Gulf Today

Marcus Rashford is fantastic, but no amount of food charity will end child poverty in the UK

- Alison Garnham,

Quite rightly, Marcus Rashford has become a national hero for demanding a response to child poverty. He has been able to articulate the lived reality of hunger for a child — one of the many symptoms of child poverty. But the uncomforta­ble truth is that a U-turn to address child hunger gets us nowhere nearer to finding solutions to child poverty.

As Covid-19 struck, we already had a child poverty crisis — the other epidemic the UK faces. There are 600,000 more children in poverty today than back in 2012. It has risen for perfectly understand­able reasons. The majority of kids in poverty (72 per cent) live with working parents who can no longer make ends meet. It is these mostly working families who rely on state top-ups to be able to manage. Yet these supports have been under sustained assault with more than 50 cuts since 2011, mostly falling on the benefits that families rely on — child benefit, tax credits, housing benefit and universal credit.

Child benefit alone has lost more than 23 per cent of its value since then. This year we were on track to spend £36bn a year less on social security than we did back in 2010. The cuting stopped this year with the first benefit uprating for years and, of course, more was spent in response to the pandemic, yet the child poverty this has caused goes on rising. There is no shortage of food, just a shortage of money.

And the effects of child poverty are life long. Low income is causally related to poorer educationa­l outcomes, poorer physical and mental health and low self-esteem. In the most deprived areas of our country, boys can expect to live 19 fewer years of their lives in “good” health and girls 20 fewer years than children in the least deprived areas. And of course the harshest impact of the pandemic has fallen on the 4.2 million UK children who were already in poverty before the pandemic — usually because their parents are low paid and/or in insecure work, on zero hour contracts, or don’t have enough working hours to bring home a wage that will cover the family’s needs. While beter off people in secure employment were reportedly able to save money during lockdown, families already struggling were pulled deeper into poverty. While scientists are still working out the best way to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic, we know what to do to reduce child poverty in the UK — we’ve done it before. We need a comprehens­ive, cross-department­al strategy — when we had one in the UK between 1998 and 2008, child poverty was reduced by more than one million. Other countries learned from this and adopted targets of their own, including New Zealand, Canada, Ireland and Scotland. So we can do it again. Action is needed across the whole of government with clear leadership from 10 Downing Street and targets, including a focus on children most at risk — black and minority ethnic children, children in disadvanta­ged regions of the UK, children in one parent families, disabled, homeless and refugee children.

Now, as we pull out of the immediate impact of COVID-19 and start to rebuild the economy, we need a strategic approach to tackling child poverty that recognises the depth and scale of the problem. If we don’t recognise and understand the problem, we can’t even begin to put in place a plan to address it — and this plan is as necessary now as the plans that helped limit the impact of the pandemic.

The plan should include strengthen­ed social security, decent work, pay and progressio­n, paying atention to racial discrimina­tion, the gender pay gap, the needs of second earners, beter employment support and parental leave. We need universal childcare, including extended schools, universal free school meals, secure homes and high-quality universal services such as children’s centres, youth services, advice and support. This is what building back beter looks like.

As a first step, we urgently need to pump prime support for all children to make sure none are falling between the gaps. The most efficient way of doing this is through increased investment in child benefit to reach every child.

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