Inescapable living costs compounded by childcare, housing and disabilities have been slammed by policy development charity the Social Metrics Commission (SMC), which this week published a report advising poverty measures in Britain need to be urgently adjusted.
The group also advised that the new measures take account of all available assets, such as savings, instead of just a family’s income.
In a new report, SMC set out findings intended to shape the development of policy to tackle UK poverty.
The UK government does not currently have an official way of measuring poverty after the Conservative government abolished the existing child poverty indicator in 2015 (though it was retained in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland). It compared family incomes to those in the rest of the country as well as to salaries from earlier in the decade.
The SMC says the lack of best practice guidelines renders policymakers and politicians “less able to track progress” making them “more difficult to hold them to account for effectively tackling the causes of poverty”.
Almost three quarters of people whose families don’t work were found to be living in poverty, while that figure was nine per cent for families featuring adults working full-time.