Cynon Valley

‘Abolish limit on Universal Credit to fight child poverty’

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THE UK Government’s two-child limit benefits policy should be scrapped and families given more help if it is to tackle child poverty, a new report recommends.

The Social Mobility Commission (SMC) is calling for a shake-up of the child welfare system and for extra funding to help disadvanta­ged pupils whose education has been set back by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

It recommends that the two-child limit for Universal Credit (UC) and child tax credit should be scrapped so larger families are not penalised. And it is calling for UC child payments and child benefit to be raised by at least £10 a week per child.

Around 4.3 million children almost one third of children in the UK - were living in poverty as of March 2020, the SMC said.

The £14bn package would lift 1.5 million children out of poverty, reducing the overall rate by 35%, the independen­t body estimates.

“There could not be a more pressing time for the UK Government to make an action plan,” according to its State of the Nation 2021 report.

Last week, figures from the DWP showed that more than 1.1 million children are in families affected by the two-child limit.

The UK-wide policy was introduced in 2017 and restricts the amount of financial support families with at least three children can receive. It has been widely criticised by MPs and charities.

The SMC’s call for families to receive an extra £10 a week per child comes as the Government plans to remove the £20 UC uplift introduced to help claimants during the pandemic.

The Government has resisted calls from charities, think tanks and its own MPs and former welfare ministers to make the increase permanent, and said it will phase it out from late September.

This could affect 6.2 million families, the SMC said.

Its report says the impact of the pandemic on children will be felt for decades and outlines measures to improve social mobility that should focus on the “poorest and youngest”. It said there are already signs that attainment gaps between disadvanta­ged and privileged children at school are widening, and those in working class jobs have experience­d some of the biggest declines in paid work during the pandemic.

It is proposing a seven-pronged recovery strategy that focuses on geography, poverty, early years, education, apprentice­ships, digital access and work and career progressio­n. It recommends that the Government extends free early years child care to more families, introduces a new student premium for 16-19-year-olds, makes teaching employabil­ity and life skills mandatory and builds three million more social homes.

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