The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has been handed a giant birthday card to mark seven years of the “cruel” two-child benefit limit.
Families claiming benefits who have a third or subsequent child after April 2017 are denied up to £3,235 per year per child compared with families whose kids were born sooner.
Around 1.5 million children live in families whose benefits are reduced by the two-child limit, according to the End Child Poverty Coalition. That is one in every 10 children.
Shockingly, 2,590 women had to disclose that they were raped to get an exemption to this policy last year.
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Rosie, a mother of three children who is impacted by the two-child limit to benefit payments, said: “My third child is about to turn seven years old. He is as old as this policy, one of the first children to be born who was impacted by this. And for all of his life, for seven whole years, it feels as if he is invisible to those who make decisions about benefit payments.”
The government has previously ruled out any connection between the two-child limit and child poverty.