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Britain: Labour cooks the books on child poverty
By Simon Wheelan
4 May 2002
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One of New Labours central pledges after being elected
in 1997 was to halve child poverty in a decade and eradicate it
within 20 years. To great fanfare at its re-election last year,
Chancellor Gordon Brown boasted that Labour had lifted 1.2 million
children out of poverty. He claimed that the number of children
living below the poverty line fell from 4.4 million in 1996/97,
to 3.2 million in 2000/01.
Newly released figures published in the annual document, Households
Below Average Income, by the Department for Work and Pensions,
indicate otherwise. Household income figures measure poverty relative
to generally rising incomes. Those below 60 percent of the average
income, measured, after housing costs, are considered to be living
in poverty-stricken circumstances. The newly released household
income figures suggest the reduction in child poverty is less
than half that claimed by Brown and the reduction is closer to
just half a million.
One in three British children still live in povertydouble
the rate in France and five times that in the Nordic countries.
A report published by UNICEF in June 2000, measuring relative
poverty, placed Britain 20th out of 23 nations. Even in the unlikely
event of Labour meeting its stated target of reducing child poverty
by half in 10 years, the country would still be stuck with the
highest child poverty in Europe.
Ministers, however, still insist their target to reduce child
poverty by a million in their first term has been met. In the
meantime they are furiously attempting to reformulate the official
methods of poverty calculation in order to mask their failure.
On release of the incriminating child poverty figures, ministers
briefed journalists that Labour had lifted more children out of
poverty but, because the national average wage had increased,
it had made it even harder from them to raise poorer incomes above
the average.
Work and Pensions Secretary Alistair Darling resorted to hypothetical
claims that even more children would have slid into poverty had
the Conservatives remained in power.
The former social security minister Frank Field, who was dumped
from the New Labour cabinet early in its first term, called the
results, a let-down, especially as in the strategys
early years many families were only just below the poverty
line. [emphasis added]
This is an important observation. That so many families were
previously only marginally below the poverty level means that
they required only a very small increase in income to raise them
above the threshold. And this is what Labour has done. Most families
who have been raised marginally above the poverty line are those
who are in receipt of the working family tax credit, which is
dependent upon them accepting low paid employment. But those who
are raised just above the official poverty line can just as easily
fall down below it.
The Blair government says there is no dignity outside of the
labour market and is using these measures to further erode welfare
provision. Many of those families who remain in poverty are single
parents and those dependent solely on benefits for their income.
While in-work benefits have meant that taking a low paid job makes
a family slightly better off, unemployment benefits have decreased
enormously in relative value when compared to wages.
This situation means that when the present period of economic
growth ends, even more families will be thrown back into even
deeper poverty.
Receiving a few pounds above the official poverty line does
not alter the fact that millions of people continue to be haunted
by economic insecurity. Recent research suggests that while a
minority of families who rely exclusively upon social security
remain in poverty for protracted periods, many others, as many
as 60 percent of the total British population, experience intermittent
periods of poverty over extended periods of time. Those suffering
poverty at any one time are only a minority of those who have
suffered from poverty-ridden circumstances over a more extended
period.
Darling has also made the dubious claim that the poorest fifth
of society had enjoyed income increases on a par with that of
the highest fifth since 1997. He used this to imply that the growth
of inequality has peaked. But even if one accepts the claim of
a five percent increase in income at either end of the scale,
there is a vast difference between five percent of not very much
at the poorest end, and five percent of millions at the other.
Just one week after the release of the embarrassing child poverty
figures, the government announced plans to redefine the calculation
of child poverty figuresclaiming the current method to be
inadequate. One can safely bet that whichever formula is finally
decided upon, it will be that which enables the government to
triumphantly proclaim it is on target in its poverty reduction
plans. When a similar overhaul of the official measurement was
implemented in the Irish Republic, poverty immediately shrank,
as if by magic, from 26 percent to 6 percent.
See Also:
Scotland report exposes child
poverty
[8 February 2002]
Latest survey shows
wealth and poverty side-by-side across Britain
[9 February 2001]
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