Introduction

This report comes at a time when both the nation’s health and its economy are in the spotlight. As the COVID-19 pandemic has shown, people’s health and the economy cannot be viewed independently. Both are necessary foundations of a flourishing and prosperous society.

The health of a population depends on more than the health care services available to it – it is shaped by the social, economic, commercial and environmental conditions in which people live. People’s economic circumstances are shaped by their income, pay and wealth, whether they have a job and the type of work they do. As the UK emerges from the immediate crisis, attention has rightly turned from protecting the NHS to rebuilding the economy. This creates an opportunity to address long-run inequalities in economic opportunity.

The UK entered the pandemic with significant inequalities in people’s health. Health Equity in England: The Marmot Review 10 Years On – published less than a month before the national lockdown – found that people living in the UK in 2020 can expect to spend more of their lives in poor health than they could have expected to in 2010. It also highlighted that life expectancy improvements, which had been steadily climbing, have slowed for the population as a whole and declined for the poorest 10% of women. Health inequalities linked to income level (the difference between the health outcomes that the least and most socioeconomically deprived people can expect to experience) have increased. These pre-COVID-19 trends are not only true of the UK. There has been a slowdown in life expectancy improvements across most European countries while in the US, life expectancy has fallen for 3 years in a row – due in part to the dramatic growth in the number of ‘deaths of despair’ – those caused by suicide, drug overdose and alcoholism, which disproportionally affect the most deprived communities. However, the slowdown has been faster and sharper in the UK than in most other countries, except the US.

The recent Marmot Review partially attributed these trends to weakened social protection in the UK as a result of government austerity over the 2010s. As explained in Mortality and life expectancy trends in the UK, however, these trends are likely to result from several factors and the complex interactions between them. In particular, with life expectancy closely associated with living standards, it is important to view this stalling in the context of the economic shock of the 2008 financial crisis and subsequent severe stagnation in living standards, with little improvement in average household incomes in the UK over the last 10 years. At the same time income inequality, though largely unchanged over this period, has remained high – a consequence of rapidly rising inequality in the 1980s.

This report focuses on how economic policy can be reshaped so that the proceeds of economic progress can be more equitably distributed. It covers policy action that seeks to influence the economic determinants of health and it comes at an important moment in terms of national policy direction for four reasons.

First, the COVID-19 pandemic has brought issues of job security and the crucial link between the economy and health to the fore. It has highlighted the number of people in the UK who are living in, or close to, poverty and food insecurity. This report can inform local and national government efforts to support recovery from the pandemic, from both a health and an economic perspective.

Second, following the 2019 general election, there was a shift in the policy context with the government’s commitment to ‘levelling up’ – reducing the economic disparities between regions of the UK. This was seen in the emphasis on skills development and improved infrastructure to link the north and south of England in the Spring 2020 Budget. There are opportunities to focus economic development in disadvantaged areas to help create more quality jobs and support people who have been economically inactive but want to get into employment. Wider government commitments include further devolution of economic development; a Shared Prosperity Fund post-Brexit; and work to develop wider measures of economic success, including metrics that track wellbeing as part of implementation of the Industrial Strategy.

Third, global factors present new challenges to the current structure of the UK economy. The nature of work is set to change radically in the near future – with growing automation of existing jobs and changes in the types of jobs available. This is likely to cause disruption to many workers but could also present opportunities if higher-quality, more productive roles are created. National and regional choices have to be made about the type of economic development that is pursued, the jobs that are created and the policies that surround the labour market.

Finally, there is the backdrop of the climate crisis. Economic activity is one of the most important determinants of carbon emissions. Carbon emissions influence people’s health through the impact of air pollution, climate breakdown and more.,, The declaration of a climate emergency by many local authorities has brought a renewed sense of urgency to this issue. The current government pledged in its general election manifesto to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050 through investment in clean energy solutions and green infrastructure. UK business and industry are likely to shift further towards ‘green’ sectors and away from carbon-heavy activity, which will have widespread implications for the economy as a whole.

This report draws on case studies from the UK and around the world that provide practical insights into ways local and regional economic development can create the economic conditions to enable people to lead healthy lives. It is intended to inform the work of economic development professionals who want to improve people’s health, public health professionals who want to strengthen economies and their partners in the private or the voluntary sectors.

The Health Foundation is supporting the adoption of the lessons presented in this report through an upcoming 2020 funding programme, Economies for Healthier Lives, which will support local action and capacity-building on initiatives that seek to improve the economic determinants of health.

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