boys in front of tower block
© Karen Robinson/Format
 

Archived briefings

For more recent briefings see current briefings

 


13 March BBC online feature by Martin Barnes
Child poverty progress 'disappointing'
  • 'Four years ago the Prime Minister pledged to eradicate child poverty within 20 years. The pledge is ambitious, and rightfully so. Any decrease in the number of children in poverty should be welcomed, but the relatively small fall, revealed by the latest statistics, is disappointing. The Government can and should do more, but progress is being made and this should be acknowledged.'

September 2002
Tax credits fact sheet
  • From April 2003 a new tax credits scheme comes into force that will radically alter the current social security and tax credits systems. The new scheme has been heralded by the Government as a means to tackle child poverty, poor work incentives and persistent poverty among working people.

January 2001
Children's tax credit
  • The children's tax credit (CTC) is a new income tax relief for people with a child under the age of 16. It can reduce the amount of income tax you pay by up to £10 a week or £520 a year. It will be introduced from 6 April 2001.

July 2000
Benefits for widowers
  • This briefing summarises recent developments on widowers' claims for benefits and the steps that can be taken to challenge a decision that there is no entitlement to widowers' benefits under UK law.

April 2000
Briefing on the Social Security (Work-Focused Interviews) Regulations 2000
  • These regulations, which came into force on 3rd April 2000, relate to the introduction of compulsory work-focused interviews as a requirement for receiving benefits. They relate to sections 57 and 58 of the Welfare Reform and Pensions Act 1999. They are integral to the ONE scheme. People claiming benefit are allocated a personal adviser who deals with all their claims from one office and interviews them about their work history, prospects and opportunities.

March 2000
Changes to the child support scheme
  • The shortcomings of the current child support system are well documented. Reform is urgently needed.

    • 1.8 million children receive no maintenance.
    • Only 47 per cent of non-resident parents pay all their maintenance. Thirty per cent pay nothing.
    • Only 62 per cent of maintenance applications are cleared within the target 22 weeks.
    • Even now only 77 per cent of CSA assessments are correct.

    The measures contained in the Child Support, Pensions and Social Security Bill are directed to providing a simpler, more efficient scheme that is of actual benefit to the poorest children. CPAG therefore gives overall support to the new scheme. But we are concerned that some families are pushed further into poverty. We believe our concerns can be addressed without undermining the principles of the new scheme.


January 2000
The impact of the child support scheme on children in second families
  • The measures contained in the Child Support, Pensions and Social Security Bill are directed to providing a simpler, more efficient scheme that is of actual benefit to the poorest children. Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) therefore gives overall support to the new scheme. We have some concerns which we believe can be addressed without undermining the principles of the new scheme. This briefing concentrates on the impact on low-income second families.

January 2000
The impact of the child support scheme on parents with care and their children
  • CPAG offers broad support to the new child support scheme. We have concerns around some of the details. In particular:

    • We welcome the child maintenance premium but would like to see it introduced at the same time for all parents.
    • Consideration should be given to increasing the level of the premium from £10 to £15. A clear commitment should be given to uprating it regularly.
    • Maintenance received should be disregarded in full for housing benefit/council tax benefit purposes.
    • Tribunals hearing child support decisions should consist of three members, at least one of which should be of the same sex as the appellant.
    • The benefit penalty should be suspended until 2006, while the new incentives are given a chance to work.

October 1999
Working families' tax credit
  • CPAG welcomes the priority the Government has placed on 'tackling the scourge of child poverty' and the commitment it has so far shown in successive Budgets. A centrepiece of policy to date was the introduction, on 5 October 1999, of working families' tax credit (WFTC) and disabled person's tax credit (DPTC).

October 1999
School meals and healthy eating
  • The development of the school meal service from in the post-war years created a platform from which nutritional poverty affecting children could be tackled in a systematic way. Legislation in recent years has significantly altered this by:

    • Restricting entitlement to free school meals to families on income support and income-based jobseeker's allowance, and
    • Abolishing minimum nutritional standards and price controls.

    The recent announcement that nutritional standards are to be reintroduced from May 2002 is welcome.


October 1999
School meals in Scotland
  • An improved diet helps children get the most out of their education and can improve health in both the short and long term. Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) believes that the development of a strategy to promote healthy eating would be an investment in the health and education of Scottish school children.


Social fund
  • CPAG believes that the social fund should be a priority for reform. In our view it is not acceptable that claimants should be in a position where they are forced to live without beds, cooking and heating facilities, bedding and many other essentials that most people in our society at the end of the twentieth century take for granted.


Social Security and Child Support (Decisions and Appeals) Regulations 1999
  • CPAG opposed many of the changes to social security and child support decision making and appeals procedures when the Social Security Bill was going through Parliament. We understand the concern about the Government’s concerns about waiting times for appeals. It remains our view, however, that a concerted effort should have been made to improve the quality of first tier decisions and explanations staff are able to give to claimants. Once this had been done, a proper evaluation could have been made about whether changes to the appeals system were necessary.


Widows and widowers
  • Entitlement depends on the husband having satisfied the contribution conditions (these are waived if he died of an industrial accident or disease). The widows pension and widowed mothers allowance are paid at a reduced rate if inadequate contributions have been paid. Entitlement ceases if she remarries and for any period for which she is cohabiting.


Working families' tax credit
  • In an earlier briefing on proposals for a working families' tax credit (WFTC), CPAG welcomed the increased generosity of the new scheme, but expressed concerns that it failed to assist those on the lowest incomes leaving many families unable to achieve a ‘low cost but acceptable budget’. Measures announced in the Budget on 9th March 1999, in particular the £2.50 increase in level of the adult credit for WFTC and a significant increase of £4.70 for the WFTC credit and personal allowance in other means-tested benefits for children under 11, have improved this. Further changes, such as the small increases in child benefit from April 2000, build on it.


Joint claims for jobseeker's allowance
  • Currently, jobseeker's allowance is claimed by one partner on behalf of a couple. The Welfare Reform and Pensions Bill introduces a requirement for both partners of a couple to sign on. We understand that the intention is to introduce it for people born after a certain date. The intention is to bring in people currently aged 18-24. These people are to remain subject to the requirement for both partners to sign on. The intention is to draw these partners in to the New Deal for Partners of the Unemployed.

Top of PageSend Comments to CPAG

Entire contents copyright © 2000-2008 by Child Poverty Action Group. www.cpag.org.uk
All rights reserved. Credits