31 – 40 of 40 results
Description: The government’s misplaced confidence in the benefit cap
The benefit cap has been in place since 2013, but what has its impact been when compared with its objectives? How does the rhetoric match up with the reality for the tens of thousands of families affected? And does the benefit cap have any place during a pandemic?

By Ruth Patrick, Aaron Reeves and Kitty Stewart
Poverty Journal, Issue 168 (Spring 2021)
Description: Safeguarding adults - a safer and more secure future
One of the principles that CPAG espouses in its Secure Futures project is that social security should protect people in vulnerable circumstances. Recent tragedies highlight where the system is currently falling short, but what is being done to protect people and ensure they always have enough resources to avoid squalor, starvation and suicide?

By Gary Vaux
Poverty Journal, Issue 167 (Autumn 2020)
Description: Universal credit and COVID-19
An anonymous civil servant was quoted in the press on 26 March as saying that the coronavirus crisis ‘could be the making of universal credit’. What has happened in recent months to universal credit (UC), which has been seen as the key answer in terms of benefits to difficulties during the COVID-19 crisis?

By Fran Bennett
Poverty Journal, Issue 167 (Autumn 2020)
Description: Universal infant free school meals
With Marcus Rashford’s successful campaign to extend their provision into the summer holidays this year, free school meals are back on the agenda. But what about universal provision? The universal infant free school meals (UIFSM) programme was introduced in 2014 in England. What impact has UIFSM had on disadvantaged school children?

By Angus Holford and Birgitta Rabe
Poverty Journal, Issue 167 (Autumn 2020)
Description: 2020 Vision: ending child poverty for good
In 1999, in a speech at Toynbee Hall in East London, prime minister Tony Blair named 2020 as the target year for ending child poverty. To mark the year child poverty was to have been ended, academics, policy analysts and practitioners have contributed to a collection of essays for CPAG on effective approaches to tackling child poverty: 2020 Vision: ending child poverty for good.

By Lizzie Flew
Poverty Journal, Issue 166 (Summer 2020)
Description: Secure futures: after the pandemic
Each Thursday evening we clapped our love and gratitude for health professionals and carers in our universal health service. The same gratitude is due for our social security system – the front line for the care and support of our neighbours’ financial security, keeping them safe, secure and fed. But is this how people feel? And if not, why not?

By Alison Garnham
Poverty Journal, Issue 166 (Summer 2020)
Description: Who pays for the recovery after COVID-19?
The government spending we have seen in recent months has been necessary and welcome. But how will we as a country pay for this spending? We need a public debate about who will pay for the costs that the country is facing as a result of the pandemic.

By Alan Buckle
Poverty Journal, Issue 166 (Summer 2020)
Description: CPAG's Cost of the School Day project
CPAG’s Cost of the School Day project in Scotland is working with schools and local authorities to understand the barriers that costs create for children from low-income families, and to support policy and practice change to reduce or remove them. With the project set to be introduced in England and Wales, and expanded in Scotland, what can be learned from the last six years?

By Sara Spencer
Poverty Journal, Issue 165 (Feb 2020)
Description: How big a state do we want?
A future strategy to end child poverty will need to be honest about the size and role of the state, and how the necessary investments can be funded. Drawing on CPAG’s latest book, Let’s Talk About Tax, Tom Lee puts the size of the UK state in international context and considers a range of options for increasing tax revenues in a progressive fashion.
Poverty Journal, Issue 165 (Feb 2020)
Description: UK poverty: what's the problem?
A new collaborative project, available at whatstheproblem.org.uk, hopes to open up a new conversation about how poverty is currently talked about and understood in the UK. Ruth Patrick, Kayleigh Garthwaite and Stephen Crossley explain how the project came about.
Poverty Journal, Issue 165 (Feb 2020)