Ex-prisoners 'need help to access financial services'

BANKS must do more to help former prisoners access financial services to keep re-offending rates down, a report said today.

Exclusion from bank accounts, insurance and affordable credit is preventing many former offenders from getting into work and securing a home, while it is also forcing their families into debt, according to the Prison Reform Trust and reformed offenders group Unlock.

The Ministry of Justice has highlighted the fact that stable employment and housing are the most important factors in reducing the risk of people re-offending.

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But the groups pointed out that it was difficult to achieve either of these things without access to basic financial services.

Chris Bath, director of projects at Unlock and co-author of the report, said: “Financial services are a crucial foundation for engagement in modern society.

“If we want people to lead productive lives, working, paying taxes and providing their family with a home, we cannot allow the justice system to sever people from their finances, even less to create lifelong financial exclusion.”

The research found that a third of people in prison did not have a bank account, and more than half had been rejected for a loan. Four out of five people had also had problems getting insurance.

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People in prison were also 10 times more likely to have borrowed money from a loan shark than the average UK household.

The report warned that this reliance on loan sharks was likely to drive up crime, as people took desperate measures to avoid the often violent techniques used by unlicensed money lenders.

One person told researchers that the reason he was in prison was because he needed to get money to pay off his bills. He said he had been rejected by banks and felt he had already asked his mother for too much.

Nearly two-thirds of prisoners said they had struggled to pay bills or were in real financial difficulties before they went to prison.

The groups are calling for people to be able to open a bank account and receive lessons in handling money before they leave prison.