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Millions of Australians struggling to put food on the table

Foodbank

On any given day, over half a million households in Australia are struggling to meet their food needs.

  • Households with children are being hit harder than others (32% severely food insecure in the past year vs a national average of 21%) and single parent households are the worst of all (37% severely food insecure).
  • The rising cost of living is the most common explanation for why people are failing to meet their household food requirements (64% of food insecure households). Unpacking this, the cost of food and groceries is the top cause (49%), followed closely by energy (42%) and housing (33%) costs.
  • Over half of food insecure households (54%) had someone in paid work.
  • Nearly a third of households with mortgages (30%) have experienced food insecurity in the last year. The situation is even worse in regional areas (36% vs 27% in metro areas).
  • On a typical day, 306,000 households are receiving assistance from food relief organisations.
  • On any given day, over half a million households in Australia are struggling to putfoodon the table, and disturbingly, those with children are being hardest hit.

    Released today, theFoodbankHunger Report 2022 reveals alarming details surrounding thefoodinsecurity crisis the country is facing.

    More than 2 million households in Australia have run out offoodin the last year due to limited finances, sometimes skipping meals or going whole days without eating. This has meant that 1.3 million children lived in food insecure households during that time.

    Unsurprisingly, the rising cost of living is the most common reason why so many are struggling to meet their household food needs, with the cost of food and groceries confirmed as the top cause followed closely by energy and housing costs.

    Assumptions that this is affecting only those who are unemployed or homeless are incorrect with the research showing that over half of food insecure households had someone in paid work and a third of households with mortgages have experienced food insecurity.

    FoodbankAustralia CEO, Brianna Casey, has witnessed the rise in demand forfoodrelief services over the past year, but even she was shocked by the troubling picture of today’s Australia exposed in the report.

    “We know how important it is for people to have access to nutritiousfood, yet the rising costs of energy, fuel, groceries, rent and mortgages have put this fundamental need beyond the reach of more and more people with no respite in sight,” said Ms Casey.

    “These results should make everyone stop in their tracks. The numbers being reported are massive and hard to process, but they represent the harsh reality of living week to week when the cost-of-living crisis collides with an income crisis and the household budget now listsfoodas a discretionary spend,” said Ms Casey.

    The report signals that the problem is only set to get worse with half of all households experiencing difficulty saying that being unable to afford food is happening more often.

    The food relief charity is hoping that next week’s Budget will deliver positive change. “We have heard the Treasurer caution that the October budget is not the time for new spending measures to deliver relief to struggling families, but with more than a million people a month already seeking food relief, if not now, then when?”

    METHODOLOGY

    This report presents key findings from theFoodbankHunger Survey, which was conducted between 11 and 28 July 2022, through an online questionnaire of 4,024 people in Australia aged 18 years or older. The sample was nationally representative by age, gender and location (capital city / rest of state) in each major state, with stratified quotas to ensure all major states have a robust minimum sample size of n=600 or above. The data was weighted to nationally representative proportion of age, gender, state and location (capital city/ rest of state).

    The term food insecurity covers a range of experiences – from being uncertain about getting enough food and compromising on nutrition right through to disrupted eating patterns and reduced food intake.

    /Public Release. View in full here.