Profiting from Poverty: Who Gets Rich Off the Poor in Britain is a powerful, unflinching investigation into one of the most uncomfortable truths of modern Britain: poverty is not just a social failure?it is a business model.
In a country that ranks among the wealthiest in the world, more than 14 million people live in poverty. Food banks have become normalised, homelessness is rising, and millions of people in work are still unable to afford the basics. Yet while hardship deepens for many, a quieter story unfolds beneath the surface?one of profit, power, and exploitation. This book asks a question rarely confronted head-on: who is getting rich from poverty, and how?
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William Parker takes readers behind the familiar headlines to expose the vast and interconnected "poverty economy" that has emerged in Britain over the last four decades. From welfare outsourcing and Universal Credit to private landlords, debt collectors, energy companies, and corporate charities, this book reveals how economic desperation has been transformed into a predictable and profitable system. Poverty, Parker argues, is no longer merely tolerated?it is actively managed, monetised, and sustained.
Drawing on political economy, social policy, and lived experience, Profiting from Poverty dismantles the myths that dominate public debate. It challenges the idea that poverty is the result of individual failure, laziness, or poor choices, showing instead how low wages, insecure work, soaring housing costs, and a hollowed-out welfare state trap millions in cycles of deprivation. The book exposes how austerity didn't simply cut public services?it restructured them, turning public need into private opportunity.
Each section of the book examines a different pillar of the poverty industry. Readers are taken inside the bureaucracy of benefits systems run for profit, the cruelty and chaos of Universal Credit, the debt industry that thrives on desperation, and the housing market that treats homes as financial assets rather than places to live. Parker also scrutinises the role of energy companies, data surveillance, and even parts of the charity sector, asking uncomfortable questions about where compassion ends and commerce begins.
But this is not just an exposé?it is a political reckoning. Profiting from Poverty shows how policy decisions, lobbying, media narratives, and ideology have combined to normalise inequality and shift blame onto those who suffer most. It traces a clear line from the neoliberal reforms of the 1980s to today's fractured social safety net, revealing how poverty has become embedded into the structure of the economy itself.
Crucially, the book does not end in despair. Alongside its critique, it highlights resistance, alternatives, and possibilities?from grassroots mutual aid and tenant organising to cooperative housing, credit unions, and campaigns for welfare reform. It argues that poverty is not inevitable, natural, or unavoidable, but the result of choices?and that different choices can be made.
Written with clarity, urgency, and moral force, Profiting from Poverty is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand why inequality persists in Britain, why hardship continues despite economic growth, and why tackling poverty requires more than charity?it requires confronting the systems that profit from it.
This is a book for readers of politics, economics, social justice, and contemporary Britain. Above all, it is a challenge: to stop asking why so many people are poor, and start asking why so many others are getting rich off it.