Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Increasing numbers of children in poverty

- Gill Hocombe By email

I WAS shocked to learn, via new research from the End Child Poverty Coalition, that in Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport there are 7,310 children living in poverty, which equals 34.5% of all children. Across the UK this figure is 29%.

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 who were 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. This is 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 children living in families where no-one 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. This is 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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