Wednesday 25 June – Legally binding poverty reduction targets are critical if England and Wales are to see a similar turnaround in child poverty to Scotland, according to a new report by the Big Issue.
Analysis of UK child poverty statistics conducted alongside the publication of the new Big Issue report highlights the assent of the Child Poverty (Scotland) Act 2017 as a parting of the ways for the different home nations’ trajectories on child poverty.
According to their new analysis of child poverty data, Scotland has seen a 12% drop in relative child poverty since 2018, while England and Wales has seen a 15% rise – a 27-percentage point gap in progress. Where 21,000 Scottish children saw their poverty lifted, 320,000 more English and Welsh children have fallen into poverty.
The Scottish Government’s landmark Child Poverty (Scotland) Act, which received royal assent in December 2017, incited a significant divergence in child poverty levels between the home nations. Before 2018, Scotland had seen similar rises in relative child poverty to England and Wales. Child poverty in Scotland rose by 19% between 2015 and 2018, only marginally slower than England and Wales (23%).
The Act included setting ambitious statutory targets for the Scottish Government to reduce relative child poverty to 10% of Scottish children by 2030. While experts say Holyrood still faces considerable challenges in meeting this target, it has enshrined tackling child poverty as a top policy priority for subsequent Scottish Governments.
As laid out in its new ‘Poverty Zero’ policy report, which is being launched today (25 July) at an event in the House of Commons, Big Issue is encouraging Westminster to adopt a similar approach and establish mandatory, time-bound targets in legislation for England and Wales.
The report argues that a cyclical target-setting method would translate Labour’s stated ambition of “enduring poverty reduction” into concrete, measurable steps. The need to meet these targets would move governments beyond annual budget cycles and counteract the inherent tendency towards policy short-termism.