@greencat (please take this as a reply not a have a go at you thing)
you say about people on £100,000 a year struggling, i'm not saying it's not affecting them but as an example i have the Exxon refinery a stones throw from me, those guys are on big money, i know some of them for years have lived beyond their means, i mean there are Aston Martins in the car park from time to time, but only in the summer of course at which point they get out their winter car, you know the old Merc AMG etc. they come in my shop and plead poverty, honestly it drives me mad, yes they have bills like the rest of us but they have the ability to get rid of a car or 2. one guy plead poverty a while ago when i knew that in the last 4 weeks he had bought nearly £4000 of retro bikes because he'd seen one of mine and he thought it was cool, he's not interested in them, it was pretty much a one-upman thing, so i don't feel particularly sorry for someone earning that sort of money if the bills are brought on by their own stupidity with money, because if you have been earning that sort money for say 10 years then frankly you should be in a good state regardless of recessions etc and if you aren't then you had a few too many holidays, a new car too often etc and haven't put enough away for the emergencies and rainy days
it might sound like i'm being harsh and unsympathetic but those people can only blame themselves, regardless of how many kids they've had. that is not a cost of living problem, that is a cost of stupidity problem, and they can get out of the problem a lot quicker and easier as next month they have £10,000 coming in, maybe £12,000 if they pic a few extra shifts etc, and if they get rid of a car or 2 and have a couple of holidays less a year then crisis over for them. the average low earner can't do that, extra shift at McDonalds doesn't solve their debt/bills issue . . . it's not the same for those earners, the low earners are facing homelessness.