Child poverty strategy unveiled - but not everyone's happy

Removing the two-child benefit cap is central to the government's new plan. But charities warn it has missed an opportunity to do more and the Conservatives argue work is a better way out.

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Two-child benefit cap to be scrapped
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A new long-awaited child poverty strategy is promising to lift half a million children out of poverty by the end of this parliament - but critics have branded it unambitious. 

The headline announcement in the government's plan is the pledge to lift the two-child benefit cap, announced in Rachel Reeves's budget last week.

It also includes:

• Providing upfront childcare support for parents on universal credit returning to work
• An £8m fund to end the placement of families in bed and breakfasts beyond a six-week limit
• Reforms to cut the cost of baby formula
• A new legal duty on councils to notify schools, health visitors, and GPs when a child is placed in temporary accommodation

Many of the measures have previously been announced.

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Two-child cap 'a real victory for the left'

The government also pointed to its plan in the budget to cut energy bills by £150 a year, and its previously promised £950m boost to a local authority housing fund, which it says will deliver 5,000 high-quality homes for better temporary accommodation.

Downing Street said the strategy would lift 550,000 children out of poverty by 2030, saying that would be the biggest reduction in a single parliament since records began.

More on Poverty

But charities had been hoping for a 10-year strategy and argue the plan lacks ambition.

A record 4.5 million children (about 31%) are living in poverty in the UK - 900,000 more since 2010/11, according to government figures.

File pic: iStock
Image: File pic: iStock

Phillip Anderson, the Strategic Director for External Affairs at the National Children's Bureau (NCB), told Paste BN: "Abolishing the two-child limit is a hell of a centre piece, but beyond that it's mainly a summary of previously announced policies and commitments.

"The really big thing for me is it misses the opportunity to talk about the longer term. It was supposed to be a 10-year strategy, we wanted to see real ambition and ideally legally binding targets for reducing poverty.

"The government itself says there will still be around four million children living in poverty after these measures and the strategy has very little to say to them."

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'A budget for benefits street'

'Budget for benefits street' row

The biggest measure in the strategy is the plan to lift the two-child benefit cap from April. This is estimated to lift 450,000 children out of poverty by 2030, at a cost of £3bn.

The government has long been under pressure from backbench Labour MPs to scrap the cap, with most experts arguing that it is the quickest, most cost-effective way to drive-down poverty this parliament.

The cap, introduced by Conservative chancellor George Osborne in 2017, means parents can only claim universal credit or tax credits for their first two children. It meant the average affected household losing £4,300 per year, the Institute for Fiscal Studies calculated in 2024.

The government argues that a failure to tackle child poverty holds back the economy, and young people at school, cutting their employment and earning prospects in later life.

However, the Conservatives argue parents on benefits should have to make the same financial choices about children as everyone else.

Shadow chancellor Mel Stride said: "Work is the best way out poverty but since this government took office, unemployment has risen every single month and this budget for Benefits Street will only make the situation worse. "

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OBR leak: This has happened before

'Bring back Sure Start'

Lord Bird, a crossbench peer who founded the Big Issue and grew up in poverty, said while he supported the lifting of the cap there needed to be "more joined up thinking" across government for a longer-term strategy.

He has been pushing for the creation of a government ministry of "poverty prevention and cure", and for legally binding targets on child poverty.

Anne Frances
Image: Anne Frances

'You're really constantly having to think about money'

Anne Frances, who has three children aged five, eight and 13, spoke to Paste BN about how she would benefit from some of the measures.

Married and working full-time as an executive assistant, she never expected to be in poverty, until a marriage breakdown and caring for her ill parents changed everything.

"I had a really good job, I had a good salary, and I was able to take care of all of our needs.

"But that kind of change meant I just felt like I was in free fall.

"I had no idea about benefit or what I was entitled to. I then had to make a lot of changes and a lot of sacrifices to be able to take care of my children and my parents. That was never part of my plan."

She was referred to the North Paddington Food Bank, a West London-based charity which mostly gives out cash and vouchers for groceries and household items rather than food parcels.

Anne received no benefits for her youngest child, due to the two-child cap, but that will now change.

"The food bank never made me feel guilty - or like I was going to misuse the money. You're constantly paying for uniforms, for shoes, clothing.

"My youngest daughter was having to receive milk and nappies, and these were things that I'd never really considered.

"Oh yeah, you know, I'm going to be stuck one day. You just always think you're just going to keep providing for your family.

"It was really difficult to kind of manage those eventualities that would just kind of come out of nowhere, a bill, or you're trying to maintain your car, or just celebrate your child's birthday or just make them feel special in some way.

"You're really constantly having to think about money, especially during the winter with the heating costs."

Anne has taken courses, through the charity, to improve her job skills and is feeling more hopeful.

"We feel like we're turning a page, we're finally turning a corner. And I think with the lifting of the two-child benefit cap, that's going just to only make things even better for them.

"Children need help, children need support. You want them to be healthy and thriving, but how can you do that on such a limited budget?

"And I think particularly when families or parents have been working and paying into the system, I think that needs to be recognised."

"You have to be able to measure yourself, you can't have the government marking its own homework," he told Paste BN.

Lord Bird also said he was a "great believer" in resurrecting Sure Start centres and expanding them beyond early years.

The New Labour programme offered support services for pre-school children and their parents and is widely seen to have improved health and educational outcomes. By its peak in 2009-2010 there were 3,600 centres - the majority of which closed following cuts by the subsequent Conservative government.

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Lord Bird on the 'great distraction' from child poverty

PM to meet families

Sir Keir Starmer's government have since announced 1,000 Best Start Family Hubs - but many Labour MPs feel this announcement went under the radar and ministers missed a trick in not calling them "Sure Starts" as it is a name people are familiar with.

The prime minister is expected to meet families and children in Wales on Friday, alongside the Welsh First Minister, to make the case for his strategy and meet those he hopes will benefit from it.

Several other charities have urged ministers to go further. Both Crisis and Shelter called for the government to unfreeze housing benefit and build more social rent homes, while the Children's Commissioner for England, Dame Rachel de Souza, said that "if we are to end child poverty - not just reduce it" measures like free bus travel for school-age children would be needed.

The strategy comes after the government set up a child poverty taskforce in July 2024, which was initially due to report back in May. The taskforce's findings have not yet been published - only the government's response.

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Sir Keir said: "Too many children are growing up in poverty, held back from getting on in life, and too many families are struggling without the basics: a secure home, warm meals and the support they need to make ends meet.

"I will not stand by and watch that happen, because the cost of doing nothing is too high for children, for families and for Britain."