Poor relative to whom, ichkeria?
I am poor relative to Bill Gates. The problem with relative poverty is that it is very subjective. If people are absolutely poor and they cannot afford life's essentials they will not buy a pair of sports shoes at £120.
Yesterday in Tesco’s I saw a woman spend over £250, most of it on goods which were by no means among life’s essentials. When she came to pay she proffered a large number (about 8 or 10) “Healthy Start” vouchers. When she left she loaded all her booty into the back of a two year old large saloon car.
If you check the qualification criteria for “Healthy Start” vouchers you will see that you have to be “relatively poor” (that is, in receipt of one or more of a limited range of income-related benefits). So here we have a woman who is relatively poor but able to spend £250, much of it on frivolities for Christmas, running a two year old car. Yes, I know, she could have been shopping for somebody else; should have borrowed somebody else’s car to do that shopping; she could have saved all her money up for Christmas. But I would wager she did none of those things.
Relative poverty in the UK is not quite the same as absolute poverty and I would not have been surprised to see the same woman from Tesco’s queuing up for her I-Pad or her Air-Jordans (though I doubt she could have used her Healthy Start Vouchers).