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Tory welfare cuts will impoverish 200,000 children next year and more than 600,00 in 2020

(700 Posts)
Gracesgran Thu 08-Oct-15 21:49:08

The Resolution Foundation has found that Tory welfare cuts will impoverish 200,000 children next year and more than 600,00 in 2020.
Their report can be found here and starts:

Measures announced at the Summer Budget are expected to significantly increase the number of children (and households) living in poverty (households with less than 60 per cent of median income). Despite positive action on low pay, cuts to working age benefits mean that most of this increase is expected to be among those living in working households.

Their worry is that this will go unnoticed because "The Welfare Reform and Employment Bill removes the requirement on Government to meet the 2020 child poverty target established in the Child Poverty Act 2010."

JessM Sun 18-Oct-15 15:59:51

Tweaking his definition of a "hard working family" so that the stats look different?

durhamjen Sun 18-Oct-15 16:06:09

www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/22173

A good few tweaks in this article, Jess.
They are tweaking the definition of poverty so it excludes any mention of money, so I wouldn't put it past them to tweak the definition of hardworking family.
Any family with a foreigner should be reclassified as illegal immigrants? That'll get rid of a few residents, particularly if any of them have been involved in demonstrations.

whitewave Sun 18-Oct-15 16:11:50

Osborne will do everything he can not to back track so I suspect he may if pushed come up with something next month. He tries to show how clever he is politically, but he isnt a very likable character and one day will undoubtedly do something too clever by half. Pride etc.

Anniebach Sun 18-Oct-15 19:41:43

How can poverty be mentioned but not money . Frightening that Osbourne is a fav to take over the leadership of his party. Who has the sharpest knife , Osbourne or Johnson?

Ana Sun 18-Oct-15 19:48:44

Although when I tried to obtain a definition of poverty in monetary terms I was roundly castigated and more or less told to get back in my box! You can't have it all ways...

whitewave Sun 18-Oct-15 19:50:19

ana I thought you agreed with a definition some time ago?

Ana Sun 18-Oct-15 19:58:52

I accepted the 60% definition, but when I attempted to suggest that people I know who fall into that category would in no way consider themselves or their families to be 'in poverty' I was cut off short - 'there you go again...' I think it was.

whitewave Sun 18-Oct-15 20:04:25

Although if you think about it, it is a bit of a sterile exercise as, when considering the OP. We are where we are and so are those families who will suffer the result of Osborne's scramble towards a small state.

rosequartz Sun 18-Oct-15 20:10:19

I did say that one person's poverty in somewhere like London could be quite adequate to live on in another area.
Or words to that effect.

Ana Sun 18-Oct-15 20:16:00

Exactly. That's why the 60% median is such an imprecise way of assessing 'poverty'.

whitewave Sun 18-Oct-15 20:21:55

So are you saying that families in London will suffer even more than families in the rest of the country?

rosequartz Sun 18-Oct-15 20:23:36

Well, salaries used to be given London weighting, not sure what happens nowadays; perhaps the same should happen with the level at which tax credits kick in.

Anniebach Sun 18-Oct-15 20:30:37

I can remember when the rates for apprentices in London was higher than the rest of the country, not so now

durhamjen Mon 19-Oct-15 00:09:24

There is still London weighting, according to Unison.

JessM Mon 19-Oct-15 07:25:03

Frank Field in a R4 interview just said: When David Cameron says "8 out of 10 of us will be better off" he's including all of us. The 3 million on tax credits will be worse off.

whitewave Mon 19-Oct-15 07:33:48

However they spin it, they simply can't hide the fact that they are introducing a work penalty for the poorest workers in the UK. Osborne is economically illiterate.

JessM Mon 19-Oct-15 11:48:47

I fear we are in part suffering from the surprise election result. The Tories did not expect to win. They were making all kinds of promises without feeling the need to think them through. Hence the long string of broken promises since the election and the need to push through huge cuts to public expenditure.
They seem to be set on a course which will do huge damage to this country and its people.

MamaCaz Mon 19-Oct-15 12:46:22

Very true, Jess. They expected to be sharing government like last time and therefore have a convenient get-out clause / scapegoat for whatever wild promises / back-of-the-fag--packet policies they dreamt up pre-election.

rosequartz Mon 19-Oct-15 13:54:10

Politicians of all parties must be smoking a lot of fags as they all seem to have plenty of fag packets to scribble down their policies hmm

whitewave Mon 19-Oct-15 15:11:11

Frank Field reckons that Osborne will try to mitigate the problem next month, he is beginning to cave in to the Tory MPs whose constituents are largely being affected. But where else will the cuts be made? Let's hope Cameron doesn't lie this time.

Perhaps the high earners will be asked to make a contribution? Or maybe employers will be made to pay more, which logically should happen before or alongside the cuts in tax credits.

durhamjen Mon 19-Oct-15 18:10:02

www.theguardian.com/society/2015/oct/19/foreign-office-cleaners-interserve-living-wage

Hope there's a petition about this.

rosesarered Mon 19-Oct-15 22:21:25

RoseQuartz grin
yes, that old chestnut, the back of the fag packet.

Ana Mon 19-Oct-15 22:44:57

And has anyone every actually tried writing on the back of a fag packet? Most of them seem to be dark blue and have a shiny-ish coating, as well as the horrendous images of damaged lungs etc....confused

rosesarered Mon 19-Oct-15 22:53:35

Very true, you haven't actually been able to scribble on a fag packet since
Around 1964, but it doesn't stop all the talking about doing it.

durhamjen Mon 19-Oct-15 22:56:24

In which case I do not understand why the government hasn't brought in plain white packaging to make it easier for themselves.
Could possibly have something to do with the fact that they are in the pockets of the cigarette companies.
My dad always used to open them up to give himself more space to write.