Javed Khan writes:
Today sees a watershed moment in the way that the UK
Government deals with child poverty, as MPs decide whether to give final assent
to the Welfare Reform and Work Bill [they did].
There are 3.7 million children in the UK living in poverty,
made more shocking by the fact the majority – over 60 per cent - of their
parents are in paid work.
Currently, how well the UK is
tackling child poverty is measured by how much income families have, and the
Government must report on its progress.
In the future, the Government will only
have to report on how children are doing in school and if their parents are
“workless”.
This change will create a hidden class of family, who are
too poor to make ends meet, but are not visible to policy makers because a
parent is in paid work.
Money is crucial to determining children’s opportunities.
How much money your family has, how well you do in school, then what kind of
work you do are still very much entwined.
Despite decades – if not centuries –
of policy-makers trying to make Britain fairer, children born in poverty are often trapped in a low waged, low opportunity area
when leaving school.
From talking to families,
Barnardo's knows that losing even a small amount of money could mean some
have to choose between heating or eating this winter.
We help a mum of five who
is skipping meals because she can’t afford to feed both herself and her family,
despite working full time. Hungry children don’t concentrate well in the
classroom.
Income-related poverty is a very real problem for many UK
families, so the Government must continue to measure, report on, and eliminate.
Improving income poverty and fighting the underlying cause of disadvantage are
not mutually exclusive – both are significant for improving children’s life
chances.
If the Prime Minister wants to
achieve his ambition of improving the life chances of the most vulnerable, he
must send a clear message that the Government’s duty is to tackle income
poverty now, as well as preventing it in the future – and urgently rethink
this legislation.
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