Sunday Mirror

NO CHILD SHOULD GO TO BED HUNGRY

2023 until UK is back where it was Dole’s 2.6m even with no new spike

- BY GRACE MACASKILL and NIGEL NELSON

FRANCES O’Grady today urges Boris Johnson to find some compassion with the heartfelt plea: “Don’t let our children go hungry.”

Writing exclusivel­y in the Sunday Mirror the TUC boss says the PM must boost Universal Credit and treble sick pay to £320 a week.

And she urges him to make saving livelihood­s his top priority by extending the job retention scheme.

Ms O’Grady says: “It’s not good enough for ministers to tell us to brace ourselves for ‘ hard times ahead’.

“The Government claims we can’t afford to carry on supporting jobs but the truth is we can’t afford not to.

“No child should go to bed hungry. And no parent should have to worry about feeding or clothing their kids.”

Her call comes as a top economist warns Britain may not recover from recession until 2023, ripping apart the PM’s claim of a swift V-shaped recovery, turning it into a slow L-shaped one.

It means Chancellor Rishi Sunak will have to find £19.2billion a year to pay the Universal Credit of a predicted four million jobless.

Holger Schmieding, chief London economist of Berenberg Bank, says the UK will be a year behind the US and Europe in getting its economy going.

And he blamed the PM’s delay in introducin­g lockdown and Brexit chaos for the mess the UK now faces.

He said: “Our guess is that the UK will take until early 2023 to get back to where it was in terms of 2019 output.

“Britain has one of the world’s best economies but has made two big mistakes – Brexit and getting the pandemic wrong.

“It has fallen into a deeper hole than Germany and America. The recession

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