joke.
What about people like my dad who came from Bangladesh in 1973, worked 14 hours a day, learnt English, worked as a waiter on low wages, lived frugally and eventually opened 6 curry houses without claiming a penny off the State. It can be done, a lot harder now, but smoking fags getting hammered on Foster's sitting in a pub, being "depressed" won't get people far.
1993 i was woking in a factory on 3 shifts and i was getting £14:75 an hour. The wage was so good because it was a rothmans ciggarette factory. My town used to have 5 big factories in the 90s Rothmans, Black and decker, an electrolux cookers factory and a seprate electrolux refrigerator factory and thorn lighting factory but by 2002 they had all moved to eastern europe about the same time the eastern europeans came here for work. I ended up moving to amsterdam in 98 and i was a painter and decorator making good money.
I am Hungarian!!!Believe me the UK. is still better than Hungary!!!We have maximum 3 months of unemployment benefit!!!(Czech 9 months, Romania 6 or 9 months). Orban is selling the country to China, they bring cheap labour from indonesia and Philppines....even those keep complaining that Hungary is not real Europe.....a group of them walked in the indonesian embassy in budapest that they want to go back and claim the money back they paid for airplane and for the Staffing Agency.
Knob head I grew up around twats like you - always bragging about the hourly rate, money for diggs, night out money and working abroad for the big bucks. Guarantee you've left many fatherless children in your wake.
It's often forgotten how grim so much of the 80s and 90s was. No minimum wage until the Blair government. I remember a friend of mine had a Saturday job at House of Fraser in 1994. They paid him £1 an hour. I was paid £2.37 an hour and felt I was rich by comparison.
The minimum wage takes away the individual worth. If you are good enough, you would leave and get the wage you deserve and can negotiate. This works up and down the wage scale for all roles. If EVERYONE worked their bollocks off and left or not even took a role that wasn't paying enough, this would solve soooooo many issues. But people are happy to accept shit money and not better themselves for more money
If everyone 'worked harder' nothing would change overall as the economic model remains the same. The lowest skilled would still remain as the lowest paid. In any society you have the bottom rung, people with lower iq, disabled and they're needed for the work that does not require a high intelligence.
Utter ignorant nonesense. Minimum wage isn't the ONLY wage. "If you're good enough". Everyone deserves to be able to live a decent life with a full time job no matter what it is. If they can't afford to pay you a good wage they shouldn't be hiring. Minimum wage recognises the time and effort the human puts in and stops these places even thinking about undervaluing you. Time after time companies have to be forced in line. There are far more factors than saying "just work harder" to people that work 40,50 60+ hours a week with skyrocketing living prices.
@@robdubz1510 Drugs were everywhere then. They were just better drugs. Ecstasy, speed cannabis. Relatively harmless. Now it's addictive and dangerous drugs like grass, cocaine, crack, heroine, krokadil, and the hundreds of others.
@sarah jones That's because the traitorous left and the corrupt EU are trying to make it a disaster. They are trying to derail the process and never had any intention of playing fair. We should never have saved Europe during WW2.
1996 - things have got worse since then. In 1996 she could have gone to college or uni and improved her skills, got a job. today she couldn't. Taking away benefits, access to education, is designed to keep the rich rich, and the poor poor. As for cuts in benefits, in 1996 they had no idea how it would be today in 2017.
True, You cant even get benefits easily,and rent is no longer payed to cove rfull rents and you have to pay somecouncil tax.People are force dto take any job becaus ethe benefit system is so difficult to get on .
I was taught that one should work hard, and do anything necessary not to be on benefits, because living off the state was considered shameful. Some people have no pride or self respect.
Have benefits gone down? Didn't the government increase benefits by £1,000 last year in response to the pandemic? I know in my line of work we've had extra work and pay freezes for the foreseeable
I hope more people leave. Might bring grocery prices down, which is needed to lift people out of poverty. It is logistically impossible to have a population like France/Germany on a small and restrictive island. Victorians had plenty of food because population size was more realistic.
@@Devenus20211 Victorians did not have plenty of food. Malnutrition was rife, which was the main reason that many people died from infectious diseases. Now we have the opposite problem: obesity from too much food.
I left school in 92. Here in my small industrial town in Scotland, it seemed like the only way to dodge working in a mill or unemployment was to go to University. Four years later, I got my first post Uni job, for a massive £3.10 per hour, twenty hours a week, working in a local tourist attraction. If I had left school at sixteen and gone into a mill I might have been well paid (although probably not because I would have been crap at it and you were paid by how much you produced) but only for a few years as the big mills closed within months of each other a few years later. I eventually got full time permanent (ie not seasonal) work but it took years and the highest wage I ever received was just over £18000. I was lucky, when I was first out of Uni I could stay with my parents. I ended up staying local to my home area due to mental health problems, which I won't go into but I need a lot of support. I was lucky, I wasn't in the most deprived part of town, and when I was wee my Dad had a job, and my Mum worked part time for 'a bit extra' sometimes taking home work in from the mills, or working in shops. I was one of the twenty kids in my year at school (out of about 150 who started at the same time) who stayed until sixth year and went on to University, and it didn't pay off. That woman talking about pensions was right, the future is very scary right now. What I really notice though, is how kind and non-judgemental this programme is. Modern t.v would be ripping into these people and suggesting they were lazy or benefits cheats. One thing is, at least there is a more compassionate attitude towards ill health and poverty from the Scottish Executive than there seems to be elsewhere in the UK. These days I would tell kids to get training, not degrees. We need good work based paid training for young people.
Interesting insight. It is a scary, heathen like world. I also have to agree on your point about how the media nowadays portrays those less well off, it’s incredibly classist and bigoted most of the time or bordering on or is exploitation. But I do have to correct you and say that the name of the Government officially is; “Scottish Government” and has been for over a decade now. It hasn’t been the officially named or really referred to as the Executive in the same amount of time. That is all!
Yes, I agree with promoting skills-based training like apprenticeships, and that many degrees don't serve people that well. I know it's only anecdotal, but my son works in retail and a few people he works with have degrees in English and other non-STEM subjects, but were only able to get retail jobs and had been there years, only being promoted as far as lowest level supervisors. STEM degrees seem to be the only ones with potential to earn one a good living these days. I also think they should change the nurse-training back to hospital-based with student nurses as paid NHS employees, as we were when I trained. We were short of nurses then too, and why wouldn't we be? It was back-breaking, poorly paid work with unsocial hours and we had to study in our spare time, but from what I am reading and being told ( I live abroad), it's been getting worse and worse since they changed the training to the universities and making student nurses supernumerary, rather than paid members of staff. I know for a fact if the training had been university based back in my day, I wouldn't have chosen to be a nurse! Not a chance- I'd have gone into a job with better hours (9-5 or similar, with every weekend off!) for a start! I suspect that other potential nursing students may well have been put off too. All this pushing people into degrees and getting themselves up to their eyeballs in debt does not seem to be working out for the best for young people anyway.
There needs to be opportunities for older people to re-train as well though, give people more chances in life generally. And STEM aren't always paid well...lots of science jobs pay really poorly for the qualifications required. One day soon even Software Developers may find themselves competing with A.I and not so highly paid. Engineering is paid well and always needed but not everyone has the maths or aptitude for it. It's the Finance lot that rake in all the money.
@@dillinger1017 Yeah I think a lot of it boils down to this country having an economy that is primarily based off of shuffling money around and barely producing anything of real value. Many innovative and hard-working people have gone abroad where their labour is better valued.
Hello from Canada. I am shocked at how low the minimum wage is in Britain. It seems to me that the government is subsidizing corporations who pay lousy wages. Talk about corporate welfare.
Norfolkgal22 says: "No, people just get housing benefit, tax exemptions and universal credit... Also, Child benefit if you have children." == The society would be better off without it? How many local businesses do you think will close if the people stop spending?
It’s worst now, no employee rights for 2 years, zero hours contracts, fixed term contracts, over employing then getting rid of people they don’t need. it’s shit for employees who are not seen as humans but as targets, figures on an excel sheet. 🤣😂🤣 it’s a nasty system we are in
Sob, sob, sob, and how do you think folk manged before there was welfare and the NHS? People survived and thrived and had self-respect and pride, both seem to be lacking a great deal now.
@@sjordan7085 Utter bollocks, the poor before the welfare state was created were living in utter squalor (usually working 50 hours a week too!) with a myriad of health problems that resulted in an early grave. The notion of 'self respect' is completely subjective anyway and linked to social attitudes of the day.
Some top economists have just released a report in November 2017, stating that the standard of living in Britain is now at it's worst for more than 60 years! It only confirms what I felt last time I was in England, 4 years ago, when my previously always happy,bustling and friendly home town felt like a different place, with a sense of sadness and even despair about the place that I had never felt before. Ever since Thatcher, the gap between rich and poor has been growing but Cameron and Co. made it even worse with their cruel benefits sanctions policy, the refusal to deal with the toxic housing market or to prevent the suppression of wages! There must be a special ring of Hell being prepared for them,they are pure evil!
@@eccremocarpusscaber5159 Yes, good point. Now we know it's because Klaus Schwab and the W.E.F.s "Great Reset" so we could surmise it's all been deliberate!
@@notamused3715 It's more than that, they actively pumped the housing market artificially with 'help to buy', stamp duty holidays, and an outdated planning system. Retail in Europe is going strong, it's not because of some magic advantage that Amazon et al has that the high street is dying. It's because physical retail is taxed up to its head, where e-commerce is barely taxed, add in Sunday trading hours on top. And don't worry the green new deal is coming, the poor and average person will be priced out of running a car or heating their house.
@@jacmar44 You're right there, unfortunately and I hadn't considered the other points you made so thank you for pointing them out!. It's a multi-pronged attack, which they now added the Covid lockdowns to, on the ordinary people so they can bring in the WEF's "Great Reset" and the Green New Deal is a part of that. Agenda 2030!
I was born in south London in 83 I grew up in the 90s it was tough but for anyone growing up on a council estate in London during the 80s and 90s know that the poor families on these estates all helped eachother out, if you didn't have something and a neighbour knew it wasn't long before you got a knock...trust and loyalties seem to be a thing of the past now
@@PF-gi9vv Sure but we’re talking about the rougher undeveloped environment and the people within,. It’s mad think some of these areas have been stagnant to fuck since the 50s-60s decaying in all sorts of shit with the people stuck in a cycle of hopelessness, feeling degraded with the whole ‘blame it on them’ mentality with no sense of conviction.... I wouldn’t say everyone but it’s been getting worse.
I was a kid in London in the 90's and had a good childhood. My parents were working class but both had jobs and were home owners, yet I identify to this poverty as it was fairly common in London too and still is. Inequity is rife and it is deliberate. It needs challenging on a monumental scale, everyone needs to revolt against this before it gets any worse. Side note: That thick Birmingham accent is jokes!
The 90's? I was married in 1990. I didn't know a single person who was 'poor.' My new Husband qualified that year as a Registered Nurse, I was already a qualified Nurse & Midwife. We weren't rich, and house prices were horrendously high, but we 'just' managed to buy a small 2 Bedroom house with a nice sized garden, very near to the beach in North Wales. Everybody we knew ate nutritious, Healthy diets, could pay their bills, and lived within their means. I just don't recognise this ' Country' as the one we lived in. I'm confused by this documentary, but realise we must have been very, very Blessed. We didn't have anything left at the end of the working month, or money for Savings, but could manage to pay for good food, and bills. We have 2 sons and , thankfully, could provide well for their needs This is so very much like the UK nowadays, though.The appalling cost of Energy, and the huge APR connected to loans, will be responsible for many people's Financial struggles and misery, and my heart goes out to them all. We ( yes, myself and the very same Husband ❤) utilised our years of experience and our Qualifications , took our Sons and emigrated 14 years ago. And thank God we realised the importance of Education, and having a Career, for that's what equipped us to do so.
I remember my parents having 5 jobs between them in the 90's! I even started working in 1988 age 11. I can still remember at 13/14 yrs working giving my mum some of my wages to help out.
I used to do the exact same thing. 1992 as a 10 year old I’d spend my 6 week school holidays helping out on a milk float in Dagenham I’d get £8 a day (which was really good) I’d give my old dot £5 of that, the rest went on sweets 😂😂
This brings me back memories of my childhood in the 80s/90s . It was just absolute shite. No food, no money and no heating. Education was the key for me, I was the only one from my family to go to University while everyone else quit at 16 to go work in the car factory or ended up in prison or pregnant. I got a green card and moved to the USA and I wont go back.
Same here mate life in Liverpool in the late 80s early 90s was brutal. We had no money for anything and even Liverpool council was skint. Most of us didn’t even have the chance to go to university as our prior education was so lacking. I did my A-Levels in my twenties and like you got myself a green card and moved to the US. Moved back since mind 🙄.
Grew up in the US. Worked hard. Joined the US Army. Got out. Went to nursing school. I didn't grow up with everything I wanted but definitely all I needed. My mother was a single parent. I always felt like if I work hard, I'll be ok. I still feel this.
The white people fled Detroit thinking it was black folks causing all the problems. Now the white communities they fled to are full of joblessness, drug abuse, welfare and now they don’t know who to blame. Look at the entire rust belt of the US-look at most of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky, Pennsylvania. The issue was always about corporations and the 1% taking more and more of the wealth for themselves and leaving the working folks (black, white, brown-doesn’t matter) with less and less. Bullshit economic theories like trickle down economics are the cause. Nothing trickles down but the misery.
I was born in the East End of London in the early 1970s, 5 generations of my family had worked the London docks. I saw first hand as a kid the depravation that having industries ripped out, had caused. My mum and I used to go walking our dog through the wrecked dock buildings and along the Thames. During the 1980s we saw the beginnings of the Dockland revitalisation, my Dad told me then two key things, "Son you will never have it as good as we did in the 1950s but computers will be your future job and your future job will be in the docks but will be a shiny city office for a bank.", my dad then got himself into debt to buy a home computer in 1982 and I learned how to use it. 1990 and I'm chasing jobs in IT in the London finance industry, somewhere I later learned where all the smart working class kids ended up. Come 2024 and I'm in my 50s, I earned enough working as my dad advised in IT, to pay off my mortgage by age 45 and looking to retire before I'm 60. Just 'cos you're born poor with nothing doesn't mean you have to play victim and stay there, we poor working class are "built" to adapt, to change and keep changing as shit happens to us and we have no control over it. My dad was smart enough to see where my future was, he guided me towards it and then it was up to me to work my arse off if I wanted some of those crumbs off the rich bastard's tables. I never took social off the government, I never asked for handouts, I did what we working class have always had to do, we hustle and we find ways to get a small slither of the pie.
Things seemed to get better 97 when labour got in. Now that we have had a long term conservative government, I am seeing society slowly go into decline again. I'm not an expert when it comes to the esoteric workings of our political parties; it's just hard not to notice the changes as you get older.
@@BigReptileCrew .... yes they are. To the point of being direct competitors. Their only similarity is that they make a similar drink. Your analogy doesn't really work.
@@BigReptileCrew Well it's certainly weird experience being called a "little boy" by some random too-edgy teenager, but I guess it's the unique things in life you remember.
Labor party is the problem 20 yrs growing government bigger , makes workers and small business owners in private sector become poorer the taxes you are rapped with
I remember this. I was a teenager in the 90s. My dad was self-employed, so even though we were poor (by most standards) and his income could be unsteady, we had no government assistance. I remember being jealous of the free school meals kids at school because my parents couldn't afford the full cost of a school dinner. My mum used to work two or sometimes three jobs. (Her main income came as a school cook but she also worked intermittently in shops at weekends, etc.) The minimum wage came at a trade-off, with greater powers awarded to employers to put employees on zero hours contracts. This was under Blair and Brown's watch, so a Labour government in name but not in ideology. Not much improved. In fact, in some ways they became worse whilst in others there was some improvement. Things are just as bad now. Though I'm in a "professional" job, I'm on a fractional contract and working ludicrous amounts of overtime but in a position of constant financial insecurity - and have been for all of my working adult life (since '98/'99), so through consecutive Labour and Conservative governments. If my employer decides I can't have the overtime for one year, I won't be able to pay the bills. After tax and necessary outgoings, little to no extra cash for any pleasure or leisure activities. Just over the threshold for any government assistance. The stories in this documentary still ring true: selective use of heating, if we can afford it at all; struggling to buy food. Bled dry financially by council tax, etc. Unable to save or pay into a private pension for retirement. The last few years have got much worse, but this has been true all my working life - through the 2000s and 2010s. Honestly, I don't trust either main party to manage workers' rights presently. Maybe with Corbyn things would have been different, but he didn't fit the neoliberal agenda that has dominated in that party since the death of John Smith and the rise of Blair/Brown.
Damn. California seems fairly immune. If I believe correctly it's the wealthiest state isn't it? I grew up in 90's north England in the UK and it was quite grim. Not sure there was a recession - just general lack of prosperity. Things look much better these days but after the global 08 bust there's just no relation to product/service/property price to wages any longer. Especially for the youth
***** I was living in Spain when the last recession hit with the most lucrative career of my life. There was no hint of economic issues... Money on paper looked good but in real time there was no money in the credit system. Scary indeed. Things are way worse now.
I don't think people wanted socialism and thats all the choice we had, conservatives that don't care about the poor, and socialism which has been shown over and over again not to work except for the people running it at the top.
@@tazzie2shoos Have you ever seen the Scandinavian countries? Its not socialism. We also don't live in a capitalist economy. Its mixed in almost all countries, but the Scandinavian model takes what works on both sides and combines it. That's all it is intended to be in the UK as well.
@@tazzie2shoos Social Democracy is different from pure socialism. Centre Left policies are the best tried and tested model we have had. Even under pure socialism there will be very very wealthy individuals just to a point where it is not revoltingly excessive greed. Leaving a market to be totally unregulated only results in a Darwinian survival of the fittest. Then what do we do with all the "undesirables' ?? Super wealthy narcissistic sociopaths will find a solution to that. A total eradication of the "useless eaters"
@@coopsnz1 Switzerland, Australia, Canada top 3. Then Denmark and Norway. UK is nr. 10. Tell me, how did you even make the correlation? What has social democracy to do with household debt and why is the UK so high in the list?
I remember the 90s like it was yesterday. I had a Ford escort (same as the guys working on the engine at the beginning). I reckon life was better back then. No social media being the main thing.
You can go back to the 90s now - disconnect your Internet, buy and use a landline phone only and drive around in a 30 year old car. But I bet you're not going to.
I was a child of the 90's and we were struggling but we were doing far better than the people in this. For instance we live in Australia and don't need heating and my parents never had a problem paying the electricity. We didn't live in a council flat either, we lived in a 5 bedroom home with a large yard which my parent now own outright. I didn't realise how lucky I was.
In this case, it might not only be a question of earnings. It sounds like it is also a question of space and housing markets. Could you find a similarly-sized house in the UK that falls within the dimensions of the house you are describing in Australia? If this may reassure you, this is not an issue which is limited to the UK: I am a Frenchman who has left for Belgium, and housing costs in the latter are much lower than in the former, despite the fact that Belgium is a more densely populated country.
Things haven't changed, Australia is just better than the UK and always has been. Interesting Karma for treating someone's country like a giant prison.
@@jasoncooke1999 It's because 90's Australia was a great place to like and 90's Britain was a horrid place to live. Britain never changes, Australia is awesome though.
Judge by what is apparent. Why should we feel sorry for certain people who didn't try hard enough at school, didn't venture outside of their hometown, decided to have lots of kids, spent their entire 20s and 30s drunk or high on weed. I reckon 70% of people who are "poor" fit into that category. I'm the child of immigrants, I taught myself to speak with a middle class accent, got forced to go to a Grammar school, then uni, chose middle class friends. It's the only way up.
They have no shame in saying " if you are born poor, you shall stay poor." What a bloody cheek ! Where is it written that one must live in poverty ?? If the British system was not a CLASS segregated society then maybe wealth might have been sheared and people would have had more. Shocking that it has just got worse than in the 1990s. Thank God that one can be poor in Europe and still live in a decent manner. Nothing ever changes there whatever the era !!
So very sad when I see my place of birth in this much poverty god give them straight to cope with their lives im live in Australia and people here don't know how good they have it
Litterally everyone says that about every country. Rather be poor in Britain than poor in Russia. It’s litterally ALL propaganda. You can’t see through your biased eyes. patriotic propaganda and anti patriotic prop. Someone will always be poor in a first world country. People will always be crying they don’t have enough. No nothing can get better because that’s not how capitalism works. Someone has to be on the losing end of a dog eat dog economy.
Simon Clark yes and voting right wing parties won’t change anything. The right have never been on the side of the working class but they pretend to be.
Celab Williams Being poor in Britain means you live in high crime social housing and means you have next to no money to survive. That’s not a life you absolute fool
Wow, those were the days. No food banks, little homelessness, plenty of council flats for all. A working class woman interviewed at home in front of shelves full of books...
I used to work in a kitchen for £2.30 an hour in the early 90s and it was hard physical work with a lot of sexual harrassment. That would be £5 an hour now. Everyone was desperate for bank holiday and unsocial hour shifts. Unsocial hours was double and bank holidays were triple.
Germany did NOT have a minimum wage until 2015 !! The minimum wage is one small factor. Germany is better UNIONISED. It actually MANUFACTURES goods and does not just make money from the financial sector. Germany traditionally rents housing and has more social housing (although housing is becoming a problem in Germany too).
@@Stampistuta Germany is an obvious example of a country that had NO minimum wage. Not until 2015. More important than minimum wages are unions, social housing, and a country that makes products. The UK has only got the finance industry. So, do you undertsand that minimum wages did not exist in many countries until very recently, but those countries were still successful and fair?
|This was the biggest problem with the EU, we paid in, took all the EU workers that wanted to come here, but the working class never benefited, no job protection, no workers rights, no real membership benefits, British governments of all colour's have always let the poor down.
I agree Kevin, yet unions support Labour and mass immigration. That's the one thing I could never fathom in the mess of EU and mass immigration. I've come to the conclusion it's purely membership size and fees they are going for.
None of the eastern european countries been part of EU nor had right to move , work or like in the UK in 90s. Don’t think you had any European immigrants in the Uk in that time..apart from the polish folks that established in the Uk after the war and had families .
@@DeejayBecks1 yep, I’m not sure what EU favored immigrants the person is talking about, most Eastern European countries entered the EU in the late 2000s. Also, I think it’s a little bit ironic to say things like that considering how much immigration mattered in sustaining the British work force, this is what the employment crisis was all about with Brexit.
I was thinking exactly this!!!! I don't even look this stuff up yet all this year it's all over my feeds and in my country in Australia the cost of living is the highest it has ever been
This in an old film, one of the very few good things Tony Blair did was to re-introduce a minimum wage. The world hasn't collapsed in the way the new right claimed it would.
The writers of this show need to understand the difference between borrowing and lending! "She lent money from loan sharks..." - no she borrowed it. This was done several times. Tsk tsk!
Guy gets fired for his asthma and says he doesn’t get enough money to live off. Next scene he’s sat in his flat smoking. Can afford cigarettes. Smoking with asthma. 🤷🏼♂️
@@pakopepefdez185 the video was getting into people's private lives..... the whole video was to show how they were living. They obviously wanted to be exposed.
@ the video is about povertry. People is what can be called "poor", so they must to show some poor plp. But it is not about their private lifes. Exposed... very very bad words.
I can tell your age. I smoked 10 skinny rollups a day in 96, it cost me about 70p a day. There was no minimum wage until 1997, but working in a pub you got paid £2-£3 an hour. So ciggies were not something you worried about paying for. Everybody smoked in working class areas, as it was one of the few pleasures you could afford. Also, smoking is not something you can just stop when you lose a job.
This is an eye-opener for me as I wasn't aware that Britain had no minimum wage, no holiday pay, no legally designated amount of hours a person could be made to work. This is a very depressing system for the working population knowing that you have no legal rights basically within the workforce. How any country on the planet, much less Britain, could make such a ridiculous statement that poverty does not exist in their country goes to show you how out of touch your parliamentarians truly are with the citizenry, or better still, simply don't care. I just read recently that the queen was getting a several million-dollar raise in her yearly allowance & so I guess subtracting from the poor is how you balance the books so that the Queen & her family can continue to live in unparalleled luxury. Thank God that I'm a Canadian citizen & that Canada is no longer a colony of Britain as there is no longer any pride to be gained in such a relationship. Britain has sold her soul to the devil.
i was earning about 4 pounds ph in the mid 90s and it wasn't from skilled work and it was in the north of england, something about this vid doesn't add up. there was def a min hourly wage
This brings back so many memories for me. Hard times very hard. I would love an update on some of these families, my life started to improve in 2020 and I hope there's did too. ♥ 🇬🇧
@@sjordan7085 Exactly, someone at his age and health could find a job in less than a day. The only people I feel sorry for are the children, they are the ones who are disadvantaged.
I had a bailiff visit me (council tax) in the early 2000, I told him the council and benefits had made a mistake, he was starting to clamp my car, I got in, said to him I am starting this car and I am going to drive it, if you continue I will have no problem with it ripping your hand off.
So pay your bills and stop sponging - this would never happen. Benefits and a car? You're not entitled to a car - that's a luxury for people that work.
@@HaggisMuncher-69-420 did you not actually read when I clearly stated it was a mistake and that I in fact owed nothing? The ‘benefits’ were in fact working tax credits soooo I suggest in future you are sure of your ‘facts’ before commenting poppet.
I just remember the London clubbing scene back then, amazing the early 90's. Good quality drugs, the massive explosion of music, love and integration. So glad i forgot about all the shit going on outside of those club doors and concentrated on that moment inside.
Imagine being so brain washed you think raves and ecstasy are to blame for the social degeneration you see here. Clearly a brexit means brexit kind of lad huh?
@Hugh Jones : "the conservatives were oppressing the working class"....Have you ever thought why the immigrants don't whine about being oppressed in this country? It's because they appreciate the opportunity of being able to "be oppressed" in the UK. I wish we had more like them and less of the eternally ungrateful like yourself.
@@charleskurth8250 : "you think raves and ecstasy are to blame for the social degeneration you see here"...Did I say that, Dumbo? Or is your conclusion just a symptom of your challenged mind? Those who complain about "all the shit" in the Uk are usually those entitled scumbags like yourself who take drugs etc and then wonder why all the "shit" happens to them.
@@shibuya3185 I have taken illegal drugs, I am also being made a partner of a business which works globally in a niche market. There is absolutely no good reason for a first world economy to allow workers to be paid an amount which is not nearly enough to cover their weekly needs. It only serves the super wealthy. Some people aren't destined for a high paying job, doesn't mean they deserve to have nothing.
I was a young single mother on benefits living in the same flats as the featured husband & wife when this was filmed (and judging from the balcony/window scenes we were on similar floors). I don't recall struggling particularly, my child was clothed, fed and happy and our flat was heated as well as a building without double glazing etc can be. Those flats were some of the worst in Newtown and were earmarked for demolition at the time of filming. There were tower blocks which were considerably less grim. Same goes for the shopping centre which was undergoing redevelopment at the time. Also one of the local schools was a Beacon school and doing incredibly well by it's pupils Newtown really wasn't that bad back then.
I was a single parent in 1990, I got a job as a cleaner earning £2.80 an hour, my son got a scholarship to University and earns a six figure salary working in the oil industry in UAE. The poverty cycle can be broken.
I was born into a working class family in the mid 60s. My parents were young but quite strict and we were not poor but no way rich. I often tell my son how lucky he is to be able to travel the world, eat out in restaurants once a week and never want for anything. I had none of the above but did have a good education and first joined the civil service in the mid 80s and later moved to Madrid and became an English teacher which was a lot more lucrative than working for the govenment, You can move up a class by getting an education which leads to a good job and a good salary. Uneducated people are always going to be the ones in low paid jobs such as factory workers, cleaners etc. Education is the key to getting out of poverty.
most people are bums and don't wanna work. yet always blame others for there own misfortune. there's always work if your willing to work hard. people in general take rejection badly and just give up and expect jobs on a plate. its a snowflake society.
halacris Japanese society is way more stressful on average than British society... Also, Japan has the highest rate of smokers out of all the ‘First World’ nations. They also had the record of having the highest suicide rate in the world for decades, and are still one of the top countries for that.
halacris Dude, I’am an anthropology graduate and half Japanese. You clearly have not ever lived in Japan to make such idealistic assertions about the country.
Paul Judkins You talking like we don’t live in a digital age where everything is online and like used Iphone doesn’t cost 100-200€... He HaS iPhOnE, hE’s NoT pOoR lmao, imagine thinking in this way, unbelievable So tell me, can you pay rent, or go to school with 200€, or afford a car ? Don’t think so m8
I left school in 1989 with no qualifications and after finding an apprenticeship (I started on a YTS and worked my arse off and was offered and apprenticeship after a year) I started my own business in 1996. I retired 2 years ago at 45 for my kids to run the business but I got bored after 4 months so now work 3 days a week.
My mother was widowed in 1951 with 3 children under 4 years old. To feed us and keep a roof over our heads she did cleaning and sewing jobs. She also took us with her when she went potato picking. One day she was so hungry she ate a raw potato, unfortunately its was a bit green and made her very sick. As she ate so little for so long her stomach shrunk and she was never able to eat a big meal for the rest of her life. A few years later she re married to a decent man and life became easier ( not easy ). My mother and stepdad worked until they retired never claiming a Penny in benefits. I am so proud of them, God rest their souls.
I grew up in a single parent family on a council estate in the north east in the 80s/90s. I worked really hard at school and was lucky enough to get a scholarship to attend a fee paying school (those scholarships were later cancelled when Labour came into power). The local council threw money at me to go to College and Uni and then I got a scholarship for bar school from the inns of court. I also gained a scholarship for a masters degree. I don’t think it’s true that if you are poor you stay poor and that myth keeps people down. You can claw yourself out of the poverty trap but it is hard work and takes many many years. I’m a barrister and partner at a law firm now. I’m not rich but I’m middle class. I’m hoping that my daughter has the same level of motivation but part of my motivation was clawing my way out of poverty so who knows?
It is victim mentality that's played. I was born to a poor working class family in the East End of London. My dad knew which way the wind was blowing, he gave me his sense of logical reasoning , got himself into debt to buy a home computer and told me in 1982 that my future would be in computers in a glass office building up the road in the City. That;s where I ended up in the 1990s working IT in investment banks in the 1990s when it was crazy times. When I was 14 we had so little money I had to wear my dad;s shoes to school, here I was now in the 1990s at age 24 making more in bonuses each year than my dad made as a salary in one whole year. I paid off my mortgage by age 45 and I'm looking to retire before I'm 60. I never got any qualifications having left school at 16 but I worked my arse off cos I never wanted to be poor and ever have to go without.
No it's a fact of life that poverty limits your opportunities. Generational poverty does so even more. Clearly there are exceptions to the rule, you are one such exception, but that doesn't mean the problem of poverty doesn't exist. Its a very elitist and Victorian attitude to say "poor people just need to work harder". Think about that last sentence properly.
The irony is the criticism here is there is no min wage, no limit to hours worked and no right to paid holiday. We have all those now and things are no better for those with little education. We seem to think that the working poor struggling is a modern thing. Nope.
My entire 20s were during the 90s and I was dirt poor throughout the decade with almost no education but was determined to not stay poor and worked hard to change my life. Now in my early 50s I’m very comfortably off. And if I can do it anyone can, have a plan for a better job and work to get it.
Working poor, once upon a time🕒 if you had a job, you were considered well👍 off, now there's no such thing, work, work, work, 💰pay bills, that's it really, the usual things, you know.
Social housing filled with idiots who have kids to get a council house don’t help either. Left a generation of English people paying private rents and unable to start a family. Are t most schools now 80 non English pupils. Doomed generation can’t even rob a bank anymore. Many times I’ve seen homeless elderly people and the other side of the road is a South American family with 2 kids and a nice council house. I do wonder where this is all leading to tbh. Yes I’m English. Let’s not even get into class which severely limits your life options if your not wearing the right trousers so to speak. Working class people are shunned by the middle classes yet they enjoy invading our culture especially music. Gentrification is just middle class repackaging of working class cultures. Ever heard a pushy say bacon butty before. I have. It’s pathetic. Just go to your nearest boozer nowadays. If it’s not already a luxury flat you won’t like the prices.
It's an odd feeling to think '95 was 25 years ago. I was born in 95 do don't really remember, but I do remember as a lil one, lots of council houses without wallpaper or with damp and mould. Since becoming an adult in 2013, I've realised how difficult it can be to make money, and how easy.
Wow, I’m in my mid 30s now so lived through the whole of the 90s as a young kid, I had no idea there was no minimum wage for part of that decade! That is nuts. Seems like something that would’ve been standard for decades but it’s surprisingly recent. Shame on the governments of those eras for not bringing it in sooner. I was on crap money starting out work in the early 00s but could’ve been a lot worse...
yea they took it out, kind of an experiment really. 1983 to 1998. Its a big factor in a lot of things that happened at that time including poll tax riots, the acid craze and all sorts. Although Blair may have brought that back, it has not fixed the problem and many places are still rife with poverty. Sadly Britains economic fate is rather multifaceted, with little production of goods a huge rise in population and inflation. If I had to guess, much worse is to come.
It's not nuts at all. I entered work in '94 - It worked pretty well because starter jobs like working in a shop had wildly different rates. Some employers paid £2.80 some paid £3.90. So the switched on people had a choice of getting better pay. All that's happened now is that all jobs pay the same LOW wage. There's no incentive for a shop or a bar to pay higher than the minimum wage. This wasn't the case in the 90s so some people could be on very good wages in quite basic jobs - I know because I was one of them. All the minimum wage has done has pushed ALL basic jobs down to the same LOW level.
Even those who have jobs,( like me) are still slaves, 4 weeks off a year, to fill yourself with drugs and beer, to numb the pain, that your a slave, end of
+Anton paisley go to work go home go to work go home go to work go home go to work go home Thats All people do with boring lives an i f there not working there getting brainwashed by eastend and Crappy Money winning shows exspecting people to help them but no one will help them .
+Anton paisley >Even those who have jobs with 4 weeks off >Slaves I don't think you know what the word slave means, or you're being sarcastic. I hope you and the rest people here are being sarcastic. You people wouldn't survive being a business Salary man in Japan, or better yet, actual fucking slaves working all day, no breaks or pay, in hot beating sun, being whipped, sold without saying your family, and probably die in your 30s or 40s.
Then you're in the wrong line of work pal or are living beyond your means. Sorry to say, but if you were in a skilled profession that paid well, you'd be better off...
you hope my kids get cancer?! Grow up. Your comment just goes to prove a point - you're an uneducated, hateful little nobody mad at the world because you're a failure.
Sad little Scot with his council estate chav dog. The type of dog you get if you live in a rough area and have no money. No expendable income yet can afford to go and watch your pish football team. You're an absolute joke pal.
I grew up in the 2000s but there were strong elements of the 90s, it was like the 90s part 2. I’ve lived life rich, then poor and now as a 20 year old I’d say I’m doing good, not rich but not poor, enough money to enjoy a lot of materialistic things though. And I must say I feel a deep sense of nostalgia and find something attractive about the days of being poor, the things we did to get by, having to sell our TVs and tech, having the sky TV cut off, not having the latest toys and hence finding our own ways to have fun, I do miss it a lot. Although when I say poor I guess it wasn’t poverty, my basic needs were mostly met, we had food even if sometimes it was a bit of a joke and i had somewhere to live.
I grew up in the 90s and was a teenager in the 2000s, i was also growing up very poor, this documentary made me nostalgic but i don’t miss it. I always see those posts on facebook/instagram of 90s/2000s toys and the comments saying "omg i had all of these" and saying it makes them nostalgic, but the only thing that makes me feel nostalgic is remembering WANTING all of those toys but never getting even one of them lol
Meanwhile back at Buckingham Palace, the "royal" family live without a worry in their world, quite oblivious to the poor people who suppport them. Spread the wealth! Long live the queen & her entourage in a regular house!
@These Are The Voyages Get a job , there is 24 hours to a day , sleep for 6 hours and you have 18 hours a day to look for a job and make money! All you need is a healthy working body and the world is your oyster! No excuses for being a lazy bum!
Almost 30 years on from this and the situation is basically the same. The whole system is rotten from top to bottom (corrupt politicians and unscrupulous businesses all the way down to individuals not controlling their own actions such that they'd benefit themselves and the immediate environment surrounding them). WHAT CAN BE DONE TO BRING ABOUT ANY SORT OF MEANINGFUL, POSITIVE CHANGE? 🤔
Rang true hearing the lady speak about unions having no power barley any union power nowadays thanks to American companies buying UK businesses taking power from unions. Perkins for example bought by CAT
Not much has changed since the 1990's. 30 years later in 2023 the Conservatives are still relying on "Trickle down economics" which still isn't working. They are still cutting the amount spent on welfare. There are more people having to use food banks. Many are expected to survive on £368 per month on Universal Credit which still doesn't cover the basic essentials like food, gas, electric and rent. Many who are working having to claim benefits because the employers don't pay enough. The crime rate has increased with more people shoplifting, begging on the streets and knife crime muggings. There is still poverty in Britain and it's increasing. The Conservative mantra was"You are always better off in work." Now the Conservatives mantra is, "Any job is better than no job." If the job doesn't pay enough to live on then tough luck we will sanction any benefits you were getting. The Conservatives are keeping people in poverty and blaming the poor for being poor because they lack the skills to get a better paying job. When you try to better yourself by going to college the Jobcentre workers tell you to give up the course to take a minimum wage job. However, the whole purpose of going to college to learn new skills would be to get a job with higher pay than the minimum wage.
Ah. The victim mentality. Maybe if so many people didn't go and have child after child and then expect that the world owes them a favour. Funny how a lot of these families can still buy alcohol and takeaways and have the latest phones, eh? People need to take ownership of their own destinies - if you can't afford to have a comfortable lifestyle with children, don't have them. Don't bring another life into this world and then expect it's everyone elses responsibility when you're struggling to pay for things. People went through a lot worse than this in the past and came through the other side, so why do we have a nation of whingers and victims now? It's a real shame that people don't see the merit in working hard and making the best lives for themselves instead of moaning that they're poor.
Complaining about jobs that don't pay enough - if you actually worked hard in school and didn't doss about, and actually aimed to have a career instead of working a minimum wage job, maybe you wouldn't be in the position to moan about these things. Just a thought.
@@andyc6542 The problem with your position is it assumes libertarian free will, which we have good reason to suggest doesn't exist. It's a fallacy. It's not a victim mentality, it's acknowledging we live in a world of cause and effect. A world with a system that requires poor and rich. Capitalism NEEDS a pool of people desperate enough to take whatever job they can to make ends meet. It needs people in debt traps, on low wages, with no purchasing power, because purchasing power in this system is freedom.
@@DavidSmith-oy4of of course - I fully agree with that. However, it's not fair to expect people on the lowest rungs of society, regardless of needing jobs like warehouse workers and till workers needing to be done, to be afforded the same luxuries in life as those at the top. Otherwise, wheres the incentive for learning, developing and striving for better?
I left school in 1987, and I left with GCSE. I can say the qualifications haven't made any real difference to finding employment. It's these exclusions between privileged parts in Britain and disadvantage areas. I had a chance to go into further education, but I took the option to work. I earned around £76 per week at that time. I don't think people today can empathize with the depression in the youth in that time. Those electric cards were the meter would run out before the morning. People had to switch all the appliances on burn energy to be able to set their alarm clock. The education system was vexed. In my opinion, the government was responsible for that devaluation and taking that out of education, health care, enforcement, and mostly everything else wasn't only diabolical. It was callas. Undermine to the value the government sold off Britain's assets and privatisation and peoples future and the youth aspirations. It's still the same economic structure in the modern day. It's the value of worth, and it's against the common man and the spiritual element.
The 1990s. My school years. My mum used to work all day at a school, then cook us tea and go off to work at sainsburys until 10pm. She and my dad gave us a great childhood and helped us go to uni. She was a bloody hero and gave up so much to give us a better life. Love her
What happened if you were sick?
Same here. My mum had 3 jobs and I’m obviously forever in her debt. We are lucky to have these kind of mums
Same here mate, my mom worked at a care home in the day and sainsburys at night, dad worked at a factory which was slowly destroying him. All to give me and my brother a semi decent life. My gratitude will always be there for them. It wasn't easy growing up in brum in the 90's. Now I'm a telecoms rigger doing alright for myself 👍🇬🇧
Bless her, Ameen
what did you do to repay her back?
What people are not talking about is the fact that the richer have been buying up property and then leasing it to the poorer and getting rich off the working classes backs. The buy to let scam is disgusting but not even discussed openly.
Get over that chip on your shoulder about the rich. Immigrants have taken up far more property than the rich ever have.
@@shibuya3185 the immigrants dont own properties
@@TheWillog : Er, they rent properties which forces up rents, especially for the poorer locals.
Shibuya 😂😂 immigrants are forcing up rents ? How are they doing that most immigrants are poorer than the poor English
@@TheWillog : Wow! You're not very clever, are you? Where do you think they live, dumbo? They take up rental housing and rental apartments thus forcing up rents. I suggest you Google the law of supply and demand. It will relieve you of your obvious ignorance.
British television was better in the 90's.
It wasn't a perfect time but modesty and humility was around alot more
@@somelad3756
And the music was bloody brilliant!
No disgusting, plastic-bodied, auto-tuned female "rappers" spewing bollocks about what gets their knickers all moist holding the number 1 spot in the charts.
Give me Des'ree, Tasmin Archer, Shirley Manson, Tori Amos, Alanis Morissette, Sharleen Spiteri et al over any and all contemporary female vocalists/artists.
my missus has been watching 90s eastenders and it's like pulling teeth
@@clovenbullet IKR! It's so corny, and the "doof doof" scenes are absolutely rubbish 😆
Saw a bit of Blind Date and Grange hill there on the box
Imagine living in a world where the government stops you working and puts you into poverty in case you get ill
Oh wait...
Sounds horrific.
Nah it'll never happen you conspiracy theorist .oh wait !
there's a lot of waiting going on here
Imagine also that what happened during those times ain't far off where we're living in now...don't we learn?
Only real difference is we have swapped Spice Girls for Spice Heads.
liam fletcher 😂😂 true!
Absolutely! 🤣
This being a vast improvement
@@notmyrealname9059 certainly more entertaining, and ultimately adding more to society.
@@thewalkingdad4537 I'd sooner have a bunch of homeless zombies swapping crack and heroin for spice than those hordes of tweenage girls skanking it up with their friends. "Making love's forever"? No it fucking isn't,, obviously. Pass me the Zig-Zags and Spice and let me exit this corporate pop abortion. Ahhh ,,, , .
Two lessons I got from this:
1) Education is key and keeps you employable.
2) Give the rich the choice on wages they will be greedy and squeeze people dry.
2) Give t̶h̶e̶ ̶r̶i̶c̶h̶ people the choice on wages they will be greedy and squeeze people dry.
Depends what education. Only trades and stem get paid. Pick a trade pick it young get good. If you are particularly academic do stem. Everything else is a road to retail.
@@zakdank No, just the rich. Fuck off with that nonsense
@@avancalledrupert5130 well said.
@@kuski655 Commie spotted
21st Century Britain: Payday Loans, Food Banks, Buy to Let Landlords and Zero Hour Contracts.
crisps
poor people eat crisps
It's what Thatcher the Snatcher's successor, Tory "Death Warmed UP" John Major called getting "Back to Basics"! :-(
@macdonald tramp BRITAIN is today THE URIAH HEEP of the WORLD
Why do many of these idiots have 8 kids, smoke, drink, take drugs and have sky? Poor people make poor decisions, then blame everyone else. Take ownership and don't do stupid things. These idiots deserve everything they get. Clueless idiots.
When I see people like this it really hits home how fortunate I am to be in my position. I was very nearly in this situation.
Left school with no qualifications, thought I knew it all and wasn’t bothered about a good job. Soon realised shit jobs are soul destroying and managed to find an apprenticeship in my late twenties. I’m not financially well off, but I can afford to live a good life.
Amen to that! May God bless you and watch over you in Jesus name.. 💯 ❤️
@@barrett7893 God bless you too, brother 🙏
Your govt is the main problem here. They don't believe something call Empty City.
They keep their criticism without limits yet ignoring, how much billions they spend for the project were actually building the society, creating job even the end result mean Empty City looks like ghost town but not for long...
Every countries face this kind of problem, so do my country named Malaysia.
1998, Asia share market crumble down yet Malaysian survived that period without hardship nor poverty cos Putrajaya were an Empty City.
Malaysia govt pawn almost all their land to banker in exchange for loan to built an Empty City that only occupied by strays dogs cos the nation were not bailed out by IMF.
Malaysia ranked top in economy recover and Putrajaya project still on going as at today, being the new govt city beside Kuala Lumpur.
Putrajaya indeed looks like a ghost town but that was the past.
The main issue here, were how you build the city, creating jobs and flourishing the market with opportunities and indirectly supporting the whole econ sector or whats lack in your society.
You need something to boast back your slumped econ, you must do something and cannot stand there and watch it slump. Get it? That is what UK doing, when crisis.
They only increase your welfare payment without any development.
That is how, Empty City pop up in Malaysia in 1998 and causes the whole econ sector booming after 3 to 4 years even other presume Malaysia already doomed by Asia financial meltdown.
This thing really happen since Malaysia still exist in Asia or you can visit Putrajaya that once occupied by stray dogs.
Cos the money that you invested in building empty city would keep rotating in the market creating more and more opportunities.
The investment won't evaporated into thin air since Putrajaya owed by the govt, that slowly occupied back the whole city.
Me don't understand, why West fear of building empty city cos after you completed the foundation, the whole econ sector grows by itself.
Good on you !!
Australia ❤️
Don’t let the bastards grind you down brother.
🙏🏼✝️🙏🏼
Poverty in the UK is nothing new. Universal Credit will save you from starving but will not permit you to live with dignity. Unfortunately, this will only get worse until enough people stand up and force the wheels of power to make it change. UK wealth inequality is a national disgrace. We must become a more equal and fair society.
Universal credit doesn’t really save people from starving anymore
@@Jba8179it's worse than that. The ukgovt have openly stated they will breedout brits by 2040. Yet no one takes notice. Not even all the murders and rapes that dont make the news.
I feel like am in a game and everyone around me is a none playable character.
There is no comparison to poverty in the 70's, 80's and early 90's to today. You people are clueless
why will people stand up when they want the tax payer to feed them. The only way to stop this is when the tax payer stops footing the bill for companies. So really nothing will change and it will get worse as people dont cry to their company when they want a pay rise they cry to the nasty tories to top them up more.
Benefits aren’t supposed to provide a comfortable lifestyle. The problem arises when people in full time work can’t afford the basics.
I was on the bones of my arse in the 90s and early 2000s but through hard work and sacrifice I climbed out of poverty, not that I have a lot of money now but I can pay my bills and feed my family
Nice one mate, and I hope you don't vote Tory.
@@mavis1108 lol believe me I don't
problem is that still many people work hard just to feed the family and pay the bills and thats it. just to live another month to collect the salary and pay bills and buy food to keep on going. working to eat and eat to be able to work. its a working class problem still, just like slaves but they are allowed to go home to sleep for the night.
It was also through opportunity you made it no doubt. In the 90’s there wasn’t the opportunities or rights we have now, ironically thanks to the EU. If you’ve got “new” money, don’t get too comfortable, they are trying to redress the balance now, it’s going to get bad very quickly
@James Prediston
This is worse then slavery because we convinced ourselves of doing this. Atlest the slaves knew they were slaves, we dont!
Minimum wage 1999 - £3.60 p/h 2023 - £9.50 p/h.
24 years gone up £6ph yet buying a house and renting gone up 1000%. Councils sold off housing and rent gone up.
£12 now, minimum wages doesn't work, just makes everything more expensive.
Stop buying Coffee ☕
@jnwms sorry can't pay you more, it's bad for the economy
Sorry can't give you sick leave, it's bad for the economy
Sorry can't give you holiday, it's bad for the economy
Sorry can't build more houses, it's bad for the economy
Fking bullsht mate
@@jnwms Minimum wages do work. Things were worse before it was introduced than now and would be even worse if it hadn't been introduced. Trouble is we haven't built enough houses, nor have councils been able to keep or replenish homes lost due to Right to Buy.
The UK population has swelled by 10 million since the late 90's due to mass immigration. So I think that would make housing a little more costly.
This is the Britain I grew up in. I never knew why my mother was upset that I was shaking in the morning, or why she was embarrassed at the condensation on the inside of the window. It was cold and we could not afford heating. It makes you harder
Living on the streets makes you EVEN harder... Nice philosophy :) Or maybe the government could have built better housing.. Many countries HAVE managed it....
@@barryUFF Living on the streets makes you harder, but also drastically shortens your life span.
@@barryUFF no, not many countries have managed it.
@@barryUFFget a job
Makes me angrier?
Isn't it about time we collectively vote something other than conservative/labour?
It’s too late for that, the wealthy are too wealthy and they run the two party system (as is the case most everywhere else). The only way things will properly change is a total breakdown of the governments we have.
@@Hugh_Morris Welcome to the accelerationist synopsis. This is pushing the dichotomy of left and right further than ever before. Probably couldve avoided it with the alternative vote.
BNP!
PLEASE NEVER VOTE. YOU ARE GIVING THEM CONSENT TO CONTROL US. THEY ARE ALL THE SAME. MALC UK
We need to use the gov.uk petition system to vote no confidence, ignore the electoral vote use the petition vote en Mass ie millions of people petitioning not voting!
Unbelievable this is the UK. Nowadays a job is not guaranteed even if you have a degree. Something is terribly wrong.🙏
That's because education has been so diluted and devalued. It's pointless having a degree...esp when it comes with a crippling debt that sticks like shit for decades after graduating.
The issue in the uk is most people who have a degree have it in a subject no one wants.
@@terryj50I've got a mathematics degree and I'm still struggling to find a job. It's been 3 months.
I’m 17 wanting to go to uni… any recommendations on what to do since degrees don’t guarantee I will get a job
@@aleenasmakeup If I were you and I’m 62 try to get into an apprenticeship. Not only do you benefit from the theory side but also practical side. Today you need a master or a phd even then employers will ask what experience you have had. If you want to get into medicine that’s another story you must go to university. I would say IT , law, finance and medicine is a great career. You don’t need to go to university to study drama or art. Be prepared to make sacrifices as this word seems to be lacking in todays world. Good luck and be determined always remain positive and don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t do something because you can if you really want it badly enough. 🙏🙏🙏🙏
2023 and nothing has changed
Let's not be coy about this - immigration to this country has played a big part in keeping not only the natives poor, but the immigrants too.
Citation needed.
@@thatssofetch3481 it's basic economics. If you import the 3rd world as your workforce, wages go down, natives go on benefits and the government skim the fat for themselves.
Its a roundabout that just keeps on not giving?
My mom did a degree in the 1980s at the Uni of Birmingham, apparently back then there was evidence of New Town being the poorest area of Europe! Not much has changed around that area, I'm from north Birmingham so past it on the too town every time I'm there, New Town still has a horrible reputation ...
It's always amazed me that here in the UK forever have the poor been advised by the upper middle and higher class how to live on low money.. How to budget.. When these people don't even know what budgeting it.. Its alright being a toff and going into a poor house for a week to learn how it is. I could manage for one week on low money but u do that week after week after year after year and that money now has to buy clothes, pay for utility break downs when ur cooker packs up, microwave dies., washing mashine, hoover on and on.. Absolute joke.
Yeah man. You can be already struggling, then one day your fridge breaks, and a week later the oven stops working. Your kid's shoes are falling apart. Winter is coming up and you need new coats for the kids etc. It's a fuckin' joke.
What about people like my dad who came from Bangladesh in 1973, worked 14 hours a day, learnt English, worked as a waiter on low wages, lived frugally and eventually opened 6 curry houses without claiming a penny off the State. It can be done, a lot harder now, but smoking fags getting hammered on Foster's sitting in a pub, being "depressed" won't get people far.
1993 i was woking in a factory on 3 shifts and i was getting £14:75 an hour. The wage was so good because it was a rothmans ciggarette factory. My town used to have 5 big factories in the 90s Rothmans, Black and decker, an electrolux cookers factory and a seprate electrolux refrigerator factory and thorn lighting factory but by 2002 they had all moved to eastern europe about the same time the eastern europeans came here for work. I ended up moving to amsterdam in 98 and i was a painter and decorator making good money.
And you make same move like eastern europeans
I am Hungarian!!!Believe me the UK. is still better than Hungary!!!We have maximum 3 months of unemployment benefit!!!(Czech 9 months, Romania 6 or 9 months). Orban is selling the country to China, they bring cheap labour from indonesia and Philppines....even those keep complaining that Hungary is not real Europe.....a group of them walked in the indonesian embassy in budapest that they want to go back and claim the money back they paid for airplane and for the Staffing Agency.
@@tamasmatyas1483Australia isnt much different.
Knob head
I grew up around twats like you - always bragging about the hourly rate, money for diggs, night out money and working abroad for the big bucks.
Guarantee you've left many fatherless children in your wake.
It's often forgotten how grim so much of the 80s and 90s was. No minimum wage until the Blair government. I remember a friend of mine had a Saturday job at House of Fraser in 1994. They paid him £1 an hour. I was paid £2.37 an hour and felt I was rich by comparison.
Reading “£1 an hour” just gave me an aneurysm
The minimum wage takes away the individual worth. If you are good enough, you would leave and get the wage you deserve and can negotiate. This works up and down the wage scale for all roles. If EVERYONE worked their bollocks off and left or not even took a role that wasn't paying enough, this would solve soooooo many issues. But people are happy to accept shit money and not better themselves for more money
If everyone 'worked harder' nothing would change overall as the economic model remains the same. The lowest skilled would still remain as the lowest paid.
In any society you have the bottom rung, people with lower iq, disabled and they're needed for the work that does not require a high intelligence.
Utter ignorant nonesense. Minimum wage isn't the ONLY wage. "If you're good enough". Everyone deserves to be able to live a decent life with a full time job no matter what it is. If they can't afford to pay you a good wage they shouldn't be hiring.
Minimum wage recognises the time and effort the human puts in and stops these places even thinking about undervaluing you. Time after time companies have to be forced in line. There are far more factors than saying "just work harder" to people that work 40,50 60+ hours a week with skyrocketing living prices.
@@raversrevenge8452- that is an overly simplistic assessment
I lived the 90s it was better than now.... Britain is in trouble now... trust me 90s were good and happy
Exactly I was a kid then, We played out etc and the drugs were less widely available
Boomer
@@robdubz1510 Drugs were everywhere then. They were just better drugs. Ecstasy, speed cannabis. Relatively harmless. Now it's addictive and dangerous drugs like grass, cocaine, crack, heroine, krokadil, and the hundreds of others.
@sarah jones That's because the traitorous left and the corrupt EU are trying to make it a disaster. They are trying to derail the process and never had any intention of playing fair. We should never have saved Europe during WW2.
@@stephenmurray2851 : Er, grass = cannabis
1996 - things have got worse since then. In 1996 she could have gone to college or uni and improved her skills, got a job. today she couldn't. Taking away benefits, access to education, is designed to keep the rich rich, and the poor poor. As for cuts in benefits, in 1996 they had no idea how it would be today in 2017.
True, You cant even get benefits easily,and rent is no longer payed to cove rfull rents and you have to pay somecouncil tax.People are force dto take any job becaus ethe benefit system is so difficult to get on .
@@debbieharry387 People should take any job, benefits aren't designed for living permanently on.
@@8G00SE8 so fukkin stupid, if any job could pay the bills therd be no poverty
I was taught that one should work hard, and do anything necessary not to be on benefits, because living off the state was considered shameful. Some people have no pride or self respect.
Have benefits gone down?
Didn't the government increase benefits by £1,000 last year in response to the pandemic?
I know in my line of work we've had extra work and pay freezes for the foreseeable
My dad got out of England in 1987. He's been back a few times but he much prefers New Zealand. I didn't really understand why until now.
I hope more people leave. Might bring grocery prices down, which is needed to lift people out of poverty. It is logistically impossible to have a population like France/Germany on a small and restrictive island. Victorians had plenty of food because population size was more realistic.
@@Devenus20211 The Victorians also had a whole empire to loot from as well.
@@Devenus20211Victorians had a lot of saw dust in their bread and industrial chemicals in their milk.
@@Devenus20211 Victorians did not have plenty of food. Malnutrition was rife, which was the main reason that many people died from infectious diseases. Now we have the opposite problem: obesity from too much food.
@@bodazephyr6629 absolutely correct, but now we have obesity from too much JUNK food.
I left school in 92. Here in my small industrial town in Scotland, it seemed like the only way to dodge working in a mill or unemployment was to go to University. Four years later, I got my first post Uni job, for a massive £3.10 per hour, twenty hours a week, working in a local tourist attraction. If I had left school at sixteen and gone into a mill I might have been well paid (although probably not because I would have been crap at it and you were paid by how much you produced) but only for a few years as the big mills closed within months of each other a few years later. I eventually got full time permanent (ie not seasonal) work but it took years and the highest wage I ever received was just over £18000. I was lucky, when I was first out of Uni I could stay with my parents. I ended up staying local to my home area due to mental health problems, which I won't go into but I need a lot of support. I was lucky, I wasn't in the most deprived part of town, and when I was wee my Dad had a job, and my Mum worked part time for 'a bit extra' sometimes taking home work in from the mills, or working in shops. I was one of the twenty kids in my year at school (out of about 150 who started at the same time) who stayed until sixth year and went on to University, and it didn't pay off. That woman talking about pensions was right, the future is very scary right now. What I really notice though, is how kind and non-judgemental this programme is. Modern t.v would be ripping into these people and suggesting they were lazy or benefits cheats. One thing is, at least there is a more compassionate attitude towards ill health and poverty from the Scottish Executive than there seems to be elsewhere in the UK. These days I would tell kids to get training, not degrees. We need good work based paid training for young people.
Interesting insight. It is a scary, heathen like world. I also have to agree on your point about how the media nowadays portrays those less well off, it’s incredibly classist and bigoted most of the time or bordering on or is exploitation.
But I do have to correct you and say that the name of the Government officially is; “Scottish Government” and has been for over a decade now. It hasn’t been the officially named or really referred to as the Executive in the same amount of time. That is all!
Yes, I agree with promoting skills-based training like apprenticeships, and that many degrees don't serve people that well. I know it's only anecdotal, but my son works in retail and a few people he works with have degrees in English and other non-STEM subjects, but were only able to get retail jobs and had been there years, only being promoted as far as lowest level supervisors. STEM degrees seem to be the only ones with potential to earn one a good living these days.
I also think they should change the nurse-training back to hospital-based with student nurses as paid NHS employees, as we were when I trained. We were short of nurses then too, and why wouldn't we be? It was back-breaking, poorly paid work with unsocial hours and we had to study in our spare time, but from what I am reading and being told ( I live abroad), it's been getting worse and worse since they changed the training to the universities and making student nurses supernumerary, rather than paid members of staff. I know for a fact if the training had been university based back in my day, I wouldn't have chosen to be a nurse! Not a chance- I'd have gone into a job with better hours (9-5 or similar, with every weekend off!) for a start! I suspect that other potential nursing students may well have been put off too. All this pushing people into degrees and getting themselves up to their eyeballs in debt does not seem to be working out for the best for young people anyway.
There needs to be opportunities for older people to re-train as well though, give people more chances in life generally. And STEM aren't always paid well...lots of science jobs pay really poorly for the qualifications required. One day soon even Software Developers may find themselves competing with A.I and not so highly paid. Engineering is paid well and always needed but not everyone has the maths or aptitude for it. It's the Finance lot that rake in all the money.
You didn't learn about paragraphs at university, then.
@@dillinger1017 Yeah I think a lot of it boils down to this country having an economy that is primarily based off of shuffling money around and barely producing anything of real value. Many innovative and hard-working people have gone abroad where their labour is better valued.
Hello from Canada. I am shocked at how low the minimum wage is in Britain. It seems to me that the government is subsidizing corporations who pay lousy wages. Talk about corporate welfare.
+johneamer This is really old. Wage is now £7.20
ElectronicPleasure says:
"Wage is now £7.20"
==
Can you afford a rent and food for a family with that?
No, people just get housing benefit, tax exemptions and universal credit... Also, Child benefit if you have children.
Norfolkgal22 says:
"No, people just get housing benefit, tax exemptions and universal credit... Also, Child benefit if you have children."
==
The society would be better off without it?
How many local businesses do you think will close if the people stop spending?
Janusha what the fuck are you talking about
It’s worst now, no employee rights for 2 years, zero hours contracts, fixed term contracts, over employing then getting rid of people they don’t need. it’s shit for employees who are not seen as humans but as targets, figures on an excel sheet. 🤣😂🤣 it’s a nasty system we are in
@j t I moved to Asia from the UK. Good wage (esp now pound is dead), and great quality of life.
dog tard on a pavement you mean ha ha ha ha ha ha
Glad for you
Sob, sob, sob, and how do you think folk manged before there was welfare and the NHS? People survived and thrived and had self-respect and pride, both seem to be lacking a great deal now.
@@sjordan7085 Utter bollocks, the poor before the welfare state was created were living in utter squalor (usually working 50 hours a week too!) with a myriad of health problems that resulted in an early grave. The notion of 'self respect' is completely subjective anyway and linked to social attitudes of the day.
Some top economists have just released a report in November 2017, stating that the standard of living in Britain is now at it's worst for more than 60 years! It only confirms what I felt last time I was in England, 4 years ago, when my previously always happy,bustling and friendly home town felt like a different place, with a sense of sadness and even despair about the place that I had never felt before. Ever since Thatcher, the gap between rich and poor has been growing but Cameron and Co. made it even worse with their cruel benefits sanctions policy, the refusal to deal with the toxic housing market or to prevent the suppression of wages! There must be a special ring of Hell being prepared for them,they are pure evil!
And you’re forgetting online business. It’s killing the high streets of towns all over Britain .
@@eccremocarpusscaber5159 Yes, good point. Now we know it's because Klaus Schwab and the W.E.F.s "Great Reset" so we could surmise it's all been deliberate!
@@notamused3715 It's more than that, they actively pumped the housing market artificially with 'help to buy', stamp duty holidays, and an outdated planning system. Retail in Europe is going strong, it's not because of some magic advantage that Amazon et al has that the high street is dying. It's because physical retail is taxed up to its head, where e-commerce is barely taxed, add in Sunday trading hours on top. And don't worry the green new deal is coming, the poor and average person will be priced out of running a car or heating their house.
@@jacmar44 You're right there, unfortunately and I hadn't considered the other points you made so thank you for pointing them out!. It's a multi-pronged attack, which they now added the Covid lockdowns to, on the ordinary people so they can bring in the WEF's "Great Reset" and the Green New Deal is a part of that. Agenda 2030!
@@notamused3715 oh shut up you paranoid fuck
I was born in south London in 83 I grew up in the 90s it was tough but for anyone growing up on a council estate in London during the 80s and 90s know that the poor families on these estates all helped eachother out, if you didn't have something and a neighbour knew it wasn't long before you got a knock...trust and loyalties seem to be a thing of the past now
Yeah you are correct ❤
You want to try Manchester, Liverpool or Glasgow.
@@benconner884 yea mate I remember the 80s quite well, if anything it's got worse 💯
@@hayleysiobhanwood9851 90s was by far my best decade
Correct. More community back then
This could have been filmed yesterday, there's not much changed in England.
That’s incredibly true.
Very sad but true. I think it's got slightly worse tbh with the designer cheap drugs like spice and monkey dust
Now they just have mobile phones, xbox, playstations & overweight biscuit eaters, its hard times.
If anything it's worse
@@PF-gi9vv Sure but we’re talking about the rougher undeveloped environment and the people within,. It’s mad think some of these areas have been stagnant to fuck since the 50s-60s decaying in all sorts of shit with the people stuck in a cycle of hopelessness, feeling degraded with the whole ‘blame it on them’ mentality with no sense of conviction.... I wouldn’t say everyone but it’s been getting worse.
I was a kid in London in the 90's and had a good childhood. My parents were working class but both had jobs and were home owners, yet I identify to this poverty as it was fairly common in London too and still is. Inequity is rife and it is deliberate. It needs challenging on a monumental scale, everyone needs to revolt against this before it gets any worse.
Side note: That thick Birmingham accent is jokes!
yes it does it is worse now
How are you doing now?
Ppl who want everybody live equal (socialists) is main part of problem. You never gonna make everybody live better, but only worst.
The 90's? I was married in 1990. I didn't know a single person who was 'poor.' My new Husband qualified that year as a Registered Nurse, I was already a qualified Nurse & Midwife. We weren't rich, and house prices were horrendously high, but we 'just' managed to buy a small 2 Bedroom house with a nice sized garden, very near to the beach in North Wales. Everybody we knew ate nutritious, Healthy diets, could pay their bills, and lived within their means. I just don't recognise this ' Country' as the one we lived in. I'm confused by this documentary, but realise we must have been very, very Blessed. We didn't have anything left at the end of the working month, or money for Savings, but could manage to pay for good food, and bills. We have 2 sons and , thankfully, could provide well for their needs
This is so very much like the UK nowadays, though.The appalling cost of Energy, and the huge APR connected to loans, will be responsible for many people's Financial struggles and misery, and my heart goes out to them all. We ( yes, myself and the very same Husband ❤) utilised our years of experience and our Qualifications , took our Sons and emigrated 14 years ago. And thank God we realised the importance of Education, and having a Career, for that's what equipped us to do so.
Where did you go to?@@jacqueline8559
I remember my parents having 5 jobs between them in the 90's! I even started working in 1988 age 11. I can still remember at 13/14 yrs working giving my mum some of my wages to help out.
I used to do the exact same thing. 1992 as a 10 year old I’d spend my 6 week school holidays helping out on a milk float in Dagenham I’d get £8 a day (which was really good) I’d give my old dot £5 of that, the rest went on sweets 😂😂
This brings me back memories of my childhood in the 80s/90s . It was just absolute shite. No food, no money and no heating. Education was the key for me, I was the only one from my family to go to University while everyone else quit at 16 to go work in the car factory or ended up in prison or pregnant. I got a green card and moved to the USA and I wont go back.
You replaced one shit hole for another one.
Same here mate life in Liverpool in the late 80s early 90s was brutal. We had no money for anything and even Liverpool council was skint. Most of us didn’t even have the chance to go to university as our prior education was so lacking. I did my A-Levels in my twenties and like you got myself a green card and moved to the US. Moved back since mind 🙄.
we didn't ask for a life story.
@@reallyryan_why are you being a prick?
@@reallyryan_It's the comments section. Nobody need request anything for it to be written. 😂
Grew up in the US. Worked hard. Joined the US Army. Got out. Went to nursing school. I didn't grow up with everything I wanted but definitely all I needed. My mother was a single parent. I always felt like if I work hard, I'll be ok. I still feel this.
We have a similar problem in the US where poor is getting poorer especially in the inner city areas such as Detroit, MI.
The white people fled Detroit thinking it was black folks causing all the problems. Now the white communities they fled to are full of joblessness, drug abuse, welfare and now they don’t know who to blame. Look at the entire rust belt of the US-look at most of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky, Pennsylvania. The issue was always about corporations and the 1% taking more and more of the wealth for themselves and leaving the working folks (black, white, brown-doesn’t matter) with less and less. Bullshit economic theories like trickle down economics are the cause. Nothing trickles down but the misery.
Poor Detroit, they're living in mad max times.
2019 folks and ain't much changed
Look at the rent prices today compared to then. It’s much worse
import the third world, you become the third world
It's the same in the USA, actually worse because we don't have the NHS.
We still survive ! May not have a lot of money but we got community spirit
Actually a lots changed
I was born in the East End of London in the early 1970s, 5 generations of my family had worked the London docks. I saw first hand as a kid the depravation that having industries ripped out, had caused. My mum and I used to go walking our dog through the wrecked dock buildings and along the Thames. During the 1980s we saw the beginnings of the Dockland revitalisation, my Dad told me then two key things, "Son you will never have it as good as we did in the 1950s but computers will be your future job and your future job will be in the docks but will be a shiny city office for a bank.", my dad then got himself into debt to buy a home computer in 1982 and I learned how to use it.
1990 and I'm chasing jobs in IT in the London finance industry, somewhere I later learned where all the smart working class kids ended up. Come 2024 and I'm in my 50s, I earned enough working as my dad advised in IT, to pay off my mortgage by age 45 and looking to retire before I'm 60. Just 'cos you're born poor with nothing doesn't mean you have to play victim and stay there, we poor working class are "built" to adapt, to change and keep changing as shit happens to us and we have no control over it. My dad was smart enough to see where my future was, he guided me towards it and then it was up to me to work my arse off if I wanted some of those crumbs off the rich bastard's tables. I never took social off the government, I never asked for handouts, I did what we working class have always had to do, we hustle and we find ways to get a small slither of the pie.
Things seemed to get better 97 when labour got in. Now that we have had a long term conservative government, I am seeing society slowly go into decline again. I'm not an expert when it comes to the esoteric workings of our political parties; it's just hard not to notice the changes as you get older.
@@BigReptileCrew .... yes they are. To the point of being direct competitors. Their only similarity is that they make a similar drink. Your analogy doesn't really work.
@@BigReptileCrew Nice to see that my first assessment of you was accurate.
@@BigReptileCrew Well it's certainly weird experience being called a "little boy" by some random too-edgy teenager, but I guess it's the unique things in life you remember.
@@BigReptileCrew I agree 2 ends of the same straw
"Things seemed to get better 97 when labour got in." Until that smimey, smug coward opend the flood gates to the invaders.
wow this is from 20 years ago and we still no better off
for first 5 mins I thought it was from 2016 lool
Labor party is the problem 20 yrs growing government bigger , makes workers and small business owners in private sector become poorer the taxes you are rapped with
Yes we are.
@@JoseWhon agreed
These sort of problems will always be around its all part of capitalism
I remember this. I was a teenager in the 90s. My dad was self-employed, so even though we were poor (by most standards) and his income could be unsteady, we had no government assistance. I remember being jealous of the free school meals kids at school because my parents couldn't afford the full cost of a school dinner. My mum used to work two or sometimes three jobs. (Her main income came as a school cook but she also worked intermittently in shops at weekends, etc.)
The minimum wage came at a trade-off, with greater powers awarded to employers to put employees on zero hours contracts. This was under Blair and Brown's watch, so a Labour government in name but not in ideology. Not much improved. In fact, in some ways they became worse whilst in others there was some improvement.
Things are just as bad now. Though I'm in a "professional" job, I'm on a fractional contract and working ludicrous amounts of overtime but in a position of constant financial insecurity - and have been for all of my working adult life (since '98/'99), so through consecutive Labour and Conservative governments. If my employer decides I can't have the overtime for one year, I won't be able to pay the bills. After tax and necessary outgoings, little to no extra cash for any pleasure or leisure activities. Just over the threshold for any government assistance. The stories in this documentary still ring true: selective use of heating, if we can afford it at all; struggling to buy food. Bled dry financially by council tax, etc. Unable to save or pay into a private pension for retirement. The last few years have got much worse, but this has been true all my working life - through the 2000s and 2010s.
Honestly, I don't trust either main party to manage workers' rights presently. Maybe with Corbyn things would have been different, but he didn't fit the neoliberal agenda that has dominated in that party since the death of John Smith and the rise of Blair/Brown.
And if anything, things are even worse.
Well done England for continually voting for tories time and time again. You never bloody learn.
I lived in England in early '80s and '90s. The poverty, squalor, decadence and lack of dignity amongst the poorest is the worse I've seen in Europe .
You can still be dignified and pour at the same time
Still the same now maybe worse
Albania, Greece, Romania to name only a few were leagues further behind the U.K in the areas you highlighted.
England is nowhere near the worst tbh, Scotland, The Balkans, Italy etc are all way more destitute than England
You exaggerate. I lived in England 85-90 and traveled all over Great Britain.
The chap has asthma yet smokes.
It is what it is bruhh
It was the 90s everyone smoked lol
@@tobyblythe-jones8212 people always smoked
And hasn't enough to live on
He seems isolated though,yoga health food etc is not for an isolated man.
Damn, the 90's were bleak. Not much better now though really.
+Aaronmn7 The late 80's and 90's were fucking grim. The Docklands got a major million £ make over and the north got forgotten.
Damn. California seems fairly immune. If I believe correctly it's the wealthiest state isn't it?
I grew up in 90's north England in the UK and it was quite grim. Not sure there was a recession - just general lack of prosperity. Things look much better these days but after the global 08 bust there's just no relation to product/service/property price to wages any longer. Especially for the youth
***** I was living in Spain when the last recession hit with the most lucrative career of my life. There was no hint of economic issues... Money on paper looked good but in real time there was no money in the credit system. Scary indeed. Things are way worse now.
Aaronmn7 The 90’s was brilliant the country was thriving and the bankers messed it but the poor are paying the tab .
No migrants is a plus.
British people: I’m poor
Also British people: I’m voting conservatives
I don't think people wanted socialism and thats all the choice we had, conservatives that don't care about the poor, and socialism which has been shown over and over again not to work except for the people running it at the top.
@@tazzie2shoos Have you ever seen the Scandinavian countries? Its not socialism. We also don't live in a capitalist economy. Its mixed in almost all countries, but the Scandinavian model takes what works on both sides and combines it. That's all it is intended to be in the UK as well.
@@tazzie2shoos
Social Democracy is different from pure socialism. Centre Left policies are the best tried and tested model we have had.
Even under pure socialism there will be very very wealthy individuals just to a point where it is not revoltingly excessive greed. Leaving a market to be totally unregulated only results in a Darwinian survival of the fittest. Then what do we do with all the "undesirables' ?? Super wealthy narcissistic sociopaths will find a solution to that. A total eradication of the "useless eaters"
@@alikhalid349 northern Europe and Australia highest household debt in world ( socal democracy ) to blame
@@coopsnz1 Switzerland, Australia, Canada top 3. Then Denmark and Norway. UK is nr. 10. Tell me, how did you even make the correlation? What has social democracy to do with household debt and why is the UK so high in the list?
1990's fredo for 10p..
weeddegree *5p
Now Freddy £8.75
Tangy toms 5p!,,
Now 10 pounds
Walkers crisps were 27p lol
Education for children and young people should be for free !!
It should be free for all regardless of age or past. We have a wealthy country there is no reason education cannot be free.
Alex Stephenson Assuming you’re British, you should know that it is free? Unless you earn a large amount, it’s free otherwise
It is for free
@@Lisandro-xw2xr
State education is free. The odds against getting out of the poverty trap are very slim. It's an unlevel playing field.
@@agsrd4496 state education sounds very American lmao
I remember the 90s like it was yesterday. I had a Ford escort (same as the guys working on the engine at the beginning). I reckon life was better back then. No social media being the main thing.
I would go back to the 90's any time
I won't 90s was shit ass well if anything I rather go back to the 70s
And me i was working full time and plenty of over time with good wages for the time.
Yeah it looks great…
You can go back to the 90s now - disconnect your Internet, buy and use a landline phone only and drive around in a 30 year old car. But I bet you're not going to.
One thing that has definitely changed in last 20 years was.... the date ;)
Intelligent man
I was a child of the 90's and we were struggling but we were doing far better than the people in this. For instance we live in Australia and don't need heating and my parents never had a problem paying the electricity. We didn't live in a council flat either, we lived in a 5 bedroom home with a large yard which my parent now own outright. I didn't realise how lucky I was.
In this case, it might not only be a question of earnings. It sounds like it is also a question of space and housing markets. Could you find a similarly-sized house in the UK that falls within the dimensions of the house you are describing in Australia?
If this may reassure you, this is not an issue which is limited to the UK: I am a Frenchman who has left for Belgium, and housing costs in the latter are much lower than in the former, despite the fact that Belgium is a more densely populated country.
Bloody hell mate 5 bedroom house
Trust me you weren’t struggling
Things haven't changed, Australia is just better than the UK and always has been. Interesting Karma for treating someone's country like a giant prison.
@@jasoncooke1999 It's because 90's Australia was a great place to like and 90's Britain was a horrid place to live. Britain never changes, Australia is awesome though.
@@darwincity France is a complete mess right now. this is what happens when a society doesn't have standards, whether ethical, natural or social.
Some of the comments on this video depress me greatly.
Before you start judging people, walk a mile in their shoes.
Judge by what is apparent. Why should we feel sorry for certain people who didn't try hard enough at school, didn't venture outside of their hometown, decided to have lots of kids, spent their entire 20s and 30s drunk or high on weed. I reckon 70% of people who are "poor" fit into that category. I'm the child of immigrants, I taught myself to speak with a middle class accent, got forced to go to a Grammar school, then uni, chose middle class friends. It's the only way up.
They have no shame in saying " if you are born poor, you shall stay poor." What a bloody cheek ! Where is it written that one must live in poverty ?? If the British system was not a CLASS segregated society then maybe wealth might have been sheared and people would have had more. Shocking that it has just got worse than in the 1990s. Thank God that one can be poor in Europe and still live in a decent manner. Nothing ever changes there whatever the era !!
this country has gone to the ground
So very sad when I see my place of birth in this much poverty god give them straight to cope with their lives im live in Australia and people here don't know how good they have it
Litterally everyone says that about every country. Rather be poor in Britain than poor in Russia. It’s litterally ALL propaganda. You can’t see through your biased eyes. patriotic propaganda and anti patriotic prop. Someone will always be poor in a first world country. People will always be crying they don’t have enough. No nothing can get better because that’s not how capitalism works. Someone has to be on the losing end of a dog eat dog economy.
It has always been on the ground, Simon
Simon Clark yes and voting right wing parties won’t change anything. The right have never been on the side of the working class but they pretend to be.
Celab Williams Being poor in Britain means you live in high crime social housing and means you have next to no money to survive. That’s not a life you absolute fool
Wow, those were the days. No food banks, little homelessness, plenty of council flats for all. A working class woman interviewed at home in front of shelves full of books...
They look like VHS tapes. I spotted Willow among them.
@@xyzzy3000 yeah, you’re right. My rose-tinted glasses must have needed a clean lol
Having no minimum wage at the time is absolutely wild when you think about it.
I used to work in a kitchen for £2.30 an hour in the early 90s and it was hard physical work with a lot of sexual harrassment. That would be £5 an hour now. Everyone was desperate for bank holiday and unsocial hour shifts. Unsocial hours was double and bank holidays were triple.
Germany did NOT have a minimum wage until 2015 !! The minimum wage is one small factor. Germany is better UNIONISED. It actually MANUFACTURES goods and does not just make money from the financial sector. Germany traditionally rents housing and has more social housing (although housing is becoming a problem in Germany too).
@@barryUFF I don’t know why you’re talking about Germany but OK.
@@Stampistuta Germany is an obvious example of a country that had NO minimum wage. Not until 2015. More important than minimum wages are unions, social housing, and a country that makes products. The UK has only got the finance industry. So, do you undertsand that minimum wages did not exist in many countries until very recently, but those countries were still successful and fair?
@@barryUFF You use capital letters to emphasise words so of course you must be right.
|This was the biggest problem with the EU, we paid in, took all the EU workers that wanted to come here, but the working class never benefited, no job protection, no workers rights, no real membership benefits, British governments of all colour's have always let the poor down.
I agree Kevin, yet unions support Labour and mass immigration.
That's the one thing I could never fathom in the mess of EU and mass immigration.
I've come to the conclusion it's purely membership size and fees they are going for.
None of the eastern european countries been part of EU nor had right to move , work or like in the UK in 90s.
Don’t think you had any European immigrants in the Uk in that time..apart from the polish folks that established in the Uk after the war and had families .
@@DeejayBecks1 yep, I’m not sure what EU favored immigrants the person is talking about, most Eastern European countries entered the EU in the late 2000s. Also, I think it’s a little bit ironic to say things like that considering how much immigration mattered in sustaining the British work force, this is what the employment crisis was all about with Brexit.
The fact that this documentary would still be so similar today 30 yrs later says a lot
It's worse now especially whith high energy bills
Love how they are re-slapping these old programs up on the Feed of thousands to re-show us what's coming 👌🏼
It's already here.
I was thinking exactly this!!!! I don't even look this stuff up yet all this year it's all over my feeds and in my country in Australia the cost of living is the highest it has ever been
Watching it in 2024 -_-
This in an old film, one of the very few good things Tony Blair did was to re-introduce a minimum wage. The world hasn't collapsed in the way the new right claimed it would.
Quite sad to see that, nearly 25 years later, Tony Blair's premiership is now exclusively seen through the prism of the Iraq War.
Why did you recommend this to me RUclips? I was sad anyways.
Aw
Sacked because of his athsma,my arse he was smoking,he sacked for another reason,
its all propaganda, journeyman is a pile of shit.
slurp
@@themuslimskinhead he didn't smoke back then. He only started smoking after he got fired but that's when his asthma stopped.
Crimes against sideburns I think was the official reason.
Did you ever think he got asthma through smoking for years and he didn't have the will power to give it up? Back then there was no vape.
The writers of this show need to understand the difference between borrowing and lending! "She lent money from loan sharks..." - no she borrowed it. This was done several times. Tsk tsk!
Exactly! I cringed!
+BlancheDevereaux I noticed that too, but I assumed it was something common in British English.
Lol
"borrow me some money" is also quite common round this parts... dunno why.
“An economic model that doesn’t work” , yes it does just not for the average person, it ‘works’ precisely the way ‘they’ knew it would.
I recently went to Newtown. There has been some recent housing developments but poverty still persists.
Guy gets fired for his asthma and says he doesn’t get enough money to live off. Next scene he’s sat in his flat smoking. Can afford cigarettes. Smoking with asthma. 🤷🏼♂️
don't get into private life, you are so stupid
@@pakopepefdez185 the video was getting into people's private lives..... the whole video was to show how they were living. They obviously wanted to be exposed.
@ the video is about povertry. People is what can be called "poor", so they must to show some poor plp. But it is not about their private lifes.
Exposed... very very bad words.
He’s smoking rolling tobacco which costs a lot less. Especially in the 90s. In my country it’s still what all poor people smoke
I can tell your age. I smoked 10 skinny rollups a day in 96, it cost me about 70p a day. There was no minimum wage until 1997, but working in a pub you got paid £2-£3 an hour. So ciggies were not something you worried about paying for. Everybody smoked in working class areas, as it was one of the few pleasures you could afford. Also, smoking is not something you can just stop when you lose a job.
This is an eye-opener for me as I wasn't aware that Britain had no minimum wage, no holiday pay, no legally designated amount of hours a person could be made to work. This is a very depressing system for the working population knowing that you have no legal rights basically within the workforce. How any country on the planet, much less Britain, could make such a ridiculous statement that poverty does not exist in their country goes to show you how out of touch your parliamentarians truly are with the citizenry, or better still, simply don't care. I just read recently that the queen was getting a several million-dollar raise in her yearly allowance & so I guess subtracting from the poor is how you balance the books so that the Queen & her family can continue to live in unparalleled luxury. Thank God that I'm a Canadian citizen & that Canada is no longer a colony of Britain as there is no longer any pride to be gained in such a relationship. Britain has sold her soul to the devil.
We do have a minimum wage, & holiday pay & sick pay, join a union !
Of course there's a minimum wage, holiday pay, maternity pay etc etc
i was earning about 4 pounds ph in the mid 90s and it wasn't from skilled work and it was in the north of england, something about this vid doesn't add up. there was def a min hourly wage
@@beverlybradley5485now we do yes, it's shocking we didn't in the 90s though!
Good we don’t want you anyway you can enjoy your lovely wet blanket Trudeau.
Fast forward 30 years and nothing has changed. Families still struggling to earn enough to keep their head above water
This brings back so many memories for me. Hard times very hard. I would love an update on some of these families, my life started to improve in 2020 and I hope there's did too. ♥ 🇬🇧
Are you British? Age??
you don't know about hard times until you have no electricity, clean water, heating and there's bombs going off around you
I thought it is irresponsible for a man who has asthma problems to be smoking!!!!
You don't know the mechanics of addiction.
He does think that, beause he would rather live off others than man up and support himself!
Everyone smoked back then
@@sjordan7085 Exactly, someone at his age and health could find a job in less than a day. The only people I feel sorry for are the children, they are the ones who are disadvantaged.
How awful! You should write a letter. Maybe start a petition.
Ffs
I had a bailiff visit me (council tax) in the early 2000, I told him the council and benefits had made a mistake, he was starting to clamp my car, I got in, said to him I am starting this car and I am going to drive it, if you continue I will have no problem with it ripping your hand off.
So pay your bills and stop sponging - this would never happen.
Benefits and a car? You're not entitled to a car - that's a luxury for people that work.
@@HaggisMuncher-69-420 did you not actually read when I clearly stated it was a mistake and that I in fact owed nothing? The ‘benefits’ were in fact working tax credits soooo I suggest in future you are sure of your ‘facts’ before commenting poppet.
I just remember the London clubbing scene back then, amazing the early 90's. Good quality drugs, the massive explosion of music, love and integration. So glad i forgot about all the shit going on outside of those club doors and concentrated on that moment inside.
The "shit" was happening because of those like you who take drugs.
Imagine being so brain washed you think raves and ecstasy are to blame for the social degeneration you see here. Clearly a brexit means brexit kind of lad huh?
@Hugh Jones : "the conservatives were oppressing the working class"....Have you ever thought why the immigrants don't whine about being oppressed in this country? It's because they appreciate the opportunity of being able to "be oppressed" in the UK. I wish we had more like them and less of the eternally ungrateful like yourself.
@@charleskurth8250 : "you think raves and ecstasy are to blame for the social degeneration you see here"...Did I say that, Dumbo? Or is your conclusion just a symptom of your challenged mind? Those who complain about "all the shit" in the Uk are usually those entitled scumbags like yourself who take drugs etc and then wonder why all the "shit" happens to them.
@@shibuya3185 I have taken illegal drugs, I am also being made a partner of a business which works globally in a niche market.
There is absolutely no good reason for a first world economy to allow workers to be paid an amount which is not nearly enough to cover their weekly needs. It only serves the super wealthy. Some people aren't destined for a high paying job, doesn't mean they deserve to have nothing.
I was a young single mother on benefits living in the same flats as the featured husband & wife when this was filmed (and judging from the balcony/window scenes we were on similar floors). I don't recall struggling particularly, my child was clothed, fed and happy and our flat was heated as well as a building without double glazing etc can be. Those flats were some of the worst in Newtown and were earmarked for demolition at the time of filming. There were tower blocks which were considerably less grim. Same goes for the shopping centre which was undergoing redevelopment at the time. Also one of the local schools was a Beacon school and doing incredibly well by it's pupils Newtown really wasn't that bad back then.
Don't be ridiculous. It's a vibrant, enriched city. Of course it's bad.
say what you mean@@jjr1728
I was a single parent in 1990, I got a job as a cleaner earning £2.80 an hour, my son got a scholarship to University and earns a six figure salary working in the oil industry in UAE. The poverty cycle can be broken.
Totally agree with you there.
Cant have been easy for you but you can be very proud
I was born into a working class family in the mid 60s. My parents were young but quite strict and we were not poor but no way rich. I often tell my son how lucky he is to be able to travel the world, eat out in restaurants once a week and never want for anything. I had none of the above but did have a good education and first joined the civil service in the mid 80s and later moved to Madrid and became an English teacher which was a lot more lucrative than working for the govenment, You can move up a class by getting an education which leads to a good job and a good salary. Uneducated people are always going to be the ones in low paid jobs such as factory workers, cleaners etc. Education is the key to getting out of poverty.
You should be very proud !
@@traceyobrien4505yes education is the key
Good for you & your son !!
It was easier to get work in the 90s than in 2021, I did loads of labouring for good money back then not like the crap wage now.
21st century britain is the worst unless your well off
It was, you could get a job no problem if you would take a job at any wage and there was some crap wages back them.
Chat shit mate building trade is pumping . I tell them what they gonna pay me .
most people are bums and don't wanna work. yet always blame others for there own misfortune. there's always work if your willing to work hard. people in general take rejection badly and just give up and expect jobs on a plate. its a snowflake society.
@@Ali-xq9hc every country has people like that
That's what happens when people consistently vote in Tory governments.
Better to be poor than socialist
Don't confuse communism and socialism.
Wasn't Labor in power for most of the 90s?
@@leem8588 No. Labour came into power in 1997.
@@leem8588 labour brought in a national living wage, made education better and sorted out the NHS... Youre welcome
10:20 "trickle down has not yet happened" ...... 2019 still waiting. Any minute now I'm sure.
halacris Japanese society is way more stressful on average than British society... Also, Japan has the highest rate of smokers out of all the ‘First World’ nations. They also had the record of having the highest suicide rate in the world for decades, and are still one of the top countries for that.
halacris Dude, I’am an anthropology graduate and half Japanese. You clearly have not ever lived in Japan to make such idealistic assertions about the country.
Paul Judkins You talking like we don’t live in a digital age where everything is online and like used Iphone doesn’t cost 100-200€... He HaS iPhOnE, hE’s NoT pOoR lmao, imagine thinking in this way, unbelievable
So tell me, can you pay rent, or go to school with 200€, or afford a car ? Don’t think so m8
Miroslav Valentik cars pollute, government is saving the world!
The only trickle down will be from a leaky roof !
Just as grim in 2023 nothing changed
I left school in 1989 with no qualifications and after finding an apprenticeship (I started on a YTS and worked my arse off and was offered and apprenticeship after a year) I started my own business in 1996. I retired 2 years ago at 45 for my kids to run the business but I got bored after 4 months so now work 3 days a week.
My mother was widowed in 1951 with 3 children under 4 years old. To feed us and keep a roof over our heads she did cleaning and sewing jobs. She also took us with her when she went potato picking. One day she was so hungry she ate a raw potato, unfortunately its was a bit green and made her very sick. As she ate so little for so long her stomach shrunk and she was never able to eat a big meal for the rest of her life. A few years later she re married to a decent man and life became easier ( not easy ). My mother and stepdad worked until they retired never claiming a Penny in benefits. I am so proud of them, God rest their souls.
I grew up in a single parent family on a council estate in the north east in the 80s/90s. I worked really hard at school and was lucky enough to get a scholarship to attend a fee paying school (those scholarships were later cancelled when Labour came into power). The local council threw money at me to go to College and Uni and then I got a scholarship for bar school from the inns of court. I also gained a scholarship for a masters degree. I don’t think it’s true that if you are poor you stay poor and that myth keeps people down. You can claw yourself out of the poverty trap but it is hard work and takes many many years. I’m a barrister and partner at a law firm now. I’m not rich but I’m middle class. I’m hoping that my daughter has the same level of motivation but part of my motivation was clawing my way out of poverty so who knows?
It is victim mentality that's played. I was born to a poor working class family in the East End of London. My dad knew which way the wind was blowing, he gave me his sense of logical reasoning , got himself into debt to buy a home computer and told me in 1982 that my future would be in computers in a glass office building up the road in the City. That;s where I ended up in the 1990s working IT in investment banks in the 1990s when it was crazy times. When I was 14 we had so little money I had to wear my dad;s shoes to school, here I was now in the 1990s at age 24 making more in bonuses each year than my dad made as a salary in one whole year. I paid off my mortgage by age 45 and I'm looking to retire before I'm 60. I never got any qualifications having left school at 16 but I worked my arse off cos I never wanted to be poor and ever have to go without.
Barrister and a partner?
No it's a fact of life that poverty limits your opportunities. Generational poverty does so even more. Clearly there are exceptions to the rule, you are one such exception, but that doesn't mean the problem of poverty doesn't exist. Its a very elitist and Victorian attitude to say "poor people just need to work harder". Think about that last sentence properly.
Sacked for asthma but smoking a roll up 🤣
😂😂😂
Wait until a more up to date video comes out, the unemployed poor woman will have false eyelashes and nail extensions.
The irony is the criticism here is there is no min wage, no limit to hours worked and no right to paid holiday. We have all those now and things are no better for those with little education. We seem to think that the working poor struggling is a modern thing. Nope.
My entire 20s were during the 90s and I was dirt poor throughout the decade with almost no education but was determined to not stay poor and worked hard to change my life. Now in my early 50s I’m very comfortably off. And if I can do it anyone can, have a plan for a better job and work to get it.
Working poor, once upon a time🕒 if you had a job, you were considered well👍 off, now there's no such thing, work, work, work, 💰pay bills, that's it really, the usual things, you know.
Social housing filled with idiots who have kids to get a council house don’t help either. Left a generation of English people paying private rents and unable to start a family. Are t most schools now 80 non English pupils. Doomed generation can’t even rob a bank anymore. Many times I’ve seen homeless elderly people and the other side of the road is a South American family with 2 kids and a nice council house. I do wonder where this is all leading to tbh. Yes I’m English. Let’s not even get into class which severely limits your life options if your not wearing the right trousers so to speak. Working class people are shunned by the middle classes yet they enjoy invading our culture especially music. Gentrification is just middle class repackaging of working class cultures. Ever heard a pushy say bacon butty before. I have. It’s pathetic. Just go to your nearest boozer nowadays. If it’s not already a luxury flat you won’t like the prices.
The days before smartphones, widespread internet and when the music was better. Ahhh
the music was not better.
It's an odd feeling to think '95 was 25 years ago. I was born in 95 do don't really remember, but I do remember as a lil one, lots of council houses without wallpaper or with damp and mould. Since becoming an adult in 2013, I've realised how difficult it can be to make money, and how easy.
Wow, I’m in my mid 30s now so lived through the whole of the 90s as a young kid, I had no idea there was no minimum wage for part of that decade! That is nuts. Seems like something that would’ve been standard for decades but it’s surprisingly recent. Shame on the governments of those eras for not bringing it in sooner. I was on crap money starting out work in the early 00s but could’ve been a lot worse...
yea they took it out, kind of an experiment really. 1983 to 1998. Its a big factor in a lot of things that happened at that time including poll tax riots, the acid craze and all sorts. Although Blair may have brought that back, it has not fixed the problem and many places are still rife with poverty. Sadly Britains economic fate is rather multifaceted, with little production of goods a huge rise in population and inflation. If I had to guess, much worse is to come.
It's not nuts at all. I entered work in '94 - It worked pretty well because starter jobs like working in a shop had wildly different rates. Some employers paid £2.80 some paid £3.90. So the switched on people had a choice of getting better pay.
All that's happened now is that all jobs pay the same LOW wage.
There's no incentive for a shop or a bar to pay higher than the minimum wage. This wasn't the case in the 90s so some people could be on very good wages in quite basic jobs - I know because I was one of them.
All the minimum wage has done has pushed ALL basic jobs down to the same LOW level.
Even those who have jobs,( like me) are still slaves, 4 weeks off a year, to fill yourself with drugs and beer, to numb the pain, that your a slave, end of
+Anton paisley go to work go home go to work go home go to work go home go to work go home Thats All people do with boring lives an i f there not working there getting brainwashed by eastend and Crappy Money winning shows exspecting people to help them but no one will help them .
+Anton paisley .....4 WEEKS OFF A YEAR....PAID???? You must be in heaven
+Anton paisley
>Even those who have jobs with 4 weeks off
>Slaves
I don't think you know what the word slave means, or you're being sarcastic. I hope you and the rest people here are being sarcastic. You people wouldn't survive being a business Salary man in Japan, or better yet, actual fucking slaves working all day, no breaks or pay, in hot beating sun, being whipped, sold without saying your family, and probably die in your 30s or 40s.
+Anton paisley The wages haven't caught up with inflation. We are living in the end times.
+J.S. Roa What's the matter with you?????
Nothings changed in 2023 I work full time and have nothing zero expendable income.
Live to work
Then you're in the wrong line of work pal or are living beyond your means.
Sorry to say, but if you were in a skilled profession that paid well, you'd be better off...
you hope my kids get cancer?! Grow up.
Your comment just goes to prove a point - you're an uneducated, hateful little nobody mad at the world because you're a failure.
Sad little Scot with his council estate chav dog. The type of dog you get if you live in a rough area and have no money.
No expendable income yet can afford to go and watch your pish football team.
You're an absolute joke pal.
This is still an issue today. I was in year 6 back then. We had to apply for free school dinners living on the council estate in London.
Companies pay what ever they want to pay you. maybe this is the reason people don't want to work
I grew up in the 2000s but there were strong elements of the 90s, it was like the 90s part 2. I’ve lived life rich, then poor and now as a 20 year old I’d say I’m doing good, not rich but not poor, enough money to enjoy a lot of materialistic things though. And I must say I feel a deep sense of nostalgia and find something attractive about the days of being poor, the things we did to get by, having to sell our TVs and tech, having the sky TV cut off, not having the latest toys and hence finding our own ways to have fun, I do miss it a lot. Although when I say poor I guess it wasn’t poverty, my basic needs were mostly met, we had food even if sometimes it was a bit of a joke and i had somewhere to live.
I grew up in the 90s and was a teenager in the 2000s, i was also growing up very poor, this documentary made me nostalgic but i don’t miss it. I always see those posts on facebook/instagram of 90s/2000s toys and the comments saying "omg i had all of these" and saying it makes them nostalgic, but the only thing that makes me feel nostalgic is remembering WANTING all of those toys but never getting even one of them lol
Meanwhile back at Buckingham Palace, the "royal" family live without a worry in their world, quite oblivious to the poor people who suppport them. Spread the wealth! Long live the queen & her entourage in a regular house!
Yes it's ironically true, poor people make rich💰 people rich, and rich people keep poor people poor.
They bring in millions in tourism to the country you moron.
@@MuayThaiMmaXboxGeek yeah i mean no-one would want to visit the uk if the tax payer didn't fund the royals would they
@These Are The Voyages Get a job , there is 24 hours to a day , sleep for 6 hours and you have 18 hours a day to look for a job and make money! All you need is a healthy working body and the world is your oyster! No excuses for being a lazy bum!
This is what they do in Spain their Royals live on a way more modest budget..
Almost 30 years on from this and the situation is basically the same.
The whole system is rotten from top to bottom (corrupt politicians and unscrupulous businesses all the way down to individuals not controlling their own actions such that they'd benefit themselves and the immediate environment surrounding them).
WHAT CAN BE DONE TO BRING ABOUT ANY SORT OF MEANINGFUL, POSITIVE CHANGE? 🤔
Fired from his job due to his asthma problems…. Sits there smoking 💨 😀
And almost 20 years on, we're seeing the same thing happen again...
Rang true hearing the lady speak about unions having no power barley any union power nowadays thanks to American companies buying UK businesses taking power from unions. Perkins for example bought by CAT
New labour inherited this terrible problem and whether you liked them or not, they improved and modernised this country for the better.
Not much has changed since the 1990's. 30 years later in 2023 the Conservatives are still relying on "Trickle down economics" which still isn't working. They are still cutting the amount spent on welfare. There are more people having to use food banks. Many are expected to survive on £368 per month on Universal Credit which still doesn't cover the basic essentials like food, gas, electric and rent. Many who are working having to claim benefits because the employers don't pay enough. The crime rate has increased with more people shoplifting, begging on the streets and knife crime muggings. There is still poverty in Britain and it's increasing. The Conservative mantra was"You are always better off in work." Now the Conservatives mantra is, "Any job is better than no job." If the job doesn't pay enough to live on then tough luck we will sanction any benefits you were getting. The Conservatives are keeping people in poverty and blaming the poor for being poor because they lack the skills to get a better paying job. When you try to better yourself by going to college the Jobcentre workers tell you to give up the course to take a minimum wage job. However, the whole purpose of going to college to learn new skills would be to get a job with higher pay than the minimum wage.
@@Krispysquare True, but you tend to get a bit more help available in some cases.
Ah. The victim mentality.
Maybe if so many people didn't go and have child after child and then expect that the world owes them a favour. Funny how a lot of these families can still buy alcohol and takeaways and have the latest phones, eh?
People need to take ownership of their own destinies - if you can't afford to have a comfortable lifestyle with children, don't have them. Don't bring another life into this world and then expect it's everyone elses responsibility when you're struggling to pay for things. People went through a lot worse than this in the past and came through the other side, so why do we have a nation of whingers and victims now?
It's a real shame that people don't see the merit in working hard and making the best lives for themselves instead of moaning that they're poor.
Complaining about jobs that don't pay enough - if you actually worked hard in school and didn't doss about, and actually aimed to have a career instead of working a minimum wage job, maybe you wouldn't be in the position to moan about these things.
Just a thought.
@@andyc6542 The problem with your position is it assumes libertarian free will, which we have good reason to suggest doesn't exist. It's a fallacy. It's not a victim mentality, it's acknowledging we live in a world of cause and effect. A world with a system that requires poor and rich. Capitalism NEEDS a pool of people desperate enough to take whatever job they can to make ends meet. It needs people in debt traps, on low wages, with no purchasing power, because purchasing power in this system is freedom.
@@DavidSmith-oy4of of course - I fully agree with that.
However, it's not fair to expect people on the lowest rungs of society, regardless of needing jobs like warehouse workers and till workers needing to be done, to be afforded the same luxuries in life as those at the top.
Otherwise, wheres the incentive for learning, developing and striving for better?
I left school in 1987, and I left with GCSE. I can say the qualifications haven't made any real difference to finding employment. It's these exclusions between privileged parts in Britain and disadvantage areas. I had a chance to go into further education, but I took the option to work. I earned around £76 per week at that time. I don't think people today can empathize with the depression in the youth in that time. Those electric cards were the meter would run out before the morning. People had to switch all the appliances on burn energy to be able to set their alarm clock. The education system was vexed. In my opinion, the government was responsible for that devaluation and taking that out of education, health care, enforcement, and mostly everything else wasn't only diabolical. It was callas. Undermine to the value the government sold off Britain's assets and privatisation and peoples future and the youth aspirations. It's still the same economic structure in the modern day. It's the value of worth, and it's against the common man and the spiritual element.
Clicked for the woman´s sweater on the thumbnail. Had to see it. But ended up really listening to the message here. So sad.