The Fabian Society today releases research that calls for new
Universal Credit payments to tackle poverty for children under
five.
The report, First Steps - An ambitious strategy to
tackle early years poverty with public consent,
recommends several measures for the 2025 Budget, including
scrapping the two-child limit for working families, and families
with a disabled child, as first steps towards an ambitious
overall strategy to end child poverty.
The report shows that more than a third of under-fives in England
and Wales live in poverty. This is the highest poverty rate of
any age group.
Evidence shows that this has lifelong consequences. The report
argues that the government should focus its Child Poverty
Strategy on the early years, as this will have the most
significant impact on health and wellbeing, school readiness, and
long-term economic outcomes. Without tackling early years
poverty, the government will struggle to achieve its missions on
health, opportunity, and living standards.
Inadequate social security is the major cause of this poverty,
including the two-child limit for Universal Credit. Therefore, a
significant and sustained fall in early years poverty can only be
delivered through increases in social security, the report
argues.
The report recommends that the two-child limit should be
completely scrapped as soon as possible. It also recommends the
introduction of a ‘baby' and a ‘toddler' element within Universal
Credit to provide additional support to families with young
children.
Public opinion is against scrapping the two-child limit
completely and doing so immediately risks undermining the case
for social security spending, the report argues. According to
polling conducted by YouGov for the report, when asked about the
two-child limit, 59 per cent of respondents said ‘the two-child
limit should be kept' – compared to 25 per cent who said ‘the
two-child limit should be removed'.
This is why the paper proposes a two-step approach to scrap the
two-child limit, that would benefit the vast majority of children
affected by the limit immediately and build support towards
scrapping the limit altogether. This first step would benefit
nearly nine out of ten children under five (89 per cent)
currently hit by the two-child limit, but would be far more
popular than scrapping it completely in one big step, and more
popular and effective than raising the cap to three children.
Combined with baby and toddler elements, the first step to scrap
the two-child limit could result in one of the largest falls in
early years poverty since the 1990s – lifting 230,000 children
under five out poverty.
When the Fabian Society and YouGov polled different ‘first steps'
to fully scrap the two-child limit, it found public support for
the report's recommendations:
- 46 per cent supported ‘removing the two-child limit for
families with disabled children' – with 34 per cent opposing
it.
- 45 per cent supported ‘removing the two-child limit for
families who are in work' – with 35 per cent opposing it.
- 32 per cent supported ‘lifting the limit from two children
to three children' – with 51 per cent opposing it.
, Fabian
Society Research Manager, and author of the report said:
“While the public finances are incredibly tight, the government
can act to transform the lives of babies and toddlers living in
poverty – and do so with public support.
“The government should exempt families in work and families with
disabled children from the two-child limit. This would be part of
a two-step plan to scrap the limit entirely.
“Public opposition to scrapping the two-child limit immediately
is strong, but the public would support policies to exempt most
children from the limit. This includes those who voted Labour in
2024, but who are looking to other political parties – including
both the Greens and Reform. This measure can start to rebuild
Labour's fractured electoral coalition, while achieving the kind
of change Labour was elected to deliver.
“Combined with new financial support for all families with
children under five, the government would lift hundreds of
thousands of babies and toddlers out of poverty. And it could do
so without undermining public support for further action to
tackle child poverty before the next election.”
Notes
-
-
First Steps – An ambitious
strategy to tackle early years poverty with public
consent is published by the Fabian Society. It was
edited by Iggy Wood. It will be available from 00.01 on
25.05.2025.
- Early years poverty is defined as a child under the age
of five living in a household with an income less than 60 per
cent of the median.
- The Fabian Society commissioned YouGov Plc to survey
4,300 adults across Great Britain. The survey was carried out
online. Fieldwork was undertaken between 18 and 20 February
2025. The figures have been weighted and are
representative of all adults (aged 18+) in Great Britain.
- The Fabian Society commissioned Howard Reed at Landman
Economics to model a series of policy options, focused on its
impact on child poverty rates and their cost. The results use
the Family Resources Survey 2022 – 2023, adjusted to take
account of income and housing costs growth since the data was
collected. All the costings are in today's prices, and
reflect the cost if they were implemented this year. All
results are for England and Wales only.