A new report from the Joseph Roundtree Foundation estimates the cost of child poverty. Key points include:
- Child poverty’s consequences are wide-ranging and long-lasting. Children
from low-income families are less likely to do well in school, and more likely
to suffer ill-health and to face pressures in their lives that help to explain an
association with anti-social behaviours and criminality.
- These consequences cost society: in the money that government spends in
trying to counter the effects of child poverty, and in the economic costs of
children failing to reach their potential.
- These costs cannot be calculated precisely, but the following are cautious
estimates:
- Public spending to deal with the fallout of child poverty is about
£12 billion a year, about 60 per cent of which goes on personal social
services, school education and police and criminal justice.
- The annual cost of below-average employment rates and earnings
levels among adults who grew up in poverty is about £13 billion, of
which £5 billion represents extra benefit payments and lower tax
revenues; the remaining £8 billion is lost earnings to individuals,
affecting gross domestic product (GDP).
- The conclusion is that child poverty costs the country at
least £25 billion a year, including £17 billion that could accrue to
the Exchequer if child poverty were eradicated. Moving all families
above the poverty line would not instantly produce this sum. But in the
long term, huge amounts would be
saved from not having to pick up the pieces of child poverty and
associated
social ills.