Metro’s route draws a poverty line in Dudley

Sunday, 30 November 2025 17:31

By Martyn Smith, Local Democracy Reporter

A West Midlands metro - image courtesy of WMCA

The route of the Midlands Metro in Dudley draws a poverty line highlighting the gap between the borough’s rich and poor.

The first phase of the tram line into Dudley town centre is set to open soon. Further development into Merry Hill will begin in 2026 and continue into Brierley Hill when extra funding is found.

The line passes through some of the most deprived council wards in the borough and a look at numbers from the 2021 census, published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), lays bare the level of deprivation.

On its way into the borough from Wednesbury the Metro passes through Castle and Priory, St James’s and St Thomas’s where levels of household deprivation based on education, employment, health and housing are above both the national and borough average.

An average of 6% of households across the three wards are deprived in three of the four criteria, compared with a national average of 3.7 percent and a borough average of 4.3%. By contrast, in affluent Halesowen South just 1.6 % of households are deprived in three of the official criteria.

The three wards also have high levels of unemployment, an average of 5.2 of economically active people are out of a job while 14% have never worked or been out of work for more than a year. The borough as a whole has an unemployment rate of 3.8 %and 9.6%  have never worked or been out of work for more than a year.

Statistics along the line’s planned route into Brierley Hill tell a similar story as the tram passes through the wards of Netherton and Holly Hall and Brierley Hill and Wordsley South.

Unemployment rates among people aged 16 and above average out at 5.5% which compares with a national level of 3.5%. In three of the borough’s better-off wards, Halesowen South, Hayley Green and Cradley South and Kingswinford North and Wall Heath, the rate is 2.1%.

People on lower incomes or living on benefits often rely on socially rented homes to put a roof over their heads.

In the Netherton and Brierley Hill wards, 28% of households are in socially rented accommodation. Across the borough 19 % of households are in the social rented sector and the figure drops further nationally to 17.1%.

In 2024 Dudley Council approved the Dudley Borough Economic Regeneration Strategy (ERS) which it says is a ‘route map’ for a fairer and more prosperous economy over the next decade. The ERS says while there has been some growth the number of jobs in the borough has fallen over the last 20 years including the loss of 20,000 manufacturing positions. The strategy aims to improve connectivity, increase investment and encourage growth in innovation, education and leisure. 

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