104,000 Children In Bradford Face Benefits Freeze, Charity Warns

    More than 700,000 children in Yorkshire and the Humber with 104,000 in Bradford alone live in families facing a four-year freeze to their benefits, research by The Children’s Society reveals.

    The charity is warning that from April the freeze will hit almost 372,000 low-income families across the region. It risks pushing many more children into poverty over the next four years as living costs rise.

     

    Shockingly, almost two thirds of those affected in Yorkshire and the Humber – 469,000 children living in 247,000 families – live in working households who receive benefits to top-up low pay.

     

    Freezing Child Tax Credits, Working Tax Credits and Job Seekers’ Allowance – rather than raising them in line with living costs – could see affected families losing up to 12% from the real value of their benefits and tax credits by 2020.

     

    Nationally, The Children’s Society estimates that around 7.5 million children living in 4 million families across the UK will be hit by the benefits freeze. Of these, 4.9 million children in 2.6 million families could be affected, despite at least one parent in each family being in work.

     

    The freeze forms part of the Welfare Reform and Work Bill, which is due to be debated in Parliament today [Tuesday 23 February].

     

    Ahead of the debate, and ahead of next month’s Budget, the charity is urging the Government to reconsider its plan to freeze benefits and agree to a moratorium on further cuts in support for low-income families.

     

    The Children’s Society’s briefing, The Future of Family Incomes: How key tax and welfare changes will affect families to 2020, reveals for the first time the collective impact of a range of welfare, tax and benefit measures announced, but not yet introduced, by the current and previous governments.

     

    Rob Jackson, Area Director for The Children’s Society in Yorkshire and the Humber, said: “Families on low incomes across Yorkshire and the Humber are facing a barrage of cuts. If ministers are genuinely concerned about child poverty they must reconsider plans to freeze benefits over the next four years. At the very least, the Government needs to guarantee there will be no further cuts when the Chancellor delivers his Budget next month.

     

    “Austerity has hit families hard, including those in work. Further cuts to support would push more children into poverty and undermine incentives for families to move into work or earn more.”

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