welcome! evoc thinkspace on #welfarereform. w rning project thinkspace what are the biggest impacts...

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Welcome! EVOC thinkSpace on #WelfareReform

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Welcome!

EVOC thinkSpace on #WelfareReform

W RNINGPROJECT

thinkSpaceWhat are the biggest impacts of welfare

reform on families with children?

AnlaysisOpportunities to influence

Press Briefings

Seminars

Early Warning System

Frontline workers

CPAG advice line

CPAG training and

events

Longitudinal study

Pregnancy benefits

• Health in pregnancy grant £190

• Sure start maternity grant only available for first child £500

Child Benefit

• Frozen 2011- 2014

• Reduced earners between £50-60k

• Removed from earners above £60k

Child tax credit

• Baby element removed in 1st year £545

• Claim within 1 month

• Withdrawn from middle income families

Working families

• Max childcare costs reduced from 80-70%

• Increase in hours requirement for couples 16 -24 hours per week £3870 per year

• Max child care costs 85%• No minimum hours for

childcare• Claimant commitment

Families without work

• Benefit cap - £500 per week• Lone parent claim jobseeker allowance when

child turns 5 instead of income support• Sanctions• Claimant commitment

Families with disabled adult

• Transfer from incapacity benefit to employment and support allowance

• Disability living allowance replaced by personal independence payments

• 3 month waiting period before additional element can be paid

• Only one additional element per couple

• Disabled carers lose out

Families with disabled child

• Disabled child element of universal credit paid at 2 rates

• Lower rate is £125 less per month than equivalent amount under child tax credit at present

Housing costs

Social tenants bedroom tax Private tenants

maximum allowance

Owner occupiershelp with mortgage

interest cut

Universal Credit

• Paid monthly• Monthly assessment period• All overpayments are recoverable• Online claims• Lower rate paid to families where parent/s

under 25

Rates of child poverty Scotland / Edinburgh

Morningside

Gorgie / Sighthill

Despite UK Govt’s obligation to eradicate child poverty by 2020, the future looks bleak (projected child poverty is the red line). This is largely the result of ongoing tax and social security reform

• 210 000 (21%) children living in poverty (2010/11after housing costs – 17% or 170 000 before housing costs)

• some children at particular risk− families affected by disability- one parent families- families without paid work

• affects families across Scotland, but concentration and nature varies− ECP child poverty map of Scotland

www.endchildpoverty.org.uk

Lower Birth Weight

Chronic Ill Health as Toddlers

Lower Educational Attainment

Risk of Accidental Injury

Impact of poverty on child wellbeing

What needs to happen?

UK: rethink tax, benefit and labour market policies to strike a better balance between poverty eradication and human rights on one side and economic growth on the other.

What needs to happen?

Scotland:• Ensure Scottish Welfare Fund is available

to families who need it• Invest in advice and information • Consider socio-economic implications of

all decisions

What needs to happen?

Locally:• Ensure child poverty

and underlying socio-economic determinants are considered by service planners (SHANARRI)

• Ensure child care is available, affordable, accessible and flexible

• Remove obstacles to education for children from families at risk of poverty

Child Poverty Action Group in Scotland94 Duke Street,

Glasgow G4 0UW

Tel: 0141 611 7090

Mob: 0795 144 0393

[email protected]

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