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Written Question
Poverty: Children
Monday 8th July 2019

Asked by: Baroness Primarolo (Labour - Life peer)

Question to the Department for Work and Pensions:

To ask Her Majesty's Government how many children who live in a household where at least one adult is employed are currently living in absolute poverty after housing costs.

Answered by Baroness Buscombe

National statistics on the number of children in absolute poverty in a family where at least one adult is employed can be calculated from figures published in the annual "Households Below Average Income" publication.

In 2017/18, 2.5m children were in absolute poverty (after housing costs) in families with at least one adult in employment. However, nearly half of these families are in part time work only, or are self-employed


Written Question
Poverty: Children
Monday 8th July 2019

Asked by: Baroness Primarolo (Labour - Life peer)

Question to the Department for Work and Pensions:

To ask Her Majesty's Government how many children live in a household where the adult is self-employed and are living in absolute poverty (1) before housing costs, and (2) after housing costs.

Answered by Baroness Buscombe

National statistics on the number of children in absolute poverty, in couple families where at least one adult is in full-time self-employment, can be calculated from figures published in the annual "Households Below Average Income" publication.

In 2017/18, the number of children in absolute poverty, in couple families where at least one adult was in full-time self-employment, was 400,000 before housing costs and 500,000 after housing costs.


Written Question
Poverty
Monday 8th July 2019

Asked by: Baroness Primarolo (Labour - Life peer)

Question to the Department for Work and Pensions:

To ask Her Majesty's Government, further to the answer by Baroness Buscombe on 17 June (HL Deb, col 652), what is their definition of "absolute poverty".

Answered by Baroness Buscombe

Government definitions of low income households are set out in the annual National Statistics publication Households Below Average Income. Someone is in absolute low income (commonly referred to as ‘absolute poverty’), if they are in a household that received less than 60% of the UK median equivalised net household income in 2010/11, adjusted for inflation.

Absolute low income is measured both before and after housing costs. Housing costs include; rent (gross of housing benefit); water rates, community water charges and council water charges; mortgage interest payments; structural insurance premiums (for owner occupiers); ground rent and service charges.


Speech in Lords Chamber - Mon 17 Jun 2019
Children Living in Poverty

"To ask Her Majesty’s Government how many children who live in a household where at least one adult is employed are currently living in poverty...."
Baroness Primarolo - View Speech

View all Baroness Primarolo (Lab - Life peer) contributions to the debate on: Children Living in Poverty

Written Question
Equality
Thursday 6th June 2019

Asked by: Baroness Primarolo (Labour - Life peer)

Question to the Department for Work and Pensions:

To ask Her Majesty's Government, further to the answer by Baroness Buscombe on 21 May (HL Deb, col 1858), on what evidence they base their statement that “inequality has fallen”; and whether they will publish that evidence.

Answered by Baroness Buscombe

National statistics on income inequality are published annually in the “Households Below Average Income” publication using the Gini coefficient. The Gini coefficient is an international standard technical measure of how incomes are distributed across all individuals. It ranges from 0% (when everyone has identical incomes) to 100% (when all income goes to only one person).

From 2009/10 to 2017/18 income inequality, measured using the before housing cost Gini coefficient, has fallen by 2 percentage points. See the table below for the annual statistics from 2009/10 to 2017/18.

This data is published annually on the “Households Below Average Income” website on gov.uk.

Year

Income inequality (Gini Coefficient. %)

2009/10

36

2010/11

34

2011/12

34

2012/13

34

2013/14

34

2014/15

34

2015/16

35

2016/17

34

2017/18

34


Written Question
Poverty: Children
Tuesday 4th June 2019

Asked by: Baroness Primarolo (Labour - Life peer)

Question to the Department for Work and Pensions:

To ask Her Majesty's Government, further to the Written Answer by Lord Agnew of Oulton on 16 May (HL15606), whether they will now answer the question put.

Answered by Baroness Buscombe

The information on numbers of children entering and exiting poverty is not available. However, figures for percentages of children moving in and out of poverty are collected in the Income Dynamics publication. These are available in Table 8.1, and in the table below:

2010-2011 to 2011-2012

2011-2012 to 2012-2013

2012-2013 to 2013-2014

2013-2014 to 2014-2015

2014-2015 to 2015-2016

2015-2016 to 2016-2017

% children entering poverty

6

6

6

7

6

7

% children exiting poverty

34

35

37

33

33

35

The percentage of children entering poverty is the percentage of only those children who were not in poverty in the earlier year but who were in poverty the following year. The percentage of children exiting poverty is the percentage of only those children who were in poverty in the earlier year but who were out of poverty the following year. Entry and exit rates are very different (since entry / exit rates are expressed as a percentage of only those not previously in poverty / previously in poverty respectively).

The threshold used is 60 per cent of median equivalised household income Before Housing Costs (BHC). Since household incomes are subject to measurement error, and the threshold is subject to sampling and measurement error, the analysis only includes ‘clear’ transitions. For an entry/exit to count, household incomes must cross the 60 per cent of median income threshold and be at least 10 per cent higher / lower than the threshold in the following year.


Speech in Lords Chamber - Mon 05 Nov 2018
Universal Credit

"My Lords, I thank the Minister for the information she has given about the changes made in the Budget last week. However, she will know that the Government had already pre-announced billions of pounds to be cut from the budget that will facilitate universal credit by 2020. Last week’s announcements …..."
Baroness Primarolo - View Speech

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Speech in Lords Chamber - Mon 25 Jun 2018
Automatic Workplace Pension Enrolment

"My Lords, I congratulate my noble friend Lord McKenzie on initiating this debate. I echo the very positive points he made about auto-enrolment: it is a good thing and has enabled millions of people to be drawn into workplace pension systems for the first time. The government review published last …..."
Baroness Primarolo - View Speech

View all Baroness Primarolo (Lab - Life peer) contributions to the debate on: Automatic Workplace Pension Enrolment

Speech in Lords Chamber - Mon 04 Jun 2018
Personal Independence Payment

"My Lords, in the interests of clarity for the Government and certainty for the claimants, can I return the Minister to the question raised by my noble friend Lady Sherlock? Will the Minister explain to the House how the Government intend to move forward in ensuring that they have identified …..."
Baroness Primarolo - View Speech

View all Baroness Primarolo (Lab - Life peer) contributions to the debate on: Personal Independence Payment

Speech in Lords Chamber - Mon 23 Apr 2018
Universal Credit

"My Lords, will the Minister explain why the universal credit sanctions regime imposes multiple sanctions on claimants with mental health problems, damages individuals’ health, causes unnecessary suffering and hardship, and does absolutely nothing to improve their ability to find paid work?..."
Baroness Primarolo - View Speech

View all Baroness Primarolo (Lab - Life peer) contributions to the debate on: Universal Credit