- Greater Manchester's leading ‘Live Well' approach to
pensioner poverty highlighted in a Work and Pensions Select
Committee report.
- Voices from Greater Manchester shaped key national
recommendations.
- The report warns despite local success, national leadership
is urgently needed.
Greater Manchester's collaborative, cross-sector approach to
tackling pensioner poverty has been spotlighted in a new report
from the House of Commons Work and Pensions Select Committee.
The report, which follows an eight-month inquiry into pensioner
hardship, draws heavily on contributions from the city region,
from written evidence to in-person testimony and a dedicated
roundtable with older people held at Manchester Town Hall.
It highlights Greater Manchester as a leading example of how
coordinated local action can make a tangible difference in older
people's lives. It praises the joint efforts of local
authorities, voluntary organisations and community groups,
particularly in areas like housing, health, social care and
benefit take-up.
Work to make Greater Manchester a great place to age well is
being delivered through the city region's ‘Live Well' mission, as
set out in the Greater Manchester Strategy, supporting people to
live well at every stage of life, in every community.
One of the report's key conclusions calls for a national,
cross-government strategy for an ageing society and points to
Greater Manchester as a working model of integrated support. The
lack of a national framework, it warns, will affect progress in
places like Greater Manchester, already showing what's possible.
Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy , said:
“The strength of Greater Manchester's approach lies in what we
call a ‘whole place' way of working. When we agree on something
here, everyone acts on it, the Combined Authority, local
councils, health services, housing providers, and the community
and voluntary sector. That shared commitment, all pulling in the
same direction, is what really drives change.
“In reality, even older residents receiving all the benefits
they're entitled to are still struggling, especially if they
don't have a private pension. Many are living on a negative
budget. That's why local action alone isn't enough, we need
national leadership and a joined-up strategy for later life that
matches the scale of the challenge.”
The report draws attention to the scale of unmet need in Greater
Manchester, where pensioners are often living in poverty despite
being eligible for financial help.
, Head of the Greater
Manchester Ageing Hub, said:
“Across Greater Manchester, all ten local authorities are working
hard to make sure older residents are receiving every bit of
financial support they're entitled to. We've built strong,
long-standing partnerships to make that happen.
“Despite those efforts, it's still astounding to reveal there's
around £500 million in benefits and entitlements going unclaimed
by pensioners in our area. That's half a billion pounds that
could be helping some of our poorest neighbourhoods, money that
could make the difference between just getting by and living with
dignity in later life.”
Voices from Greater Manchester helped shape key recommendations
in the report, including calls for increased Pension Credit
take-up, reform of the eligibility cliff-edge, and the
establishment of a minimum income standard for a dignified
retirement.
Arooj Shah, Leader of Oldham Council & Greater
Manchester Lead for Equalities and Communities, said:
“The stories shared in this report show just how deeply
inequality is impacting older people, especially those without
private pensions, from minoritised communities, or living alone.
In Greater Manchester, our approach has always been to listen to
lived experience and act on it through our equality panels and
local partnerships. We're proud that our work has been recognised
in this report, but there's still so much more to do. Every
person deserves to age with dignity, security and support, and
that has to be a national priority as much as a local one.”
The city region's proactive involvement in the inquiry
underscores its leadership on ageing policy, but also its urgent
call for national action to match the efforts of local
communities.
The final report has now been published, highlighting Greater
Manchester's role in shaping national recommendations to tackle
pensioner poverty, you can read it here.