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Fears child poverty figures will soar because of welfare cuts

Two young boys play football in a street in Govan on September 30, 2008 in Glasgow, Scotland. Latest reports by the campaign to end child poverty, claim that millions of children are living in households living on under  £10 per person per day.
Two young boys play football in a street in Govan on September 30, 2008 in Glasgow, Scotland. Latest reports by the campaign to end child poverty, claim that millions of children are living in households living on under £10 per person per day.

Around 120,000 children whose parents are working on low incomes will be cast adrift if the UK Government changes its definition of child poverty, the social justice secretary has said.

Alex Neil MSP has written to Iain Duncan Smith, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, urging the UK Government to focus on tackling the root causes of child poverty instead of redefining the way it is measured.

The Scottish Government said that proposals set out in the Welfare Reform and Work Bill would mean the UK Government would no longer be required to take action to reduce the number of people living on low incomes.

Instead, the focus would move to “worklessness” and “educational attainment”, ignoring the increasing problem of in-work poverty which affects 120,000 children in Scotland.

Mr Neil said: “By changing the definition of child poverty the UK Government is hiding the true extent of the problem and casting adrift the 120,000 Scottish children whose parents are working on low incomes and struggling to pay their bills.

“The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions must rethink these flawed plans. They will only gloss over the impact of the UK Government’s austerity agenda and fail to show the shocking reality of its inexcusable attack on low-paid families.

“The Scottish Government will continue to measure and report on the wide range of factors that drive child poverty including income, educational attainment and health outcomes. Our sophisticated measurement framework was developed with experts and leading children’s organisations and is helping us to understand the full scale of the problem and find the most effective ways to address it.

“Around 210,000 children are living in relative poverty after housing costs are paid, but these numbers are likely to soar in coming years because of cuts to social security. Reforms to tax credits alone will reduce the incomes of between 200,000 and 250,000 households in Scotland, with families facing almost £700 million of cuts.”

He added: “We recognise that any serious attempt to tackle inequality has to focus on in-work poverty, which remains very high. That’s why we are calling for powers over the minimum wage, employment policy and working-age benefits to be devolved to Scotland.”