PLEND FINANCIAL INCLUSION REPORT: A DIVIDED NATION
Our third annual ‘Financial Inclusion Report: a divided nation’ focuses on the cost-of-livings legacy, and how access to financial services has evolved over the last three years. The findings emphasise a divide within our society, and a widening of existing gaps in access to affordable credit – with women and ethnic minorities among the worst affected – thereby contributing to the financial exclusion of those seeking support.
Research conducted by Opinium from over 4,000 respondents shows that nearly half of UK adults consider themselves to be in a financially vulnerable position, and many are struggling to access affordable credit, with 28% of the population feeling locked out of the financial system. At present, 65% of UK adults are struggling to repay their loans and 1 in 10 of us are considering using a loan shark in the next 12 months.
Research conducted by Opinium from over 4,000 respondents shows that nearly half of UK adults consider themselves to be in a financially vulnerable position, and many are struggling to access affordable credit, with 28% of the population feeling locked out of the financial system. At present, 65% of UK adults are struggling to repay their loans and 1 in 10 of us are considering using a loan shark in the next 12 months.
of people feel locked out of the financial system. Rising to 40%for people from a Black, Asian and minority ethnic background
of the population felt impacted by the cost-of-living crisis in some way during 2023, down from 94% last year
of UK adults are financially vulnerable, and 34% of vulnerable adults believe that their bank would not be there for them in an emergency
of people struggle to repay their loans, this rises to 72% for women
of people said that their financial situation would improve if they could access a genuinely low interest loan, up from 39% last year
of people who applied for a loan in the last 24 months have been declined – a 2% increase from last year
ROBERT PASCO
CO-FOUNDER & CEO AT PLEND
"Despite news about falling inflation and potential interest rate cuts, the credit market remains fundamentally broken, causing a vicious cycle of high-interest rates and unaffordable repayments from an increasing number of unregulated and illegal providers. It is clear from both the report and our own customer base that there is tremendous demand for a fairer lending system and accessible credit products that don’t currently yet exist.”
The report indicates that all sections of society are still struggling with their finances – borrowing to cope with the cost-of-living crisis is up by 20% – however, the impact of the crisis has been disproportionately severe for certain sections of the population. Women are experiencing a far slower recovery than men, with 72% currently struggling to repay their credit. In addition, those from ethnic minority backgrounds are more likely to feel locked out of the financial system, with 40% feeling this way in comparison to 27% for those from White backgrounds. In another sign of the disparities that exist, The North West region experienced the highest percentage of loan declines, simultaneously, 73% of the residents here reported being in a worse financial position than they were last year.
The report provides a framework for what we as an industry can do now to ensure we tackle financial exclusion within the UK in a measured and impactful way, alongside support from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Government.
This report was created in collaboration with Nationwide Building Society, StepChange, PFRC Bristol University, ClearScore, Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Big Society Capital and Fair By Design.
The report provides a framework for what we as an industry can do now to ensure we tackle financial exclusion within the UK in a measured and impactful way, alongside support from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Government.
This report was created in collaboration with Nationwide Building Society, StepChange, PFRC Bristol University, ClearScore, Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Big Society Capital and Fair By Design.
“The whole ecosystem, from lenders, government and the regulators need to do better, and start seeing customers as human beings, not just credit scores. Our lending data shows no correlation between loan performance and where someone lives, despite banks and lenders still relying on Office of National Statistics (ONS) data to make credit affordability decisions, which only serves to increase the cost or block people out of certain credit products despite being able to afford them - this has to change as the postcode you live in should not have a bearing on what you can afford.”