The high cost of getting to work or reaching essential services, including by rail, is pushing five million people into poverty, according to a national research group.
The independent Social Market Foundation claims that the Government’s decision to peg road fuel duty in 2011 has left a £100 billion shortfall that could have been spent on improvement in public transport.
A survey by the group lists Middlesbrough and north-east Liverpool (the Knowsley district with Hunts Cross, Huyton, Kirkby and Kirkdale) as the worst-served areas in England.
They are followed by Shropshire, Staffordshire Moors, The Wyre, North Warwickshire, Thanet, Leicester, Stoke and Portsmouth.
Londoners fare best, where 28% of people use public transport -more than three times the rest of the country.
This is because there is plenty of public transport…