Chichester Observer

Child poverty

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I was shocked to learn, via new research from the End Child Poverty Coalition, that in Arundel and South Downs there are 4,446 children living in poverty, which equals 22.3% of all children. Across the UK this figure is 29 per cent.

It is concerning to me that UK children are growing up in homes where they go without meals, appropriat­e clothing or heating.

This research not only details where children are growing up in poverty, but which families are most likely to be experienci­ng this. The report finds that between 2021/22 across the UK:

• 71% of children who were in poverty after housing costs, and 67% of those in poverty before housing costs, were in a family where at least one adult was working

• 44% of children in lone parent families are in poverty after housing costs compared with just 25% of children in couple parent families

• The poverty rate for children in families with three or more children was 42%, compared with 23% and 22% among children in families with one or two children, respective­ly

• Children living in a family where someone is disabled had a poverty rate of 36% after housing costs, compared with 25% for those in families where noone is disabled.

• There are persistent ethnic inequaliti­es in child poverty across the UK, 47% of children in Asian or Asian British households, and 53% of those in black households, were in poverty after housing costs compared with just 25% of those where the head of household was white.

I understand that in order to address the increasing numbers of children in poverty, the

End Child Poverty Coalition are calling for an end to the two-child limit to benefit payments, as part of their All Kids Count campaign.

If the government were to scrap this policy which prevents larger families from claiming child related benefits for their third or subsequent child, 250,000 children would immediatel­y be lifted out of poverty.

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