Poverty , The UN Report on UK Poverty 2019

Report of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights on his visit to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland – link to Report

From the introduction:

“The Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, Philip Alston, undertook a mission to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland from 5 to 16 November 2018.Although the United Kingdom is the world’s fifth largest economy, one fifth of its population (14 million people) live in poverty, and 1.5 million of them experienced destitution in 2017. Policies of austerity introduced in 2010 continue largely unabated, despite the tragic social consequences. Close to 40 per cent of children are predicted to be living in poverty by 2021. Food banks have proliferated; homelessness and rough sleeping have increased greatly; tens of thousands of poor families must live in accommodation far from their schools,jobs and community networks; life expectancy is falling for certain groups; and the legal aid system has been decimated.”

Recommendations

The United Kingdom Government should:

(a)Introduce a single, multidimensional measure of poverty;

(b)Systematically measure food security;

c)Request the National Audit Office to assess the cumulative social impact of tax and spending decisions since 2010, especially on vulnerable groups, with a view to identifying what would be required to restore an effective social safety net;

(d)Reverse particularly regressive measures such as the benefit freeze, the two-child limit, the benefit cap and the reduction of the Housing Benefit, including for underoccupied social rented housing;

(e)Restore local government funding needed to provide critical social protection and tackle poverty at the community level, and take varying needs of communities and differing tax bases into account in the ongoing Fair Funding Review;

(f)Initiate an independent review of the efficacy of changes to welfare conditionality and sanctions introduced since 2012 by the Department of Work and Pensions;

(g)Train Department staffto use more constructive and less punitive approaches to encouraging compliance;

(h)Eliminate the five-week delay in receiving initial UC benefits;

(i)Ensure that the benefit truly works for individuals, including by facilitating alternative payment arrangements and reviewing the monthly assessment practices;

(j)Review and remedy the systematic disadvantage inflicted by current policies on women, as well as on children, persons with disabilities, older persons and ethnic minorities;

(k)Re-evaluate privatization policies to ensure that the approach adopted achieves the best outcomes for the citizenry rather than for the corporate sector; transport, especially in rural areas, should be considered an essential service and the Government should ensure that all areas are adequately and affordably served.

Reaction

The Guardian 24.5.19

“UN poverty expert hits back over UK ministers’ ‘denial of facts’ – “Philip Alston says he thought government response to his report might be a spoof”

New Statesman 22.5.19

“14 damning findings by the UN inspector who investigated UK poverty”