The two-child limit on benefits policy was introduced by David Cameron and George Osborne in 2017. It has been a disaster for children and their families.
The rule means that families affected by it, receive around £3,500 per year for each of their first two children through the child element of universal credit and nothing for their third or subsequent children. It must be scrapped in full at the budget – without compromise.
The cap leaves almost 1.7 million children living in almost half a million families trapped in poverty. It is the reason why 109 children each day are born into poverty.
Read more:
- Frozen housing benefit pushes renters into homelessness. Will Labour finally listen and thaw it?
- Keir Starmer promises to ‘put an end to unsafe housing’ in exclusive article for Big Issue
- Could a wealth tax convince young people to vote Labour?
As we head towards the budget on 26 November and the release of the UK government’s Child Poverty Strategy, it’s evident this is the most important moment in a decade for the families we work with. They are waiting to see if this government will boldly back children, or retreat from making the investment needed to drive down punishing rates of child poverty.
This week I was in touch with Tasha. She has four children and caught by the rule. She works as a clearer. Her husband works full time in construction. They are struggling to make ends meet. Tasha has been vocal in campaigning to get the two-child limit overturned. She isn’t sure where things are headed with myriad press stories emerging in recent weeks about the government pulling back from axing the policy in full and considering half-way house suggestions to keep costs down.