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Anti-poverty policy needs better benefits

Posted: 14 August 2003 | Subscribe Online


It is a pity the government is so mired in its own muck that it hasn't time to celebrate the good news. Tax credits have reduced severe hardship among low-income families by 40 per cent in the two years to 2001.

Two reports published last week, based on surveys of 8,000 families by the Policy Studies Institute, show a dramatic reduction in child poverty defined in terms of living standards rather than income. They counted items that families ought to have but go without, such as hot meals, clothes and family outings. Added to these were factors such as debts and overcrowding to arrive at a nine-point hardship scale.
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Institute deputy director Alan Marsh, writing in The Guardian,1 said the results revealed that seven out of 10 British families scored zero while only 8 per cent were in severe hardship (three to nine points). In 1999, 41 per cent of out-of-work families caring for two million children were in severe hardship. Two years later, the figure had dropped to 28 per cent for lone parents and 22 per cent for couples who were out-of-work.

Critics claim that if you give the poor extra cash they spend it on booze, fags and lottery tickets. This research indicates they invest it in food, children's shoes and reducing debt. "No one has ever been able to show this beforeÉon a national scale," Marsh says.

Those who also hugely improved their lot had managed the move from joblessness to low-paid work supported by tax credits, reducing rates of severe hardships from 31 per cent to 11 per cent in two years.

The research raises two key points. One is the question of why the taxpayer is subsidising employers by compensating employees for the lousy wages they receive. Then there is the plight of a core of families containing a million children who may never be able to make the step into sustained employment, and the hurdles faced by some ethnic minorities - especially Pakistani and Bangladeshi families - disadvantaged by language and poor qualifications.
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The government has focused on shifting people into work and compensating for inadequate pay. Should a second, more clearly defined, strand of policy now concentrate on those who, through ill health or vulnerability, remain embedded in extreme hardship because they cannot make that step?

Couldn't they be trusted with a significant increase in basic out-of-work benefits so the lift out of poverty truly becomes universal?

1 Alan Marsh, The Guardian, 5 August.


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