The Scotsman

Call for action on deprivatio­n to help tens of thousands of children

- By THOMAS HORNALL newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Tens of thousands of children will have their lives "blighted by hardship and anxiety" without urgent action to tackle deprivatio­n, a report has warned.

The Joseph Rowntree Foundation's (JRF) Poverty in Scotland 2021 report warns immediate steps are needed for the Scottish Government to avoid missing its own targets on child poverty by 2024.

It recommends immediatel­y doubling the current Scottish Child Payment to £20 per week for every eligible child under six years old.

The planned cut to the £20-per-week Universal

Credit boost from Wednesday "makes the task more urgent", said the JRF.

Some 450,000 families in Scotland will be £1,040 poorer per year as a result of the cut, it added.

Figures in the report, "which paintsapic­tureofpove­rtylevels in Scotland just before the Covid-19 pandemic", said around a million people, including a quarter of a million children, were trapped in poverty.

Itsaidther­ehavebeenf­ailures to tackle high levels of deprivatio­n among key priority groups which include: ethnic minority families, families where someone is disabled, those with a child younger than one, and single-parent households.

More than eight in 10 children in poverty are in one of these groups.

Some 100,000 impoverish­ed children live in a household where someone is disabled – 40 per cent of all children in poverty in Scotland, the report highlighte­d.

It said: "It is time for the Scottish Government to stop walking and start running, by immediatel­y doubling the Scottish Child Payment."

Despite making up just 7 per cent of the population, children from minority ethnic background­s count for 16 per cent of all children in poverty, it added.

It said: "Much evidence has highlighte­d the unequal impact the pandemic has had on many of these groups, meaning their current situations could be much worse."

By April 2024 the Scottish Government hopes to have reduced relative child poverty to below 18 per cent.

The report concluded: "We will miss that target, and by some way, unless urgent action, at scale, is taken now."

By doubling the Scottish Child Payment as quickly as possible, the child poverty rate would drop to 22 per cent by April 2024, still four percentage points short of the interim targets, it adds.

Chris Birt, associate director of the JRF in Scotland said: "The Scottish Government has rightly set a national mission to end child poverty and has put in place steps to move us in the right direction.

"But we are on course to miss our targets by some distance. Such a political failure would have a profound human cost – tens of thousands more children will experience childhoods blighted by hardship.

"It is time for the Scottish Government to stop walking and start running, by immediatel­y doubling the Scottish Child Payment and by significan­tly increasing the scale and pace of its programme.

"The responsibi­lity for the cut to Universal Credit falls squarely at the UK Government's door. It is a failure of both compassion and of policy."

 ?? ?? The Joseph Rowntree Foundation recommends immediatel­y doubling the current Scottish Child Payment to £20 per week for every eligible child under six years old
The Joseph Rowntree Foundation recommends immediatel­y doubling the current Scottish Child Payment to £20 per week for every eligible child under six years old

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