The numbers are staggering.

Secours Catholique welcomed 938,000 people in France in 2021, who were able to benefit from various services, such as food aid or social support.

Among them, 48% of households who have requested aid have an insufficient budget for daily food, the association warns in its annual report on poverty, published Thursday.

“These people do not live, they survive, they are constantly calculating”, comments Véronique Devise, president of Secours Catholique.

The median income of people helped by Secours Catholique stood at 548 euros per month in 2021. Rent, electricity bills, insurance: pre-committed expenses absorb on average nearly 60% of the income of these households in precariousness, underlines the association.

Fears around the rise in energy prices for 2023

If we take into account other "virtually incompressible" expenses such as the repayment of debts or transport costs, 48% of households received by Secours Catholique have a living allowance of less than five euros per day and per person, i.e. 0.5 to one euro less compared to the period before the health crisis.

"With this, you have to buy food, hygiene products, get dressed", describes in its report the Secours Catholique, which estimates the minimum food expenditure at seven euros per day and per person.

"This situation is not acceptable, the government must absolutely take up this issue of the poorest 10% of society," says Véronique Devise.

Secours Catholique, which is asking for a revaluation of the RSA, is also concerned about the effects of inflation on the lives of these households, already faced with "impossible choices", such as favoring the payment of bills or shopping for food. .



“These families are already doing a lot to reduce their electricity and gas consumption, how are they going to do” in the face of the 15% price increase planned for next year, questions the president of the association.

Single mothers represent a quarter of the households encountered, a share three times greater than in the general population, underlines the association.

Many single men, often unemployed or inactive, also visited the association: they represent 22.4% of the households met.

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