Guardian community team 

Tell us: 10 years since the start of austerity, how has your life changed?

A decade since the Conservatives announced deep cuts to public spending, we’d like to hear how you have been affected
  
  

A homeless person reads a newspaper in the doorway of a closed-down shop in the town centre of Wrexham.
A homeless person reads a newspaper in the doorway of a closed-down shop in the town centre of Wrexham. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images

In his budget speech on 22 June 2010, George Osborne – the then Conservative chancellor – announced the deepest period of cuts to public service spending since the second world war.

Osbourne said his plans would be fair and would protect “the most vulnerable in society” while eliminating the government’s budget deficit. But in the 10 years since, libraries and Sure Start centres have closed, housing benefits have been frozen or cut, and schools have had to fundraise to provide pupils with basic supplies – with Labour-held local authorities hit harder than Conservative-run councils.

Share your experiences

We’d like to hear how your life has changed since the start of austerity.

You can get in touch by filling in the form below, anonymously if you wish. Your responses are secure as the form is encrypted and only the Guardian has access to your contributions.

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