Labour MPs Urge Chancellor Reeves to Boost Affordable Credit for Low-Income Britons Through Credit Union Expansion
In a bid to tackle financial exclusion, a group of Labour MPs has urged Chancellor Rachel Reeves to support a massive expansion of credit unions, which would provide cheap credit to millions of people on low incomes. The move coincides with the 10-year anniversary of the UK's military credit unions, which offer an ethical and affordable alternative to high-cost lenders for service personnel.
The MPs, including several parliamentary committee chairs, have called on Reeves to enhance the financial inclusion bill currently before parliament by adding a duty on housing associations to promote credit union membership to their tenants. They also want credit unions to be given access to the government's Help to Save product, which allows low-income individuals to earn a 50p bonus for every £1 they save.
Since 2010, many opportunities to help credit unions expand in the UK have been missed, according to the MPs. Given the current cost of living crisis and the need for increased investment in all communities, they argue that a renewed focus on expanding credit unions is overdue.
Despite struggling to make headway in the UK, membership of credit unions has grown by 9% between 2020 and 2025, with outstanding loans amounting to almost £5bn. However, this still represents just less than one-twentieth of the estimated £120bn of outstanding non-mortgage financial debt held by UK households.
The MPs point to the success of military credit unions in the US as a model for the three credit unions currently operating in the UK. They also cite Queen Camilla's support for credit unions, which she has described as an alternative to the payday loan industry.
To achieve their goal of doubling the size of the credit union sector, the MPs are calling on Reeves to adopt several measures, including giving employees a "right to save" through auto-enrolment schemes, promoting credit unions to social housing tenants and staff, and easing rules on credit unions lending to each other.
In a bid to tackle financial exclusion, a group of Labour MPs has urged Chancellor Rachel Reeves to support a massive expansion of credit unions, which would provide cheap credit to millions of people on low incomes. The move coincides with the 10-year anniversary of the UK's military credit unions, which offer an ethical and affordable alternative to high-cost lenders for service personnel.
The MPs, including several parliamentary committee chairs, have called on Reeves to enhance the financial inclusion bill currently before parliament by adding a duty on housing associations to promote credit union membership to their tenants. They also want credit unions to be given access to the government's Help to Save product, which allows low-income individuals to earn a 50p bonus for every £1 they save.
Since 2010, many opportunities to help credit unions expand in the UK have been missed, according to the MPs. Given the current cost of living crisis and the need for increased investment in all communities, they argue that a renewed focus on expanding credit unions is overdue.
Despite struggling to make headway in the UK, membership of credit unions has grown by 9% between 2020 and 2025, with outstanding loans amounting to almost £5bn. However, this still represents just less than one-twentieth of the estimated £120bn of outstanding non-mortgage financial debt held by UK households.
The MPs point to the success of military credit unions in the US as a model for the three credit unions currently operating in the UK. They also cite Queen Camilla's support for credit unions, which she has described as an alternative to the payday loan industry.
To achieve their goal of doubling the size of the credit union sector, the MPs are calling on Reeves to adopt several measures, including giving employees a "right to save" through auto-enrolment schemes, promoting credit unions to social housing tenants and staff, and easing rules on credit unions lending to each other.