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A time of need: exploring the changing poverty risk facing larger families in the UK

Stewart, Kitty ORCID: 0000-0001-7744-8741, Reeves, Aaron ORCID: 0000-0001-9114-965X and Patrick, Ruth (2021) A time of need: exploring the changing poverty risk facing larger families in the UK. CASEpapers (CASE 224). Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion, London, UK.

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Abstract

Child poverty in the UK has seen rapid change over the last two decades, broadly falling from the late 1990s until 2012/13 and rising since then. As a result, child poverty rates converged with rates of poverty for workingage non-parents before diverging again. This paper examines these changes through the lens of family size, asking how horizontal inequalities have changed over this period between larger families – those with three or more children – and smaller families with one or two. Focusing on data from before the pandemic, we look at trends in poverty rates for the two groups and explore alternative explanatory factors – including changes in the composition of larger families, differential employment rates, and differences in the impact of social security support. Our interest in family size is two-fold. First, by interrogating the way families of different sizes have been affected by policy we gain a better understanding of the effects of particular approaches to poverty reduction, with implications for policy debates both in the UK and beyond. Second, larger families are rhetorically important in the popular discourse around benefit receipt, with stigmatising representations of ‘benefit broods’ mobilised by politicians and popular culture to critique a supposed culture of ‘welfare dependency’. This has provided justification for recent significant cuts in social welfare provision, including policies specifically targeting larger families – the benefit cap and the two-child limit. The paper seeks to illuminate the reality behind these popular conceptions by exploring larger families’ composition, employment and poverty rates, even before these policies take effect. We find that most of the rise and the fall in child poverty in the UK is a story about poverty in larger families. Social security changes are the key driver here: these policy shifts have affected larger families much more acutely than smaller families, simply because larger families have a greater need for support, due to both lower work intensity and higher household needs. This remains true despite steady increases in employment in larger families. Larger families are more dependent on the state, by definition, while children are at home. They are more likely to need support even when things are going well and are more exposed when things go wrong, such as family breakdown, job loss or ill health. As the pandemic has laid bare, risks to livelihoods can happen to anyone and with little warning. Limiting support available by holding down benefit levels or placing caps on support means accepting that many children will grow up in poverty simply because of their family size.

Item Type: Monograph (Discussion Paper)
Official URL: https://sticerd.lse.ac.uk/CASE/_new/publications/
Additional Information: © 2021 The Authors
Divisions: Social Policy
Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HC Economic History and Conditions
H Social Sciences > HQ The family. Marriage. Woman
JEL classification: I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I3 - Welfare and Poverty > I31 - General Welfare; Basic Needs; Living Standards; Quality of Life; Happiness
I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I3 - Welfare and Poverty > I32 - Measurement and Analysis of Poverty
I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I3 - Welfare and Poverty > I38 - Government Policy; Provision and Effects of Welfare Programs
J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J1 - Demographic Economics > J12 - Marriage; Marital Dissolution; Family Structure
J - Labor and Demographic Economics > J1 - Demographic Economics > J13 - Fertility; Family Planning; Child Care; Children; Youth
Date Deposited: 08 Feb 2024 15:30
Last Modified: 01 Nov 2024 04:59
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/121530

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