Child poverty

Child poverty in the UK is widespread and deepening, with profound effects on children’s health, wellbeing and educational outcomes, and with disproportionate impacts on some communities.

Key facts

  • Nearly one third of children in the UK are growing up in poverty, despite living in a wealthy country.
  • Poverty does not fall equally: Black children, pupils with SEND, looked after children and young carers are all more likely to experience poverty.
  • Schools and staff increasingly step in to meet basic needs, including food, clothing and emotional support, stretching already limited resources.
  • Poverty widens attainment gaps from the early years through to key stage five and affects attendance, concentration and behaviour.
  • Most children in poverty live in working households, showing that low pay, insecure work and inadequate social security are key drivers.
  • The two-child limit and the benefit cap push hundreds of thousands of children into deeper poverty.

Key statistics

Campaign asks

  • Scrap the two-child limit and the benefit cap as a matter of urgency to reduce child poverty and hardship.
  • Increase social security entitlements for families with children so that incomes are adequate to meet basic needs.
  • Invest in affordable housing, childcare and decent work so that employment is a genuine route out of poverty.
  • Target additional resources at schools and communities serving the highest proportions of children in poverty.
  • Develop a cross-government child poverty strategy with clear targets, timelines and accountability mechanisms.
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