Children’s health and food
Food is a good place to start. A recent House of Lords committee report found that food-related ill health costs society equivalent to 1–2% of GDP a year.
Here the government deserves credit. The recent commitment to extend free school meals to children from families on universal credit, along with the introduction of the new Healthy Food Standard – which mandates a target for sales of healthy food, against which all large food businesses will report – will help more children access the nutritious food they need.
Policies like the Soft Drinks Industry Levy also show what works. Since its introduction, sugar sold in soft drinks has fallen by more than a third without harming sales and the same principle has been extended to milk-based drinks.
The government should now introduce a new levy that incentivises manufacturers to make a wider range of products healthier. This would reward responsible businesses, spur innovation and reflect public demand: 68% of adults back an extension of the levy, and three quarters want the revenue reinvested in children’s health.
A serious child poverty strategy
Millions of children are growing up in poverty and insecure housing. Poverty in childhood leads to poorer health, lower educational attainment and lower lifetime earnings. Reducing child poverty should be viewed as an economic reform, not a welfare cost.
The two-child limit on universal credit and tax credits is one of the most significant drivers of child poverty, pushing hundreds of thousands into hardship. Abolishing it would lift 350,000 children out of poverty and reduce deprivation for 700,000 more. At around £2 billion a year, the long-term return in health and productivity would far outweigh the cost.
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Clean air, fair growth
Air pollution is another silent drag on the economy. It contributes to up to 43,000 deaths a year in the UK and costs the economy £27bn every year through hospital admissions, lost productivity and premature deaths. Its impacts fall disproportionately on children and people in lower income areas or from racialised communities.
Around a third of emissions in urban areas come from industrial and commercial sources, yet businesses are rarely incentivised to change. The Treasury could introduce tiered business rates relief to reward companies that measure and reduce harmful emissions such as PM2.5. This would reward those investing in cleaner operations and level the playing field between polluters and responsible firms.
London’s progress shows what is possible, but extending such incentives nationally would accelerate improvements in air quality, delivering healthier communities and a stronger economy.
Growth that lasts
This budget will be defined by hard choices. But some of the smartest decisions don’t require big spending, just a clearer vision of what drives long-term growth. Policies that create cleaner air, fairer opportunities and healthier environments will pay for themselves through lower NHS demand, higher productivity and stronger communities.
Growth built on poor health is fragile. Growth built on improving the health of society is sustainable. If the government truly wants to go for growth, it must start by improving the conditions that allow people to live healthy lives.
Peter Babudu is executive director of Impact on Urban Health.
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