Poverty (127 Summer 2007)
Where next for Gordon Brown? His first hundred days
- Gordon Brown MP formally became the leader of the Labour Party on 24 June, and Prime Minister three days later. Advice to the new Prime Minister has been flowing fast and furious, ranging from impassioned demands that he distance himself from the Blair years and bring the troops out of Iraq, to directives that he prioritise education and global warming.
CPAG asked a number of prestigious commentators and people who are directly affected by poverty to outline a compelling agenda for the new Prime Minister. All agreed that high levels of child poverty and gross wealth inequality in the UK are a disgrace. Gordon Brown needs to be more open in challenging our complacent attitudes to poverty, and to adopt much more robust and transparent policies to reduce it. Here, he is urged to inculcate a sense of public outrage about child poverty and inequality in the UK that will guarantee it a place at the forefront of the political and electoral agenda.
- Download
this article: Where next for Gordon Brown? His first hundred days (42 KB pdf file)
- For most people, any thoughts of slavery are now firmly consigned to a shameful episode in our history. It is difficult to imagine that people in the UK today are still being bought and sold, mistreated and abused. Pamela Fitzpatrick argues that, two hundred years after the abolition of the slave trade, slavery is still very much alive and well.
- Download
this article: Modern-day slavery? (32 KB pdf file)
Poverty (126 Winter 2007)
- The Government has pledged to end child poverty by 2020, and acknowledges that low income and disadvantage in childhood impacts on children's life chances throughout their lives. It has introduced a raft of policies to counteract the long-term effects of child poverty, and to improve the opportunities and life chances of children from disadvantaged backgrounds. However, little is known about how children from different socio-economic groups perceive and experience social difference. Liz Sutton describes a recent project by the Centre for Research in Social Policy that sought to find out.
- Download
this article: A child's-eye view (79 KB pdf file)
- The Government has committed to a series of challenging national targets on child poverty: numbers of children in poverty to be reduced by a quarter by 2004/05 (a target which was narrowly missed) and by a half by 2010/11. There are no corresponding targets at regional or local level, but there remain huge differences in child poverty levels between different parts of the UK, and reducing these differences will be key to making further progress towards the long-term objective of eliminating child poverty by 2020. How other tiers of government can contribute to meeting this aim is likely to be a major issue on the road to the 2010/11 target. Carey Oppenheim presents the challenge for London.
- Download
this article: Child poverty in London (79 KB pdf file)
- On the eve of Scottish devolution in 1999, there were strong hopes that redressing social injustice would be an enduring feature of the new government, especially when the (then) First Minister promised: 'to take action to tackle exclusion, and develop policies, which will promote a more inclusive, cohesive and ultimately sustainable society.' Eight years on, and with the third Scottish elections due in May, Gill Scott and Gerry Mooney look at whether or not this ambition has been realised.
- Download
this article: Devolution, deprivation and disadvantage: lessons from Scotland (79 KB pdf file)
Poverty (125 Autumn 2006)
- The Treasury has currently embarked on a frenetic spending round that will determine the Government's priorities for the next four years. This spending review offers the Government an opportunity to fulfill its promise to halve child poverty by 2010. If it does not deliver, it seems inconceivable that the target will be met. Paul Dornan looks at its options.
- Download
this article: Can the comprehensive spending review deliver for 2010? (86 KB pdf file)
- Twenty-year plans are an unfamiliar feature of the UK political landscape. Tony Blair's remarkable pledge in 1999 to end child poverty by 2020 provided a vision and a compass, but not a long-term plan. Only now is the Government trying to create a full, publicly articulated, strategy for meeting its bold targets. Recent research by Donald Hirsch for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation argues that, if it is to be successful, any long-term plan must include both initiatives to expand work opportunities and to redistribute income.
- Download
this article: Ending child poverty: moving forward (86 KB pdf file)
- Tess Ridge's and Jane Millar's interviews with lone mothers and their children reveal that managing work and family life is an undertaking that involves the whole family. Rather than being a barrier to employment, they show that children play an important role in supporting their mothers staying in work.
- Download
this article: A fine balance: managing work and family life (274 KB pdf file)
Poverty (124 Summer 2006)
- Only eight
months into the job, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions,
John Hutton MP, is a lead figure in the Government's drive to
eradicate child poverty by 2020. He also has ambitious plans to
reduce the number of people claiming incapacity benefits by one
million over the next ten years. He talks here to Alex Belardinelli about failing to meet the first child poverty target, tackling
benefits dependency and making sure that work provides people
with a route out of poverty.
- Download
this article: Interview
with John Hutton MP, Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
(28 KB pdf file)
Poverty (123 Winter 2006)
- The observation
that children from poorer backgrounds do worse in terms of educational
outcomes was first highlighted in Rowntree’s investigation
into poverty in York at the turn of the twentieth century. A hundred
years on, gaps in educational attainment between children from
rich and poor families continue to be marked, and an increasing
focus of government policy. The recent White Paper, Higher Standards,
Better Schools for All, acknowledges that ‘a child’s
educational achievements are still too strongly linked to their
parents’ social and economic background – a key barrier
to social mobility’. The debate continues, however, about
whether the current direction of government policy towards increased
choice and competition is the most appropriate one for reducing
the attainment gap and promoting the achievement of the poorest.
Here, Jo Blanden and Sandra McNally provide
an overview of the evidence before addressing the really important
question: what should be done?
- Download
this article: Mind
the gap: child poverty and educational attainment (52 KB pdf file)
- Tax credits,
aimed both at increasing family incomes and returns from work,
are crucial to tackling child poverty. The programme is large
– in 2004/05 £15.8 billion was spent – and encompasses
most families, and this serious investment in children has been
welcomed by those keen to see the Government meet its child poverty
targets. Yet early problems with both its structure and the quality
of the administration have dogged the scheme and threatened its
success. Eliza Buckley and Paul Dornan examine
some of these and the Government’s action plan for reform.
- Download
this article: A
credit to the Revenue (47 KB pdf file)
Poverty (122 Autumn 2005)
- The government
wants to raise the UK employment rate to 80 per cent, which could
make a real difference to the level of poverty in this country.
The objective is ambitious but achievable, providing the government
plans to achieve it over the long term, investing in high-quality
support for those who need it most. But, warns Richard Exell,
any attempt to rush things, or to put unfair pressure on disabled
people and other disadvantaged claimants, would put the whole
enterprise in a different light - and probably doom it to failure.
- Download
this article: An
80 per cent employment rate (50 KB pdf file)
- Poverty
in the workless population is well documented and being tackled
by the government in its welfare to work policies. Yet poverty
among low-paid workers remains a pressing issue. For those who
need it most - including those providing essential services such
as childminding, cleaning and catering - the National Minimum
Wage has made little real difference, nor is the tax credits system
making real inroads. Here, Carol Murray from the Scottish
Low Pay Unit argues for the problem to be first addressed at its
source: increasing the minimum wage to an adequate, flat-rate
level.
- Download
this article: Low
paid workers: the forgotten poor (52 KB pdf file)
- A close
look at the evidence on families and their income shows how wrong
it is to believe that, if people work, own their home and live
as couples, they and their children will be free of poverty. If
the government is to make further progress in abolishing child
poverty, writes Peter Kenway, much more needs to be done
to improve pay (including regional variations) and the conditions
of work. These are goals that anti-poverty campaigners and trade
unions need to join together to realise.
- Download
this article: In-work
child poverty (90 KB pdf file)
Poverty (121 Summer 2005)
- New research
has found that many people are unaware, misinformed or sceptical
of the reality of poverty in the UK, and of the Government's pledge
eradicate child poverty by 2020. Here, Louise Bamfield argues that the Government needs to engage greater public support
for this goal, as much more investment is needed to achieve it.
Investing in quality of life and improving life chances must be
argued as both morally right and, in the bigger picture, beneficial
to society as a whole.
- Download
this article: Making
the public case for tackling poverty and inequality (35 KB pdf
file)
- Research
shows that the burden of responsibility for managing family finances
in low income families generally falls on women. When there is
debt or barely enough to go round, women often do without basic
necessities themselves. Such stress can damage health and self-esteem,
which in turn can affect women's job prospects and parenting abilities.
In this way women's poverty is inexorably linked with that of
children. Ruth Lister argues that policy makers must acknowledge
this link in their efforts to eradicate child poverty.
- Download
this article: The
links between women's and children's poverty (35 KB pdf file)
- Class difference
in infant mortality, one of the Opportunity for All poverty indicators,
has widened since 1998. Many other poverty-related child health
indicators are also not improving or getting worse - low birth-weight,
obesity, asthma, teenage conceptions, some infectious diseases
and sexually transmitted disease. Childhood accidents have fallen
but class differentials have widened. A new source of evidence
on child poverty and health is emerging as the results of the
Millennium Cohort Study become available. Emese Mayhew and Jonathan Bradshaw present some findings from and analysis
of this important new source.
- Download
this article: Mothers,
babies and the risks of poverty (30 KB pdf file)
Poverty (120 Winter 2005)
- The Government's
new ten-year strategy for childcare focuses on choice and flexibility,
availability, quality and affordability. Hundreds of thousands
of new childcare and early education places have already been
created across the nation, and this expansion needs to be maintained
if the goal of childcare for all is to be achieved. As Stephen
Burke notes, the challenges of funding and affordability,
building a sustainable system and quality workforce, and meeting
families' needs across the spectrum must be met for the vision
to become a reality.
- While all
of us need access to gas, electricity, water and telephone services
as part of our daily lives, some pay more than others. Privatisation
and competition are not in the best interests of the most disadvantaged,
argues the National Consumer Council. Direct debit payment
or energy efficient provision are not often feasible for those
on low incomes or otherwise vulnerable. Government, regulators
and suppliers must work together to stop the poor paying more.
- Planning
of transport routes and access to services is increasingly geared
towards car-users, while public transport fares have risen disproportionately
in relation to motoring costs. For those who are economically
or socially disadvantaged, the costs of travel and inadequate
means of transport can be a major barrier to participating in
everyday activities. Stephen Joseph and Kechi Petruzzelli discuss the issues and set out what the Government is doing -
and should do - to improve transport options from the ground up.
- School meals
play an important role in tackling disadvantage and in the fight
against child poverty.
The need for good-quality, easily accessible school meals is more
important than ever. Of the 1.8 million children entitled to free
school meals in the UK, over 350,000 do not claim them due to
fear of stigma and bullying.
Research also shows that millions of mothers often have to go
without food because they do not have enough money, in order that
their children can eat.
- Download
a 4-page school meals fact sheet (54 KB pdf),
including sections on: What is food poverty?; Food security; The
importance of healthy eating; Policy developments; What needs
to be done?; History of school meals; Examples of good practice
for school meals; CPAG recommendations.
Poverty
(119 Autumn 2004)
- A national
database containing details of all children - from addresses and
schooling, to what services they and family members have had dealings
with - is being proposed in the Children Bill. It would enable
wider access by professionals to currently restricted information,
in an effort to improve the identification of needs and be able
to provide help more quickly. Eileen Munro assesses the
adequacy of this approach and whether it will make any real difference
to the life chances of children in poverty.
- This edition
of Poverty welcomes a new Chief Executive, Kate Green,
to CPAG. Kate arrives at a critical time in the campaign to end
child poverty, about a quarter of the way through the 20-year
period set by Tony Blair. Kate joins CPAG from One Parent Families
(OPF). Here Paul Dornan asks Kate how she sees the child
poverty debate now, how further progress may be made and how CPAG
can influence this change.
Poverty
(118 Summer 2004)
- What real
voice do people with direct experience of poverty have in research
and inquiry into poverty? Participatory approaches respect the
expertise of people with direct experience of poverty and give
them more control over the various stages of the research process.
The authors of a recent report on 'participatory' research on
poverty in the UK, Fran Bennett and Moraene Roberts,
provide an overview of participatory approaches to research on
poverty and examine what happens when principle turns into practice.
- In February
the Zacchaeus 2000 Trust published a Memorandum to the Prime
Minister on Minimum Income Standards, challenging the Government's
proposed poverty thresholds and calling for the establishment
of a minimum income standards commission. The Memorandum's
co-editor, Peter Ambrose, describes his research in
Brighton and argues the case for basing income support payments
on real levels of need as revealed by budget standards studies.
Poverty
(117 Winter 2004)
Dealing
with anti-social behaviour
- The former
Director of CPAG and now Labour MP, Frank Field, is no
stranger to controversy. In his latest book, Neighbours from
Hell, he calls for a radical shift in how we deal with anti-social
behaviour, which would include the use of benefit sanctions. He
took a break from his busy Westminster schedule to talk to Paul
Dornan.
Defining
income poverty out of existence?
- We are about
to enter the first milestone year of the Government's crusade
against child poverty a point at which it intends to have
reduced the number of children living in poverty by a quarter.
In December 2003 the Government also announced how it would measure
child poverty after 2004/05. Here, Paul Dornan examines
what progress has been made and the implications the measurement
review may have on future policy.
Poverty
(116 Autumn 2003)
The
Children's Defense Fund: 30 years of action
- This year
the Children's Defense Fund of the United States is celebrating
its 30th anniversary. Rosemary Link looks at the history
of this pioneering children's organisation.
Can
we afford poverty?
- People living
in poverty are vulnerable to multiple deprivation. They are more
likely to live in sub-standard housing, have poorer health, and
have a greater risk of being affected by crime, debt and premature
death. The consequences of poverty not only have an impact on
the lives of low-income families, but also pose a serious risk
to public finances. Peter Ambrose argues that we can no
longer afford to ignore the true cost of poverty.
Poverty
(115 Summer 2003)
Poor,
excluded and forgotten: asylum seekers and the welfare state
- Media coverage
of the UK's creaking asylum system continues unabated, with proposals
for 'offshore' processing centres recently grabbing the headlines.
Pamela Fitzpatrick argues that the Government's increasingly
punitive asylum policies are not working and run counter to its
goal of abolishing child poverty.
The
Anti-social Behaviour Bill will it deliver for communities?
- A new government
Bill seeks to tackle anti-social behaviour by introducing a range
of enforcement measures. These include new powers for social landlords
and a planned consultation on cutting the housing benefit of anti-social
tenants. Adam Sampson asks whether the Government's approach
will work.
Baby
bonds can asset-based welfare tackle inequality?
- After a long
gestation period, the Chancellor finally announced in this year's
Budget that baby bonds (the Child Trust Fund) will be introduced
in 2005. Claire Kober asks how effective this asset-based
approach will be in tackling child poverty.
Poverty
(114 Winter 2003)
Promoting
financial inclusion
- Over a million
adults in Britain still live their lives without the most basic
of financial products. Some 6-9 per cent of all households do
not have any kind of bank or building society account and 14-23
per cent live without the flexibility of a current account. There
is a large minority of people for whom the financial services
revolution has effectively passed them by; they are financially
excluded. Against this backdrop, Faith Reynolds assesses
some current initiatives that are attempting to promote greater
financial inclusion.
A
'child audit' of the National Action Plans for social inclusion
- Fran
Bennett
and Sandy Ruxton were commissioned by Euronet, the European
Children's Network of organisations campaigning for children's
rights and interests, to write a report exploring how to develop
a coherent approach to child poverty and social exclusion across
Europe. As part of this project, they carried out a 'child audit'
of the National Action Plans against poverty and social exclusion
developed recently by the UK and other member states.
Poverty
(113 Autumn 2002)
Facing
the childcare challenge
- The Government's
first ever National Childcare Strategy, launched in May 1998,
is an integral part of its package of policies designed to tackle
child poverty and social exclusion. Megan Pacey looks at
how effective it has been and argues that universal childcare
is key to ending child poverty.
Childhood
poverty and social exclusion listening to children's voices
- A new child-centred
study of childhood poverty gives an insight into some of the challenges
that children who are living in poverty face in their everyday
lives. The findings from the study are reported in a new book,
Childhood Poverty and Social Exclusion: from a child's perspective,
which explores the lives and experiences of children living in
poverty using child-centred research methods which engage directly
with the meanings and perceptions of poor children themselves.
Here, the book's author, Tess Ridge, describes some of
the findings.
Poverty
(112 Summer 2002)
New
tax credits: will they tackle child poverty?
- Poor people
cannot be identified on the basis of their behaviour, or any other
observable feature. Their standard of living can only be measured
objectively and to understand what is socially regarded as unacceptable,
people have to be asked for their views and opinions. At this
point, we encounter the first problem with trying to measure poverty,
best described by R H Tawney: 'What thoughtful rich people call
the problem of poverty, thoughtful poor people call with equal
justice a problem of riches.' Here, Paul Treloar looks
at whether the new child tax credit can adequately address the
problem, as perceived by both sets of thoughtful people.
'Security
for those who cannot': Labour's neglected welfare principle
- The Government's
welfare reforms have been based on the principle of 'work for
those who can, security for those who cannot'. While benefits
policy and delivery have focused heavily on the first half of
this equation, the security side has been neglected. Saul Becker
argues that New Labour will need to address what this means in
practice and pay far more attention to providing real security
for those who cannot work if more people are to be lifted out
of poverty.
Poverty
(111 Winter 2002)
Housing
benefit: progress at last?
- The problems
of the housing benefit scheme have often been examined but rarely
tackled effectively. Geoff Fimister reports on a new study
which could help to generate some real progress.
Listening
to children: their contribution to anti-poverty policies
- Children's
own accounts of what it is like to be poor can increase our understanding
of the impact on families of living on a low income. Here, Tess
Ridge argues that for anti-poverty strategies to be successful,
we need to allow children's own voices to be heard.
Poverty
(110 Autumn 2001)
Mind
the gap: widening inequalities
- The latest
official figures show that, despite a number of government anti-poverty
initiatives, income inequality continues to rise. Adrian Harvey
questions whether a Government committed to tackling poverty can
afford to ignore the growing gap between rich and poor and argues
that if inequalities continue to be ignored the target of ending
child poverty will not be met.
Tackling
inequalities in health
- 'What
greater inequality can there be than to die younger and to suffer
more illness throughout your life as a result of where you live,
what job you do and how much your parents earned.' So said
Yvette Cooper, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Public
Health, launching the consultation paper Tackling Health Inequalities.
Here, Tim Marsh examines this latest government initiative,
together with the national health inequalities targets, and asks
whether they are likely to be successful in reducing the health
gap between rich and poor.
Urban
regeneration an answer to poverty
- 'I believe
in greater equality. If the next Labour Government has not raised
the living standards of the poorest by the end of its time in
office it will have failed.'
Tony Blair, July 1996 Speaking while still in opposition Mr Blair
could hardly have foreseen the Labour landslides of 1997 and 2001
and the two-term timescale these would allow for the achievement
of what was declared to be a key ambition for his Government.
How goes New Labour's fight against inequality? Not too well according
to some.
Council
tax reform
- In July the
New Policy Institute launched a new mini-think tank to campaign
for a council tax which is fairer to families with low incomes.
This Centre for Council Tax Reform is being supported by the public
sector union, PCS, and the Local Government Information Unit.
Through publications, events and behind-the-scenes lobbying we
aim to draw attention to the inequities of the current system
and campaign for change.
Student
debt
- September
is the start of the academic year and the beginning of university
life for over 1.5 million students. But for many, it is the first
step on the road to massive debt and poverty.
Poverty
(109 Summer 2001)
Children,
poverty and disability
- The Government
has made an ambitious and public commitment to eradicating child
poverty within a target of 20 years and has put (at least some
of) its money where its mouth is, with a range of policy initiatives
and increases in benefits. Some of the changes represent improvements
for all parents parental leave, above average increases
in child benefit others are targeted at low-income families
working families' tax credit, allowances for children within
income support and schemes such as Sure Start. So far, so good,
but will these improvements reach all children at risk of poverty?
What about disabled children or children in families where a parent
is long-term sick or disabled? Lorna Reith looks at what
action the Government is taking to address their needs.
It's
time to protect children from the advertisers
- Many campaign
organisations believe that children are especially vulnerable
to the powerful emotive messages in advertisements and that advertisers
readily exploit children for commercial gain. The effects of marketing
targeted at children are far reaching and place a disproportionate
burden on low-income families. Charlie Powell describes
the unhealthy way in which childhood is increasingly being transformed
into a market.
Integrated child credit
- The ICC is
intended to roll up the children's additions to means-tested benefits
with the new children's tax credit, to create a combined means-tested
credit payable regardless of whether or not parents are in work
or of which benefits they receive. CPAG sees the ICC as a potential
means of channelling further resources towards low-income families
with children, but has also warned of the possible hazards - not
least the danger that the new means-tested payment might come
to be treated as an alternative to child benefit, rather than
building upon it as the Chancellor has promised.
'Assets for all' a new pillar of welfare?
- There are
two main proposals: a new Child Trust Fund, with a lump sum invested
at birth and further payments at 5,11 and 16; and a new Savings
Gateway a guarantee to match the tax-free savings made
by individuals with funds from the Government.
Improving the take-up of free school meals
- School meals
play an important role in promoting healthy eating and tackling
disadvantage, but of the 1.8 million children in the UK who are
eligible for free school meals, on average one child in five fails
to take it up. Currently, only those children whose parents are
in receipt of income support or income-based jobseeker's allowance
are eligible for free meals.
Poverty
(108 Winter 2001)
Does 'public
utilities' mean anything any more?
- Concern
about poverty has long included awareness of the precarious grip
that householders struggling to make ends meet have on the basic
household essentials: gas and electricity, water, and more recently,
telephones and allied services. Here, Martin Fitch explores
the impact the privatisation of the utility industries has had
on its poorer customers.
Getting
the measure of fraud
- The latest
word on social security fraud is that 'the tide is turning against
benefit cheats'. The evidence for this turn of events is, according
to a DSS press release in November 2000, 'the first substantial
fall in fraud and error'. Three cheers for the Government, then?
Perhaps. But before we sigh with relief that we have 'benefit
cheats' on the run, Roy Sainsbury takes a closer look at
the latest fraud figures and examines what else they can tell
us about the health of our social security system.
The view
from Peckham
- In
the first of what we hope will be a regular series of personal
viewpoints, Pascale Vassie describes the human cost of
one South London urban regeneration scheme.
Progress
reports
- In March
1999, the Prime Minister announced the Government's intention
to set in train a programme to abolish child poverty within 20
years. In September 1999, Opportunity for All: tackling poverty
and social exclusion made its appearance. This was announced
as the first of a series of annual reports, designed to track
progress towards the Government's objectives in attacking poverty
and promoting social inclusion.
A better
deal for parents?
The
case for a decent minimum wage
- It is over
18 months since the national minimum wage was introduced and the
evidence shows that it is a success, enjoying wide support from
the public and key stakeholders. Together with the Working Time
Regulations and the working families' tax credit, the minimum
wage provides protection for low-paid workers against gross exploitation
and plays a key role in the Government's 'making work pay' strategy.
Poverty
(107 Autumn 2000)
Designing
the employment tax credit
- In a major
shift in social policy, payments for children and adults will
be paid separately from 2003. In Poverty 106, Jane Millar
examined policy and delivery issues for the proposed integrated
child credit. Here, Marilyn Howard considers the design
and delivery of the other side of the equation - the adult employment
tax credit.
Poverty and food: will the Food Standards Agency make a difference
- Following
the BSE and other food scandals, the Food Standards Agency was
launched earlier this year. Deputy Chair, Suzi Leather,
reflects on the Agency's role in combating food poverty.
Housing
Green Paper
- Shelter's
campaign priorities for the last two years have focused on improving
housing benefit, increasing investment in affordable housing and
improving rights for homeless people. These were chosen because
they were the three key issues we identified, from the experiences
of our front-line services, that would make a significant improvement
for the people we work with.
Payments
for children
- Chancellor
of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, announced in this year's Budget
that the children's additions to means-tested tax credits and
benefits would be increased by £4.35 per child per week
from June and October respectively. As CPAG had called for a £5.00
increase in October, followed by a further £5.00 in April
2001, this was a welcome step in the right direction. It would,
of course, be too bold to claim that the Chancellor's decision
was a response to our press statements, but the fact that such
increases are debated as realistic possibilities represents a
very real change in the policy climate.
Human Rights
Act
- The Human
Rights Act came into force in England and the UK on 2 October
2000, and will apply to decisions made on or after that date.
The Act brings into law most of the provisions of the European
Convention on Human Rights. This includes provisions ('articles')
that give rise to, for example: the right to a fair trial (Article
6); the right to respect for private and family life and home
(Article 8); the protection of property (Protocol 1, Article 1)
and the prohibition of discrimination (Article 14).
Poverty
(106 Summer 2000)
The
integrated child credit: issues of policy and delivery
- The new integrated
child credit represents a major change in our system of financial
support for children. The key feature of the proposal is very
simple: that all poor children should receive the same type of
financial support regardless of whether their parents are working
or not. It is a policy which has much to commend it, but which
also raises some difficult delivery issues. Jane Millar
examines what we can learn from similar systems in Canada and
Australia.
Financial
support for care leavers
- The Children
(Leaving Care) Bill will lead to the almost total exclusion of
looked after young people from the benefits system and places
sole responsibility for their financial support on local authorities.
Alaster Calder provides an overview of the Bill and assesses
its implications for the welfare of vulnerable young people.
ONE for
all?
- The
Government has announced a radical change to the way people claim
benefits. The Benefits Agency and the Employment Service are to
merge in 2001, to create a new 'ONE' agency, where people of working
age will claim most of their benefits. The new Pensions Agency
will be responsible for benefits for people over working age and,
from 2003, the Inland Revenue will be responsible for assessing
and delivering the integrated child credit and employment credits
for low-paid workers. All should take advantage of information
technology to share information and to pay people benefit through
their wages or by automatic credit transfer into bank accounts.
Only disability living allowance and attendance allowance will
be left outside this new structure.
Hidden
hunger
- New work
by Sustain farming (formerly the National Food Alliance and the
SAFE Alliance) has revealed further evidence to to highlight the
problem of food poverty among children in the UK, . This includinges
children going without food for long periods, arriving at coming
into school hungry and making very unhealthy food choices, and
some visible signs of malnutrition at school. Jacqui Webster
and Vicky Johnson describe the project.
Budget 2000:
Winning the war against child poverty?
- Press reports
had suggested that the Chancellor would be stepping up the 'war
on child poverty' in April's Budget ('Budget to focus on child
poverty' - The Guardian 17 February). Expectations were
therefore high, but did the Chancellor deliver?
Poverty
(105 Winter 2000)
A refuge
for children?
The impact of the Immigration and Asylum Act
- The number
of people seeking asylum in the UK has increased dramatically
over recent years and the asylum system has been characterised
by delay, confusion, inconsistency and inefficiency. Against this
backdrop the Government laid out its plans to 'modernise' asylum
procedures in its White Paper Fairer, Faster, Firmer, which
culminated in November 1999 with the passing of the Immigration
and Asylum Act. Terry Smith assesses the Act's implications
for children and shows how it is contrary to the spirit of the
United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Setting
a governmental minimum income standard -
the next steps
- The Government
aims to have eradicated child poverty in twenty years' time -
but how can it establish the minimum household income that would
require? John Veit-Wilson examines the complexities surrounding
governmental minimum income standards.
Community legal services - access to justice for all?
- From
April, the new community legal service will radically change publicly-funded
advice. It will affect the activities of funders and service providers,
ranging from local authorities through to solicitors and community
groups, and is based on the development of local networks of information
providers - welfare agencies, libraries and community groups.
Yet knowledge of the new service remains sketchy. Nick Whitton
provides an overview.
Child
support - the reform wheels turn
- Following
the publication of the Government's White Paper on child support
in July (see Poverty 104), child support reform has been
the subject of a report by the Social Security Committee, and
is the centrepiece of a new Bill.
Housing
benefit - still waiting
- Housing
costs play a key role in determining net disposable incomes, so
housing benefit (HB) should occupy a key place in any anti-poverty
strategy. Nevertheless, readers of Poverty could be forgiven
for having lost track of where the Government's much-delayed review
of the HB scheme is up to.
Poverty
(103 Summer 1999)
Child
benefit - where to next?
- Before the budget, speculation
was rife that child benefit, having increased since the last general
election, would be taxed. This did not happen, even though child
benefit and the children's allowances in income support will increase
this year. In a little-reported section of his Budget speech,
the Chancellor announced that his long-term goal was to bring
together the different elements of benefits payable for children
into a seamless system of support. Marilyn Howard looks at what
may happen to child benefit in future.
The future of contributory benefits
- Controversy about the
Welfare Reform and Pensions Bill has recently focused attention
on contributory benefits and the balance between means-tested
and non-means-tested benefit provision. The Social Security Select
Committee is conducting a timely inquiry into the contributory
principle and its future. Martin Barnes examines the options.
Tackling poverty - an acceptable living standard
- Soon after the Report
of the Independent Inquiry into Inequalities in Health chaired
by Sir Donald Acheson, a report by the Family Budget Unit (FBU)
published in December last year estimated the costs of a Low Cost
but Acceptable (LCA) living standard - or poverty threshold -
for families with young children, in and out of paid work. Hermione
Parker summarises the main findings.
UK factories - poisoning poor people
- Pollution hits poor people
hardest. This is the message to the UK Government from Friends
of the Earths new work linking pollution to poverty.
Welfare Reform and Pensions Bill
- The Welfare Reform and
Pensions Bill had its report stage in the House of Commons on
20 May. 67 Labour MPs voted for the amendment to delete the clauses
on restricting eligibility for incapacity benefit and reducing
entitlement for those with occupational pensions.
Asylum and Immigration Bill - the opposition grows
- The
Kosovo refugee crisis has brought home the reality of the experience
of flight from persecution. The crisis also raises grave questions
about the treatment of refugees in the UK, which is to be reformed
in the Immigration & Asylum Bill, currently before Parliament.
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