I have seen it defined as being in the lower half or quarter (whatever) of disposable incomes or some measure of material wealth. I have always hated this definition because it is relative. Being in the bottom half of the population in England is clearly not as challenging as being in the bottom half in Bangladesh, for example. Or in England 30 years ago (when we were allegedly poor but happy)What is the definition of poverty?
Without reeling out the Four Yorkshiremen sketch, what does it actually mean?
A couple of years ago I went to see some people, I hasten to add good honest folk in part time work, who had the majority of their funeral bill paid for by the DWP, they had a nicely furnished flat, iPhones and ran a car, at no point did I see anyone without shoes, scruffy clothes, scabies etc.
Is there an actual poverty line in UK, that anyone below a certain level of income is classed as in the poverty trap?
Do some politicians use the word poverty as an emotive vote catcher?
The UN and the WHO have definitions that refer to specifics such as access to drinking water, ability to maintain a healthy level of nutrition, and things to do with accommodation. This of course will vary according to who is doing the oversight and what their responsibilities are. Clearly Kent council would have greater aspirations to inform their targets and threshold.
The relative wealth definitions are counterproductive because there are two ways to change a skew distribution - one is to increase the income of the majority when there is a minority of super rich. This can lead to people who a relatively comfortable targetted for 'help'. This is how labour and tories game elections, appealing to 'workers' wanting more income, or the 'upper middle class' who simply want to keep more of what they have (lower taxes, anyone).
This leads, for example, to people asking how someone who uses their smart phone to call Nicky Campbell to spend 10 minutes complaining how they can't make ends meet can be for real.
I suspect that with easy access to good information we may, over the next 20 years, move away from the extremes of the debate ("give me a 35% pay hike", versus "I don't want my income to be taxed to subsidise scroungers"). To a certain extent I will temper any criticism of the junior doctors by stating simply that the NHS is buggered mostly because we don't have enough NHS doctors because they are clearing off to where they will be paid double, and we either fix this by hiking the salaries, or give up - or try importing massive numbers of doctors trained in poorer countries such as India; which is not a solution favoured by a large element of the electorate for a range of reasons).
I would be interested in @Neville's Breakfast thinks of the general sweep of my comments (we can agree to differ on minutiae of the details).