That's the equivalent of £70 per living citizen of the UK.
Including children and pensioners.
A full day's paid work at minimum wage (Before tax).
Now taking into account some people can easily afford that, some can't work and so don't. The amount of minimum wage workers doing a week a year to pay for the accommodation of migrants might feel jarring to people who have just came out of 15 years of austerity, after the decade of the credit crunch, which followed "The Recession" which came after Thatcher's Britain and all of the strikes.
That's the equivalent of £70 per living citizen of the UK.
Including children and pensioners.
A full day's paid work at minimum wage (Before tax).
Now taking into account some people can easily afford that, some can't work and so don't. The amount of minimum wage workers doing a week a year to pay for the accommodation of migrants might feel jarring to people who have just came out of 15 years of austerity, after the decade of the credit crunch, which followed "The Recession" which came after Thatcher's Britain and all of the strikes.
Just sayin'.