Families in poverty will have to endure another year of frozen benefits from today despite the rise in the cost of living.
More families are expected to fall into poverty as a result of the government’s continued freeze on benefits and tax credits until 2020, despite declaring austerity over.
Campbell Robb, chief executive of the independent Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said: “Keeping benefits and tax credits frozen is unjustifiable. 4.1 million children are now locked in poverty – nearly three quarters of whom are in a working household.”
It’s not right that more parents will face impossible situations – trying to decide which essential bills to pay and what they can cut back on to make it through each week
The freeze was introduced in April 2016 by then-Chancellor George Osborne, but between then and November 2018 JRF reckon that the cost of living for people on low incomes increased by £900.
Continuing the freeze for a fourth year will leave the poorest of families an average of £560 worse off, which is the equivalent of three months of food shopping for a low-income household. That is down to stagnation as benefits have not kept pace with the rising costs that families have to meet to keep themselves afloat.
Robb said: “It’s not right that more parents will face impossible situations – trying to decide which essential bills to pay and what they can cut back on to make it through each week.”