Residents of the Essex coastal community with the highest proportion of economically inactive people in the UK discuss the reality of living on the edge

At Geo’s Fish Bar in Clacton-on-Sea on a sunny afternoon, business is quiet enough for Peter Serghiou, the manager, to take a break. He rests his forearms on the wooden counter and gazes out at the high street in the town where he grew up.

“I mean, I like it. I’ve been down here all my life,” says Serghiou, whose parents moved to the seaside town from Cyprus more than 70 years ago. “But I think for newcomers that come into the town, there’s nothing much for them worthwhile. If they don’t want to work in shops, there’s nothing.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

A lieutenant for Suella Braverman? Back off everyone: that job has my name on it | Nels Abbey

Who would want to run the private office of the most divisive…

The great resignation is here! Seven things bosses should do to make brilliant staff stay

Millions of people around the world have quit their jobs or are…

Leak inquiry launched as No 10 insiders accuse Dominic Cummings

Labour says investigation into leak of Boris Johnson’s text messages with James…