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News from Marina Ahmad: Southwark had one of highest child poverty rates in the country

Created on
21 May 2021

Almost half of all children in Southwark were living below the poverty line in the lead up to the pandemic. These new statistics, published by End Child Poverty, also reveal that this was one of the highest rates in the country during the period between April 2019 and March 2020. Local London Assembly Member, Marina Ahmad AM, said that these “alarming figures” are “yet another wake-up call” for the Government to “fix our broken welfare system”.

With research showing that almost two-fifths of London’s children were living in poverty before the COVID-19 outbreak hit, Ms Ahmad is also calling for the Government to fully include the capital in what the Government says is its ‘levelling- up’ agenda.

End Child Poverty’s research has attributed the high cost of housing as a key driver behind these numbers, which place the capital above every other region of the UK in terms of child poverty levels. The average rate across the country during 2019/2020 was 31%.

In March 2020, the Government raised Local Housing Allowance rates to cover the bottom 30% of rents. However, Ms Ahmad believes that Ministers must boost this further to encompass up to 50% of local rent levels, to prevent more families from falling into arrears to private landlords.

She is also urging the Government to make wider reforms to the welfare system, such as an increase to child benefits, the scrapping of the two child-limit and formal five-week waiting period on Universal Credit payments, and a permanent extension to the weekly £20 uplift.

Local London Assembly Member, Marina Ahmad AM, said:



“Children in our community simply shouldn’t be going hungry or living in cold and overcrowded homes. Our children are being neglected by the Government who seem keen to give off the impression that London’s streets are paved with gold.

“These alarming figures provide yet another wake-up call to Ministers that prove that after a decade of austerity, the state is failing to fulfil its duty of care for vulnerable people in our society.

“We must remember that these findings reflect the situation before the pandemic, which has since exacerbated social inequalities and the financial struggles local families have been facing.

“We are in real danger of child poverty becoming a new normal in our community. We need the Government to take immediate action and throw our children a lifeline by fixing the broken welfare system”.

Notes to editors

  • The latest research from End Child Poverty showing that 43.1 % of children in Southwark were living in poverty, after housing costs were considered, between April 2019 and March 2020 can be found here. These figures reflect the number of children living in settings/ households with below 60% of the median income, after housing costs are taken into account;

 

Local authority

% of children below 60% median income after housing costs, 2019/20

UK

31%

Tower Hamlets

55.8%

Newham

50.0%

Barking and Dagenham

48.1%

Hackney

47.9%

Waltham Forest

45.3%

Southwark

43.1%

Islington

42.7%

Lambeth

42.6%

Birmingham

42.5%

Greenwich

42.0%

Manchester

41.8%

Newcastle upon Tyne

41.2%

Hounslow

40.9%

Haringey

40.6%

Sandwell

40.0%

Brent

40.0%

Redbridge

39.7%

Middlesbrough

39.4%

Luton

39.4%

Lewisham

39.0%

 

 

  • The same research shows that 38% of children in London were living below the poverty line during this period and that the capital has the highest child poverty rates in the UK;

 

  • In April 2020, the Government raised Local Housing Allowance rates to cover the bottom 30% of rents. When introduced in 2008, Local Housing Allowance was set to cover up to the 50th percentile, or the median, rents of an area;

 

  • Marina Ahmad AM is the London Assembly Member for Lambeth and Southwark

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