Alison Garnham writes:
Now you
see it… Now you don’t.
The government’s rustled up a party trick
for the kids this Christmas. They’re going to make 3.7 million of them
disappear.
Britain’s children aren’t going anywhere, of course,
particularly those who are growing up poor.
But with a legislative sleight of
hand, the government plans to quietly give up on the targets to end child
poverty enshrined (with cross-party support) in the Child Poverty Act 2010.
And with it, they’re hoping to magic away any mention of
child poverty at all.
The Social Mobility and Child Poverty Commission will
become the Social Mobility Commission. The Child Poverty Act will become the
Life Chances Act.
All this
is more than a little politically convenient.
Apart from a solitary BBC
Today programme interview with Iain Duncan Smith last year, which left
presenter Evan Davis audibly flabbergasted, not even the Government claims it
is on track to meet the child poverty targets.
Indeed, the latest available projections, from the Resolution Foundation, warn child poverty will rise
from 2.3m children to 3.3m by 2020 - a figure that will be even higher once the
poverty-producing impact of the Summer Budget and the Autumn Statement is
totted up.
Ministers, of course, would claim that it is simply a
gigantic coincidence that as benefit cuts reduce the incomes of the poorest,
they want to scrap poverty measures based on income.
They claim they just
prefer the proposed new measures of children’s ‘life chances’: whether their
parents are in work or not and how well they do at GCSE.
Those things matter,
no one denies it – but the inconvenient truth is that money also matters and it
needs to be measured.
Any parent trying to raise their kids in poverty could
tell them that (and 88 per cent of the public would agree with them).
As would
the professionals including doctors and teachers, working with and for children
and families, who signed today’s letter in the Guardian.
Rebecca is one of those parents. She and her husband work
full-time and life is easier than it was in the past, but she still struggles:
“I try not to let my children know we are poor. But I dread them needing new
shoes, or a letter home about a school trip. Winter is especially hard. After
new uniforms in September, it’s Christmas and finding money to keep the heating
on.”
What
families like Rebecca’s need is action to end child poverty. Not magic tricks
or bedtime stories.
Rebecca has launched a petition to call for the House of
Lords to block the changes that will scrap the target to end child poverty. She
says:
“If poverty measures are solely based on parents working and achievement
at GCSE level then no one will know about children like mine who grow up
missing out on things their friends take for granted. Children in poverty
already feel poor and disadvantaged, why should they also be unnoticed?”
In short, the Government needs to mount precisely the kind of
‘all-out assault on poverty’ David Cameron promised in his party conference
speech in October.
It’s the same thing he promised on his first day as
leader of the opposition, exactly ten years ago today: ‘the test for our
policies will not be how they affect the better off, but how they help the
worst-off in our country’.
The kind of promise that brought him to government
in the first place, with his new brand of compassionate Conservatism.
And a
promise that he repeated at the first cabinet meeting after this year’s
election, when he told his ministers they should aim to "give
everyone" in the UK "the chance to make the most of their life”.
So many promises. So little of the action that would address
child poverty and make life easier for families: affordable rents, benefits
that adequately topped up family incomes to cover the extra costs children
bring and affordable childcare that fits around parents’ lives for children of
all ages.
Instead, all we’ve had are some tired magic tricks.
Desires may not be that they will see something enchantment; it might essentially be that they hope to be entertained. Especially in the high spending plan stage demonstrates, the performer has a notoriety which will prompt certain desires by the crowd. mentalist dubai
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