The uneven impact of austerity on the voluntary and community sector: A tale of two cities

Author:

Jones Gerwyn1,Meegan Richard1,Kennett Patricia2,Croft Jacqui2

Affiliation:

1. Liverpool John Moores University, UK

2. University of Bristol, UK

Abstract

There has been much debate about the impact of recession and austerity on the voluntary and community sector over recent years. Using secondary data from the 2008 National Survey of Third Sector Organisations, Clifford et al. (2013), writing in this journal, have argued that voluntary sector organisations located in more deprived local authorities are likely to suffer most due to the combined effect of cuts in government funding in these areas and their greater dependency on statutory funding. This paper develops this argument by exploring the sector’s changing relationship with the state through an empirical analysis of the differential impact of recession and austerity on voluntary and community organisations involved in public service delivery in the two English core cities of Bristol and Liverpool. This paper highlights how the scale and unevenness of public spending cuts, the levels of voluntary sector dependency on statutory funding and the rising demands for the sector’s services in a period of recession and austerity are being experienced locally. It portrays a sector whose resilience is being severely tested and one that is being forced rapidly to restructure and reposition itself in an increasingly challenging funding environment.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

Reference58 articles.

1. A strategic unity: defining the third sector in the UK

2. Alcock P (2010b) Partnership and mainstreaming: Voluntary action under New Labour. Third Sector Research Centre working paper 32, University of Southampton and University of Birmingham.

3. Alcock P, Kendall J (2010) Constituting the third sector: Processes of decontestation and contention under the UK Labour governments in England. Third Sector Research Centre research report 42, University of Southampton and University of Birmingham.

4. Placing the Social Economy

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