Vitamin c Bolding Mine wrote: ↑Sat Feb 04, 2023 8:52 am
Vitamin c wrote: ↑Fri Dec 02, 2022 12:28 pm
It just didn't work curled up on the sofa and just not warm especially hands ,feet , heads .
I don't know how their going to cope this just wrap up and we'll be OK is a joke and this at just the start of winter.
Do you know anybody like this.
Xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxupdate.
Well my relatives have coped they used their heating especially when the temperatures dropped to the minus 8-10 mark a while back .
They have been honest with me and said the
bills were big and they really struggled to pay them but their point was that it would of been
impossible to cope without the government help .
How did everyone else get on .
The problem about this energy price situation is that we* are kicking the can down the road and such struggling folks look to get absolutely debt crushed when this year's winter comes. Here's how I see it playing out.....
In this winter so far, usage is high, bills are so high as to be just about bearable. The gov gives us £400 in the run up to April and we* survive. We* have unit charges capped at what they are now. Then in April, prices go up but usage comes down with the warmer weather. Net zero benefit to us. The cap rises and unit prices rise. We* continue to just about survive, but with no breathing space afforded by our warmer weather. The government may stop the £66 monthly support, so we* again really struggle into summer, even with the heating mostly off. But then.... November comes and we* go back to high usage, but this time at a high unit price, with little support. Maybe there will be no support. THAT is the cliff edge that really crushes. Super high unit costs: No support: Winter usage needs. Come November, the energy poverty will spring shut like the jaws of a bear trap.
I draw parallels with the way food inflation is strangling us. We drop meals out: we drop holidays: We carve non-essential spending to the bone. We survive. Then we switch down from Waitrose, through ASDA, down to Lidl, then Farmfoods, then eventually some hit the foodbanks, which themselves are struggling. We lose weight, we have our spirit broken, and when we are living on the absolute breadline, MORE inflation hits. But there's no way of making more savings, so we start to die. Literally die!. Some by suicide: Some by hypothermia: Some with stress. And if next winter doesn't clinch it, there will be plenty more to follow.
I'm not blaming anyone and we all just knuckle down as best we can. No point grumbling, but equally no point ignoring our situation. We can do A BIT to alleviate it. The energy price, in particular, is just a feature of the world running down it's resources, and of nations fighting over them. C'est la Vie.
*'We': In this post, 'We' means those of us on fixed or mostly fixed incomes which don't keep pace with inflation. I include those on company or state pensions or living off their depreciating savings. We could also include those on negligible benefits or in low paid employment, working every hour god sends. I'm part of 'We', albeit buffered by savings and preps.