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UK seeing ‘big rise in poverty’

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011
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Woman carrying a childChild poverty will rise until 2013, says a forecast

Falling incomes will mean the biggest drop for middle-income families since the 1970s – and will push 600,000 more children into poverty, says a report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

The IFS forecasts two years “dominated by a large decline” in incomes.

By 2013 there will be 3.1 million children in poverty in the UK, according to the IFS projections.

A Department for Work and Pensions spokesman said benefits changes would tackle poverty by “making work pay”.

Squeezed middle

People below the poverty line have a household income at least 60% less than the national average.

The report from the IFS independent financial research organisation said 2.2 million children and two million working age adults were living in absolute poverty in 2009-10.

In percentage terms, 17% of UK children were living in absolute poverty in 2009-10.

It warns that in the next two years there will be deepening levels of adult and child poverty following the oil crisis and included a sterling crisis, IMF bail-out and industrial unrest.

By 2012-13, the IFS predicts this will rise to 21.8% as an extra 600,000 children and 800,000 adults of working age will be in absolute poverty.

The report also issues a stark warning of tough times for people in the so-called “squeezed middle” – with median incomes falling by 7%, after inflation has been taken into account, the sharpest drop in 35 years.

There will also be 2.5m working-age parents and four million working-age adults without children in absolute poverty by 2013, says the report.

It also confirms previous suggestions that targets set in 2010 to cut absolute child poverty by 2020 to 5% are likely to be missed by a wide margin – with the IFS forecasting it will be 23%.

The IFS said median income was also forecast to begin slowly rising after 2013 – although it is not projected to have recovered its losses by 2015.

The government wants a system where people are better off in work than they would be on benefits.

It has proposed the Universal Credit which is designed to replace six income-related, work-based benefits.

The IFS says this should directly reduce the number of children in poverty by 450,000, and adults in poverty by 600,000, by 2020-21.

However by 2020, the IFS is projecting there will be 4.7m working-age adults without children in absolute poverty.

Missed targets

Report co-author James Browne warned that the targets adopted on cutting child poverty by 2020 could not be achieved with the current trends.

He said the previous government had cut child poverty by nearly a quarter between 1998 and 2009 after it increased spending on benefits and tax credits however this was not enough for the government to hit its child poverty targets.

Mr Browne added that even if there were an immense increase in the resources made available, it was hard to see how the legally binding targets to reduce child poverty could be achieved in nine years.

Responding to the IFS forecast, Barnardo’s chief executive Anne Marie Carrie said: “The projected figures for child poverty revealed today are a tragedy.

“This isn’t just about statistics as every day thousands of families are being forced into making choices between heating or eating.”

Alison Garnham, Chief Executive of Child Poverty Action Group, said: “Ministers seem to be in denial that, under current policies, their legacy threatens to be the worst poverty record of any government for a generation.

“They risk damaging childhoods and children’s life chances, as well as our national economic wellbeing from wasted potential and social costs spiral. It would be a catastrophic failure in public policy and political leadership.”

Poverty trap

A spokesman for the Department for Work and Pensions argued that the Universal Credit would bring more families into work – and that it would break the cycle of poverty.

“The IFS acknowledge that Universal Credit will substantially reduce child poverty.

“It will make work pay for the first time, tackling in-work poverty and lift over one million people, including 450,000 children, out of poverty.

“Our wide-ranging reforms will have a dynamic impact on some of the poorest families, encouraging people into work, many for the first time, and improving the life chances of children at an early age.

“Over the last decade billions of pounds have been moved around the tax and benefit system in an attempt to address poverty. This has had the perverse effect of trapping thousands of families on benefits while income inequality increased to its highest ever level.

“It is clear that sticking with the status quo, which has had no meaningful long-term effect on poverty projections, is not an option.”

The IFS report was funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation.

Poverty chart

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Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/education-15242103
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